“As a survey of Ronald Harwood’s oeuvre, this book faces little or no competition. It clearly fills a gap in the market. Ann Hall’s book ambitiously attempts a selective synopsis of the plots of seven novels, sixteen plays, and eight screenplays.”—Peter Lawson, author, Anglo-Jewish Poetry from Isaac Rosenberg to Elaine Feinstein
“In her introduction to Ronald Harwood’s Tragic Vision, Ann Hall suggests that ‘Harwood repeatedly demonstrates that while art may be hell, it also sustains and ennobles both the practitioners and the spectators.’ This appreciation of the impact of the body writing under scrutiny, its roots in practice and experience, and its potential for transformative experience, is central to the approach that she adopts. Hall’s overview is necessarily both broad and selective in this survey of six decades of Harwood’s creative output across three genres—the novel, for stage and screen—with an emphasis on offering appreciations of popular and published works to facilitate and encourage further scholarly scrutiny. The result is a compelling review of the achievements of a too often neglected but major talent of the late twentieth century, critically marginalized for his avoidance of the zeitgeist and for an ‘old-school’ dedication to his craft as a means of channeling personal experience and promoting the value and capacity of art. The richness and diversity of Harwood’s career is appreciated here as characteristic of his position as an ‘unfashionable’ author whose work included ghostwriting and acting as script doctor, working as an adaptor of other authors’ material for the screen, as biographer (of the actor-manager Donal Wolfit), and as the celebrated observer of human fragility and resilience in works such as The Dresser, The Pianist, and The Diving Bell and the Butterfly. Hall capably knits together the various strands of Harwood’s oeuvre with a compelling focus on what she defines as his ‘tragic vision,’ identified primarily in his construction of flawed or complex lead characters, often outsiders to their own social environments, who are nobly facing adverse or compromising conditions, or addressing their own inner conflicts. Though the emphasis is on the tragic, a rich undercurrent of humor is celebrated as a key component of the author’s voice. What emerges from this highly readable study is a very clear set of patterns in Harwood’s writing including nuanced auto-biographical impulses, the thrall of totalitarian regimes, the horror of the Holocaust, the dignity of Jewish community, and the iniquitous persistence of anti-Semitic sentiment, and, perhaps most importantly, the role of art as an enduring civilizing force, as a force of resistance in an exigent world: ‘His plays force us to face moral dilemmas, challenge us to remain true to ourselves, demonstrate the need for justice, and warn us against the totalitarian impulses that persist in our world,’ Hall outlines, and through the lens of Harwood’s tragic vision this book scrutinizes, she painstakingly evaluates and promotes these qualities across all of his output.”—Mark Taylor-Batty, University of Leeds
“Ronald Harwood’s influence in the world of the theatre, in the realm of novels, and on the screen has long been neglected as a topic worthy of book length study. Ann Hall, in her thorough and highly readable assessment of Harwood’s influential career, finally provides the scholarly consideration that Harwood deserves. Relying upon interviews with Harwood as well as detailed readings of his works, Hall highlights the multi-faceted nature of his cultural imprint, which includes his membership in the ‘unfashionable’ theatre set, his crafting of tragic figures across all three genres, his political writing as a Jew and a South African condemning oppression, especially Nazism and apartheid, and his exclusive focus on adaptation in his film scripts. While Hall admits that there is still much work to be done on Harwood’s oeuvre and encourages scholars throughout her book as to possible avenues, her work is an important first step in placing Harwood in context alongside his much-heralded contemporaries and arguing he deserves similar treatment.”—William C. Boles, author, Mike Bartlett