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Lee HallLee Hall
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Critical perspective  
BiographyPlaywright Lee Hall was born in Newcastle in 1966. His acclaimed play Spoonface Steinberg (1997), a monologue for a nine-year-old autistic girl dying of cancer, was first broadcast by BBC Radio 4 in 1997. He subsequently adapted the play for television in 1998 and for the stage in 2000. He was appointed Writer in Residence at the Royal Shakespeare Company in 1999/2000 under the Pearson Playwrights Scheme Award.
Lee Hall co-wrote the screenplay for the film, Pride and Prejudice, in 2005, and adapted The Wind in the Willows for television, in 2006.
The Pitmen Painters (2008) is a new play premiered at the Live Theatre, Newcastle-upon-Tyne in 2007.    
  Genres (in alphabetical order)Drama, Radio drama     BibliographyI Luv You Jimmy Spud (audio cassette) BBC Audio, 1997 Spoonface Steinberg and Other Plays (BBC Radio 4's God's Country Series) BBC Books, 1997 Frontline Drama 7 (includes 'I Luv You Jimmy Spud' by Lee Hall) Methuen, 1998 A Servant to Two Masters/Carlo Goldoni (adaptation) Methuen, 1999 Billy Elliot (screenplay) Faber and Faber, 2000 Cooking With Elvis & Bollocks! Methuen, 2000 The Adventures of Pinocchio Methuen, 2000 The Good Hope Methuen, 2001 Plays One Methuen, 2002 Plays Two Methuen, 2003 The Pitmen Painters Faber and Faber, 2008  
  Critical PerspectiveLee Hall is a writer whose work is firmly rooted in the expression of the political through the personal. He is perhaps most associated with the film Billy Elliot (2000), for which he wrote the screenplay, and with Spoonface Steinberg (1997), written for radio and later adapted for the stage. Both works combine a popular appeal with a textual urge to express the extraordinariness of ‘ordinary’ lives. Taken together, the international movie and the monologue for radio can be seen to exemplify a number of Hall’s thematic and narrative concerns.
An impulse to defamiliarise the familiar characterises much of Hall’s work. In I Love You Jimmy Spud (1997) the decaying world of once-thriving shipyards and factories is ‘made strange’ by the transformation of the boy Jimmy into an angel. Cooking With Elvis (2000) finds the paralysed, mute Dad bursting into song in his one-time persona of Elvis impersonator. As a formal device the popular quiz show format is rendered ‘uncanny’ in Children of the Rain (published in Plays One, 2002). Normally associated with sparkly entertainment shows in which points mean prizes and often high financial rewards are at stake, in this version of the quiz the Quizmaster suggests ‘there are no right or wrong answers’ as he aggressively interrogates young children about the world and their own hopes and dreams.
In its broadest sense, the Uncanny is located within the psychoanalytical paradigm that emphasises the binaries of recognition and misrecognition, familiar and unfamiliar, particularly in terms of the ‘once-known’, now appearing disturbingly ‘different’. Thus the appearance of a once-familiar figure of any sort (Jimmy; quiz show host; wheelchair-bound dad) in an unexpected or unanticipated context (Jimmy-angel; Quizmaster in the classroom; dad-as-Elvis) might be termed uncanny.
Hall both engages with, and problematises, this notion in his use of the transformation of ‘familiar’ or recognised characters. As referred to above, the wheelchair-bound Dad ‘becomes’ Elvis; Jimmy Spud ‘becomes’ an angel. However, it is not only characters that are used to defamiliarise the narrative in some way: the form and context of the dramas hint at the uncanny nature of Hall’s world. The scene directions for Jimmy Spud contain numerous examples of the transformatory possibilities of both character and situation. Here Jimmy is at a funfair, being pursued by the strangely disturbing Gabriel – who may or may not be some kind of angel:
INT HALL OF MIRRORS.
GABRIEL (OOV): Excuse me.
Much of Hall’s humour – which has been variously described as ‘razor-sharp’ and ‘gut-wrenchingly funny’ – arises out of his exploration of the grotesque or monstrous. By grotesque we mean neither deformed nor absurd, but containing the potentiality to deform or make absurd; by monstrous we mean not physically hideous nor visually freakish, but either psychically or corporeally excessive. In both cases we mean a figure who poses a threat to borders and boundaries, whose own internal disharmonies and conflicts threaten to destabilise the social order.
Mam, in Cooking With Elvis, exemplifies this notion. Her desire cannot be contained by her physical boundaries – her body. Metaphorically, her lust protrudes, shoots out, resists containment – here in the form of linguistic expression. ‘I still want to laugh till it hurts and drink till I’m stupid and fuck till I’m numb.’ This mother is locked in a battle with her daughter Jill, who disapproves of the fact that ‘Mam’ - she is ‘named’ only Mam lest we should forget her ‘role’ – is having a very indiscreet sexual liaison with Stuart, a young baker, in the marital home. Through Jill’s monologues, which both introduce and comment upon the action, we learn of Dad’s accident and Mam’s insatiable appetite for sex which can no longer be satisfied by her husband. Mam’s sexual need is echoed in Jill’s appetite for food – Jill is seriously overweight and getting larger, as if her mother’s unspeakable desire has been acted out through the body of her daughter.
These connections between parents and their children - both literal and metaphorical – are often used to drive Hall’s narratives forward. In Billy Elliot, Dad’s slow acceptance of his son’s dancing ability is interweaved with Dad’s own acknowledgment of his flawed masculinity. In Two’s Company – in which the man, Karaoke Master, has two wives and two sets of children – the connection between the man and his children from his original marriage becomes so powerful that his ‘parallel’ wife only has to look closely at him to ‘know’ the truth. The truth of parenthood is somehow written on his body. Indeed, in many of Hall’s plays that feature children and/or young teenagers it is the ways in which their inner worlds intersect with and impact upon the exterior worlds of reason and authority that provide the narrative dynamic.
Frances Piper, 2004  
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