We are in the eye of the exam preparation storm and we are
looking, as a department, at how we can help our students with the exams. A
recent mock showed us how students struggled with A02 when exploring ‘An
Inspector Calls’. And, I’d have to agree it is hard, and, I have read modern
drama at university. Prose and Shakespeare can be relatively easy when
exploring language choices because they are reliant on rich language and
description to paint a picture of a character, situation or event. Shakespeare
didn’t have the painted backdrops, or enough actors or props to convey an army
or a boat at sea. Dickens told his story over months so he needed people to
remember what characters looked like so they could remember them many months
later. A playwright and especially a modern playwright have very little
dialogue and speeches to convey complex emotions, because they are traipsing
the thin line between realism and story-telling. A playwright is focused on
relationships and the subtle behaviour patterns of people. The relationships
and behaviour is subtle and so too must the language of a play be subtle.
Students will probably skip around plot with ‘An Inspector
Calls’ more than any of the other texts. The characters are closer to being
real people for them. They act and behave like real people. It is hard for them
to separate the person from the character. The problem with ‘An Inspector
Calls’ is it is hard to break the ‘suspension of disbelief’ and it is real.
Yes, we know Gerald does that, but how does he use language to show it.
I’d argue that we have to be even more explicit with the
choices a playwright makes. We have to be visual with these choices -
something, I have alluded to before. Students can pick up subtle nuances from
everyday speech, but it needs to be more explicit when reading the play. Tone
is useful. However, tone can easily lead to plot level idea.
The Inspector uses an aggressive tone to show he is
determined to get to the truth.
The playwright gives the Inspector an aggressive tone here
so that the character shows their determination to get to the truth.
Yes, I could add another sentence and add ‘symbolises’ to
extend the level of explanation, but it doesn’t really convince me that the
student understands the text fully. Students can easily recall the tone as
again it is something that real people do. That’s why I am working hard on
drawing attention to the choices made by the writer. The students might think
the events of ‘An Inspector Calls’ is like real life, but I am going to work
harder to show the artifice.
Take these specific choices:
·
Inspector describes Eva Smith as ‘not pretty’
after the death but alive she had been ‘very pretty’
·
Eric describes her as ‘pretty’ and a ‘good
sport’
·
Sheila is described as being ‘pretty’ in stage
notes
·
Gerald is described as ‘attractive’ in the stage
notes
·
Gerald refers to Eva Smith (Daisy Renton) as
‘pretty’- ‘soft brown hair and big dark eyes’
I’ve not really given much thought to how pretty characters
are in ‘An Inspector Calls’. I don’t read a play and go, ‘Phwoar, look at that Lady
Macbeth!’. Nor, do I rate the characters on who I’d snog, marry and avoid in ‘Pride
and Prejudice’. You don’t really. However,
there is a running thread of how attractive Eva Smith in the play and it is
repeated. But, why does Priestley use the word ‘pretty’ several times in the
play.
·
Make a connection between Sheila and Eva so she
identifies with her more
·
To show that poor and rich are alike physically
·
To show us that physical looks are not enough to
sustain a person in society
·
To show us how the poor are only noticeable when
they ‘pretty’
·
To show how ‘like attracts like’ – ‘attractive’ Gerald
went for ‘pretty’ Daisy Renton
·
To show us how Eva is better than your average
poor person – she is an innocent – Eric describes the rest of the women as ‘fat
old tarts’.
·
To romanticise the poor
·
To challenge the notion that the poor are dirty,
disgusting, unhealthy and unattractive
·
To visually represent what the rich have done to
the poor – they make her ugly – ‘not pretty’
·
To reflect the journey she travels – pretty to
ugly – all cause by men and women
·
To show the audience that the poor are
deserving.
·
To show personality – a pretty person is a good
person and an ugly person shows an ugly personality - What about Gerald?
·
To highlight how she is a victim – Victorian melodrama
– perils of Pauline
·
To make the audience care for her
I could go on and on. That’s even before I start looking at
how ugly characters are. Those five explicit choices help step up a discussion
of the role that Eva Smith holds in the text. When students read the play, they
just get the idea that she is ‘fit’ and everybody wants a bit of ‘hanky-panky’
with her. There’s something more and more interesting than her being a bit
pretty. Priestley does what Dickens does – he romanticises the poor. In a
sense, both Dickens and Priestley are guilty of the same thing: they ‘poor wash’
texts. We don’t get realistic characters; instead we get ciphers who idolise
the poor.
Right, I am off to plan my starter for tomorrow’s lesson.
Who do you fancy most?
Belle Mrs
Cratchit Mrs Birling
Eva Smith My
Last Duchess
Only joking. That’s an essay instead. Anyway, I have attached
the text I am using for students to see the explicit choices made by Priestley.
We are going to turn it into an A5 booklet and get students to highlight
choices linked to a theme. They have to think about why that choice has been
made by the playwright. Feel free to use *.
Thanks for reading,
Xris
*If I see this resource copied on TES or another site
without my permission, I will get my specially trained piranhas to eat you.
And, they don’t care if you are pretty or ugly.
Staging – A02 Choices
·
First line in the play is directed to Edna ‘
Giving us the port, Edna’
·
We see no other part of the house
·
The 7 characters in the story – four male /
three female
·
Audience never sees or hears of Eva Smith –
audience are not aware of what she looks like – only know her through the
characters telling their stories which link to her
·
Starts with an engagement party
·
Set solely in the dining room
·
Set in real time
·
Set in 1912 – historic setting for the audience
– recent past – before the war
·
House of a prosperous manufacturer
·
Three act play
·
Every act ends on a cliff-hanger
·
Order of the interrogation – Mr Birling – Sheila
– Gerald - Mrs Birling – Eric
·
Eva Smith’s story is revealed to us in
chronological order – there are two narratives in the story – the events of Eva
Smith’s life and the events of that night. However, technically, Eric met Eva
before Mrs Birling so it should be him before Mrs Birling
·
The last word in the play is ‘questions’
Act 1
·
All the characters are happy in the stage
directions – ‘smiling’, ‘gaily’, ‘half playful’, ‘suddenly guffaws’
·
The women
leave the men to talk after the main celebrations – Eric, Mr Birling and Gerald
are all left on stage when the Inspector is announced
·
‘Sharp ring’ of the doorbell announces the
Inspector’s arrival during Mr Birling’s line – ‘a man has to look after himself
and his own’
·
When the Inspector arrives the men act
light-heartedly – ‘humorously’, ‘lightly’. Eric doesn’t behave in the same way
– ‘uneasy, sharply’
·
The levels of aggression increase with Mr
Birling, Eric and the Inspector during their conversation (‘rather angrily’ /
‘sulkily’). Sheila’s entrance deflates that with her ‘gaily’ comment
·
The Inspector changes the way he describes the
death of Eva Smith between the men and the women – ‘Burnt her insides out’ /‘a
young woman drank some disinfectant and died, after several hours of agony’
·
Mr Birling leaves the stage after it has been
discovered that Sheila has a connection with the dead girl – ‘I must have a
word with my wife’
·
Eric and the Inspector leave to fetch Mr Birling
·
End of Act 1 contains two characters alone on
stage – Gerald and Sheila – then the Inspector arrives
·
Act 1 starts and end with a different point in
the relationship between Gerald and Sheila
Act 2
·
The Inspector fools us into thinking he will
interrogate Mrs Birling before Gerald, but then questions Gerald
·
The Inspector repeats the fact that Eva Smith
was ‘pretty’
·
Gerald thinks that Sheila should leave as she
has had ‘as much as she can stand’
·
The stage directions between Act 1 and Act 2
change considerably. In Act 1, characters tended to be ‘angrily’ or
‘distressed’. In Act 2, characters are ‘cutting in’, ‘sharply’, ‘ coolly’,
‘bitterly’, etc.
·
Sheila uses the pronoun ‘we’ to apportion blame
– ‘And probably between us we killed her’
·
Idea of her diary is introduced at the middle of
Act 2
·
Sheila returns the ring to Gerald after
listening to the story about the affair
·
When Mrs Birling is being interrogated, the
scene is interrupted several times by the search for Eric
·
The characters tend to get more emotional
towards the end of the scene – ‘distressed’, ‘terrified’, ‘sternly’,
‘thunderstruck’
·
Act 2 ends with the arrival of Eric and the
discovery of his link to Eva Smith
Act 3
·
No time has passed between Act 2 and Act 3
·
The majority of Eric’s confession is with male
characters only
·
Eric was absent from Mrs Birling story so we
have the story told to Eric again in reduced form
·
The Inspector recaps the whole narrative of Eva
Smith’s journey before he leaves
·
As the Inspector leaves, the characters are
physically changed. Sheila –crying / Mrs Birling –collapsed / Eric –brooding /
Mr Birling – active, moving about
·
The characters attack each other. Mr and Mrs
Birling attack Eric and Sheila responds.
·
The structure of Act 3 is an inversion of Act 1
– both involve the Inspector leaving or arriving towards the middle – a
dramatic shift
·
Sheila once again repeats the narrative of Eva
Smith’s life – copying the Inspector
·
Both Act 1 and Act 3 involve the doorbell
ringing to change the events – Gerald
returns in Act 3 – second time is more dramatic based on previous events
·
The characters after being investigated by the
Inspector now investigate the Inspector
·
The characters get more and more angry and
aggressively towards each other – ‘protesting,’ shouting’, ‘shouting,
threatening’, ‘ bursting out’, ‘flaring up’
·
After having Eva Smith’ story repeated a few
times, we how have Gerald retelling the story but trying to disconnect the
parts each person played
·
The use of the photograph is questioned
·
The characters group themselves off – Gerald, Mr
Birling and Mrs Birling side together and Sheila and Eric side together
·
Use of telephone call to establish the truth
·
Birling’s last speech repeats the Inspector’s
description of Eva Smith’s death, but removes all traces of emotion.
Characters – A02
Birling
·
Mr Birling has an accent – ‘provincial in his
speech’
·
Mr Birling is pompous – ‘portentous’
·
Birling gives long speeches
·
Mr Birling constantly like to refer to his
famous connections – Chief Constable , Colonel Roberts (golf)
·
Mr Birling makes reference to Titanic being
unsinkable and a war with the Germans never happening
·
Mr Birling insists on telling the Inspector of
his daughter’s engagement to the son of Sir George Croft
·
Mr Birling takes his frustration of the
Inspector out on Eric – ‘Look-just keep out of this’
·
Mr Birling is shocked when Sheila is too candid
– ‘only escaped with a torn blouse’
·
Mr Birling protects Sheila from the Inspector
because she is ‘a young unmarried girl’
·
Mr Birling refers to himself as a ‘public man’
and not a private man and he worries later about the ‘Press’
·
Mr Birling orders Sheila to remove Mrs Birling
when she hears Eric’s story
·
Mr Birling has so much money that he did not
realise that Eric stole money from him
·
Eric calls him as ‘not the kind of father a chap
could go to when he’s in trouble’
·
Mr Birling’s main concern when the Inspector
leaves is the ‘scandal’ it will cause and its impact on his ‘knighthood’ –
returns to the start
·
Mr Birling at the end attempts to silence Sheila
and control Eric – ‘If you’ve nothing more sensible than that to say, Sheila,
you’d better be quiet’ - ‘Eric, sit
down’
·
Mr Birling is described mocking the Inspector at
the end of Act 3 before the truth is discovered – ‘Imitating INSPECTOR in his
final speech’
·
Mr Birling describes his children as
‘hysterical’ at the end of the play and that they ‘cannot take a joke’
Gerald
·
Gerald is described as ‘attractive’ in the stage
notes
·
Gerald always agree with Mr Birling at the start
of the play
·
Gerald picked the ring for the engagement – is
it the one you wanted me to have?
·
Gerald’s connection to Eva Smith is discovered
in a different way – he recognises the name rather than have the Inspector
point out the connection
·
Gerald uses the euphemism ‘women of the night’
to describe prostitutes in the Palace Variety Theatre yet is quite negative
about them - ‘hard-eyes dough-faced women’
·
Gerald refers to Eva Smith (Daisy Renton) as
‘pretty’- ‘soft brown hair and big dark eyes’
·
Gerald starts calling Eva a ‘girl’ then uses her
name when in the story his relationship is closer
·
Gerald uses the euphemism ‘make love’ when
denying he intend to support Eva Smith for sexual gratification
·
Gerald asserts to others that the affair wasn’t
‘disgusting’
·
Gerald offers the ring again to Sheila at the
end of the play
Sheila
·
Described as being ‘pretty’ in stage notes
·
Sheila uses slang at the start of the play
‘squiffy’ and refers to her mother as ‘mummy’. This changes as events get
serious.
·
Sheila and Eric are the only characters who ask
questions to find out more about Eva Smith when they first hear about the
suicide
·
Sheila gives an emotional response when she
views the photograph – ‘half-stifled sob, and then runs out’, ‘almost breaks
down’ and changes emotionally to ‘miserably’ and ‘distressed’
·
Sheila is the only character to visibly cried as
a result of events – ‘Enter Sheila, who looks as if she’s been crying
·
Sheila
refuses to leave when her connection to Eva Smith is revealed and the Inspector
confirms he is finished with her
·
Sheila is the only character to not know Eva
Smith by a name before the events of the play
·
During Act 2 Sheila starts to argue, challenge
and laugh at her parents – who don’t like it
·
Sheila reverts to sarcasm when Gerald is telling
the Inspector his story
·
Sheila refer to Gerald as the ‘hero’ and ‘the wonderful Fairy Prince’ of his story
·
Sheila refers to herself as ‘not a child’
·
Sheila ‘respects’ rather than hates Gerald after
the affair
·
Sheila was influenced by a woman to go to the
Palace Bar – ‘There was some woman who wanted her to go there’
·
Sheila is drunk when she meets Eric – who is
also unsurprisingly drunk too
·
Sheila refers to her parents as being ‘childish’
for not facing up to the facts and their role in Eva Smith’s fate
·
Sheila tries to leave the room at the end of the
play – ‘ I want to get out of this. It frightens me the way you talk’
·
Sheila repeats twice that the way her parents
‘talk’ scares her
·
Eric
·
Eric helps himself to a drink in Act 1
·
Eric and Sheila are the only characters to use
slang
·
Eric is the one character that interrupts and
questions Mr Birling during his big speech in Act 1
·
Eric refuses to go to bed when instructed by his
father because of the Inspector – yet he doesn’t stay in the room
·
By Eva Smith he is described as ‘ a youngster –
silly and wild’
·
Eric is more forthcoming than the other
characters with his connection – ‘You know, don’t you?’
·
Eric still acts childish at the end – accusing
his sister of being a sneak for telling his parents about his drinking
·
When explaining his story, Eric has another
drink
·
Eric doesn’t really use euphemistic terms to
describe his sexual relationship with Eva. He simply describes it as ‘it’
·
Eric couldn’t remember Eva Smiths name after
their first encounter
·
Eric doesn’t think he stole the money because he
‘intended to pay it back’
·
Asserts his maturity – ‘I’m old enough to be
married’
·
Eric links his behaviour to his father’s friend’s
behaviour – ‘fat old tarts…. I see some of your respectable friends with’
·
Eva Smith treated him like a ‘kid’ in relation
to the pregnancy
·
Mr Birling refers to Eric as ‘spoilt’
·
One discovering his mother’s actions, Eric’s
thoughts are broken down with dashes and pointed use of pronouns – you, her,
she, you, me, you, her, you, her, she,
my, your, you, you, you
·
Eric, after discovering that the Inspector isn’t
real, is still affected – ‘I say the girl’s dead and we all helped to kill
her’
·
After spending the majority of the play being
vague and distant, Eric spends the last act being blunt, direct and honest – ‘we
all helped to kill her’
·
Eric agrees with his sister at the end of the
play
Mrs Birling
·
Mrs Birling greets the Inspector ‘smiling’ even
though her husband has told her the reason for his visit
·
Mrs Birling refers to Eva Smith and the suicide
as ‘a girl of that class’
·
Mrs Birling calls her son a ‘boy’ and not a
‘man’. She refers to Gerald as a ‘man’ and Eric as a ‘silly boy’ later in the
play.
·
Mrs Birling is shocked to discover someone she
thought as a good man is a ‘womaniser’ – Aldermand Meggarty – but according to
Sheila ‘everyone knows’
·
Mrs Birling constantly tries to shut the
conversation down – ‘I think we’ve just about to an end of this wretched
business’
·
Mrs Birling is the one character that lies about
her connection – the other characters avoid talking or misdirect the audience:
‘You’re not telling the truth’.
·
The Inspector describes the organisation Mrs
Birling works at as an organisation helping ‘women in distress’ – Mrs Birling
does not describe its purpose
·
Mrs Birling was the ‘prominent member’ / ‘chair’ of the organisation
·
Mrs Birling’s dislike of Eva Smith stems from
her use of their name – ‘impertinently made use of our name’
·
Mrs Birling refer to the Inspector having ‘no
power’ over her and even blames her husband for Eva Smith’s situation rather
than take any responsibility
·
Describes
the father of Eva Smith as not being of her ‘class’
·
Mrs Birling doesn’t explain what she did to Eva
Smith to Eric
Inspector
·
Inspector is roughly the same age as Mr Birling
·
Inspector controls the flow of information by
only showing the photograph to one character at a time - he also stand in front of characters to
block their view
·
Inspector makes a clear point of starting his
investigation by clearly stating that it is a ‘Suicide, of course’ and there is
no reference to murder
·
Inspector is quite direct and emotionless at
times. Repeats ‘of course’ twice when introducing the death of Eva Smith
·
Inspector tends to speak ‘dryly’ and ‘steadily’
occasionally suggesting a level of detachment or subtle address to the audience
·
He speaks to Sheila ‘harshly’ and ‘sternly’ -
Act 1
·
Inspector is inflexible and has a plan – ‘he
must wait his turn’
·
Inspector uses the word ‘mistress’ when
describing Gerald’s link to Eva Smith
·
Depending on the person, depends how vivid his
description of the death is. To Mrs Birling, he describes ‘she lies with a
burnt-out inside on a slab’
·
When referring to the sexual relations between
Eric and Eva Smith he refers to it as pretty ‘make love’
·
After the last revelation, the Inspector’s
speeches get lengthier
·
His last speech places him in the same position
of them – us, our, we, we, we, we. Then, he distances things by stating ‘I
tell’ and refer to people as ‘men’
·
Then, the last speech he ends by saying ‘Good
Night’ and no discussion of the procedure related to the case
·
Sheila describes him as ‘never seemed like an
ordinary police inspector – others late describe him as being ‘frightening’
(Sheila), ‘peculiar’, ‘suspicious’
(Birling), ‘rude, extraordinary’ (Mrs Birling)
·
Birling describes him as possibly being a
‘socialist’ or ‘crank’ – showing he seems they are both the same thing
Edna
·
Has the least amount of speech in the play
·
Only responds to orders
·
No opinions
·
Refers to characters as ‘sir’ and ‘ma’am’
·
Has no surname
Eva Smith
·
Not seen on stage at all
·
Inspector describes her as ‘not pretty’ after
the death but alive she had been ‘very pretty’
·
Twenty-four when she died
·
Each character knows her by a different name or
identity – Sheila is the only character to not know her by a specific name
·
Told Gerald when he left her that she was ‘the
happiest she has ever been’ with him
·
Eva Smith only lies at the end with Mrs Birling
and not before
·
Eric describes her as ‘pretty’ and a ‘good
sport’
·
Didn’t want Eric ‘to marry her’
·
The Inspector links Eva Smith to John Smith a
common name in British culture – meaning a common, ordinary person – an
everyman
Really great! Can I share with our students on our intranet please? xx
ReplyDeleteYes, that's fine. : )
DeleteReally useful information here. Although I always interpreted 'portentous' to mean pompous or self-important?
ReplyDeleteWell spotted. Thanks for pointing it out.
ReplyDeleteXris you are a star. I love the way you think - it helps my thinking about teaching no end!
ReplyDeleteHi Xris, would you be interested in having a look at our new GCSE revision platform? We offer it 100% free to students and teachers. This is one of our "An Inspector Calls" courses (we have a different one for each exam board): https://app.senecalearning.com/classroom/course/1bcb11c0-2c27-11e8-b18d-d1082cf88b6d/section/09145590-2c55-11e8-b18d-d1082cf88b6d
ReplyDeleteThank you!
(twitter @SenecaLearn)
Although this is now several months post your post (hehe), I wanted to drop a note to say I really enjoy reading these posts and they give me plenty to think about in my own practice- thank you! I have always felt the same about modern plays and the lack of 'juicy' language to analyse, however I'm often a bit embarrassed to point it out, fearing judgemental looks about all the 'juicy' bits I might have missed somewhere! In any case, I've been pushing the idea of a WIDER understanding of methods: characterisation, structure, character changes, stage directions, setting etc. It's given great AO2 material and stops students doing the whole 'retelling the story' thing.
ReplyDeleteThank you
ReplyDelete