Adapted and directed by Peter Brook from the Royal Shakespeare Company’s ‘production-in-progress US’, this long-unseen agitprop drama-doc – shot in London in 1967 and released only briefly in the UK and New York at the height of the Vietnam War – remains both thought-provoking and disturbing. A theatrical and cinematic social comment on US intervention in Vietnam, Brook’s film also reveals a 1960s London where art, theatre and political protest actively collude and where a young Glenda Jackson and RSC icons such as Peggy Ashcroft and Paul Scofield feature prominently on the front line. Multi-layered scenarios staged by Brook combine with newsreel footage, demonstrations, satirical songs and skits to illustrate the intensity of anti-war opinion within London’s artistic and intellectual community.
Mark Jones
Robert Langdon Llyod
Pauline Munro
Ursula Mohan
Hugh Armstrong
Peggy Ashcroft
Patrick Wymark
Paul Scofield
Barry Stanton
Henry Woolf
Glenda Jackson
John Hussey
Tom Driberg
Ivor Seward Richard
Kingsley Amis
Reginald Paget
Peregrine Worsthorne
Michael Williams
Marjie Lawrence
Leon Lissek
Ian Hogg
Eric Allan
Kwame Ture
Jacqueline Porcher
Mark James Walter Cameron
Clifford Rose
Bill Macy
Mary Allen
Jeremy Anthony
Noel Collins
Joanne Lindsay
William Morgan Sheppard
Hugh Sullivan