This May Hurt A Bit (NHB Modern Plays)
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About this ebook
A month after stating 'we will stop the top-down reorganisation of the NHS that has got in the way of patient care', the government launched the biggest top-down reorganisation the service had seen in its 65-year history.
Stella Feehily's play explores one family's journey through the digestive system of the NHS, and asks: what is the prognosis for this much-loved institution?
This May Hurt A Bit premiered in 2014, on a UK tour co-produced by Out of Joint, and Octagon Theatre, Bolton.
'urgent, clever, anarchic... I defy anyone to leave without a renewed sense of pride in our greatest institution, and some serious concerns about its future.' - Time Out
'surreal, hilarious and hard-hitting' as theatrically entertaining as it is politically committed' - Observer
'urgently topical' a passionate defence of nationalised medicine and a call to fight for its preservation - Guardian
Stella Feehily
Stella Feehily's other plays include Duck, O go my Man and Bang Bang Bang (Royal Court Theatre), Dreams of Violence (Soho Theatre) and This May Hurt a Bit (tour and St James's Theatre).
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Book preview
This May Hurt A Bit (NHB Modern Plays) - Stella Feehily
Stella Feehily
THIS MAY HURT
A BIT
NICK HERN BOOKS
London
www.nickhernbooks.co.uk
Contents
Title Page
Original Production
Acknowledgements
Dedication
Characters
This May Hurt A Bit
NHS SOS by Jacky Davis
About the Author
Copyright and Performing Rights Information
This May Hurt A Bit was first performed at the Theatre Royal, Bury St Edmonds, on 6 March 2014, before touring to Octagon Theatre Bolton; Traverse Theatre, Edinburgh; Everyman Theatre Cheltenham; Oxford Playhouse; Bristol Old Vic; Liverpool Playhouse and the St James Theatre, London. The cast was as follows:
Acknowledgements
With thanks to Tom Morris, Sebastian Born, the National Theatre Studio, Laura Collier, Colin Ludlow, Lord Kinnock, Nick Hern, Jacky Davis, Louise Irvine, Dr Lucy Reynolds, Nicholas Timmins, Roy Lilley, Lucy Briers, Nigel Cooke, Lorna Brown, Susan Engel, David Rintoul, Julian Wadham, Karina Fernandez, Matthew Needham, Niamh Cusack, Ian and Kay Redford, Dr Polly Brown, Out of Joint, Mel Kenyon, Nigel Stafford-Clark, Bolton Octagon, Dr Bob Gill, Allyson Pollock, Nina Steiger, Tim Hoare, Kara Manning, Sally McKenna, Sarah Liisa Wilkinson and last but very definitely not least Max Stafford-Clark.
This May Hurt A Bit was developed in association with the National Theatre Studio and Out of Joint.
The books and materials that I referred to when researching the play were: Hansard February 9th 1948; Hansard April 23rd 1951; In Place of Fear by Aneurin Bevan; Pollock A, Price D and Harding-Edgar L (2013) Briefing paper – the NHS reinstatement bill open democracy, January, www.opendemocracy.net/ournhs/allyson-pollock-david-price-louisa-harding-edgar/briefing-paper-nhs-reinstatement-bill; www.socialinvestigations.blog-spot.it/2012/02/nhs-privatisation-compilation-of.html; Foundation Trust News Report 2013; Never Again? by Nicholas Timmins; NHS SOS by Jacky Davis and Raymond Tallis; The Plot Against The NHS by Colin Leys and Stewart Player; Dr Lucy Reynolds talks to Jill Mountford (BMJ website); NHS PLC by Allyson Pollock
Special thanks to Frank and Elizabeth Brenan
S.F.
For Jacky Davis, Louise Irvine, Lucy Reynolds
And all those fighting to protect our National Health Service
Characters
ANEURIN BEVAN
PRIME MINISTER
MILES, senior civil servant
NICHOLAS JAMES
MR WEAVER, consultant urologist
TABITHA, receptionist, auxiliary nurse
DANNY, prisoner
SAM, police officer
CASSANDRA, lady in the audience
THE NHS
IRIS JAMES
MARIEL JAMES
DR HANK QUESTEL
WINSTON CHURCHILL
ALY, public-health researcher
BEA, public-health researcher
ROGER, paramedic 1
TERRY, paramedic 2
WENDY, a pretty weather girl
GINA, nurse
DINAH, patient on geriatric ward
JOHN, stroke patient
ARCHIE, hospital porter
MILTON, a Conservative campaign strategist
DR GRAY, consultant
THE GRIM REAPER
The play can be performed by a cast of eight with the following doubling of roles:
IRIS
NICHOLAS / PRIME MINISTER
ANEURIN BEVAN / DANNY / TERRY / ARCHIE
WINSTON CHURCHILL / MR WEAVER / ROGER / JOHN / MILTON
MARIEL / THE NHS /
TABITHA / DINAH / BEA / DR GRAY
HANK / MILES / SAM / THE GRIM REAPER
GINA / CASSANDRA / ALY / WENDY
Board of Directors to be played by all members of cast
This ebook was created before the end of rehearsals and so may differ slightly from the play as performed.
Scene One
In the Beginning
ANEURIN BEVAN. Mr Speaker, I beg to move:
That this House takes note that the appointed day for the National Health Service has been fixed for July 5th and welcomes the coming into force on that date of this measure which offers to all sections of the community comprehensive medical care and treatment and lays for the first time a sound foundation for the health of the people. The House will recollect that this debate was requested from this side of the House, and not by the Opposition. There is some significance in that fact. During the last six months to a year there has been a sustained propaganda in the newspapers supporting the Party opposite. There has been even worse misrepresentation, sustained by a campaign of personal abuse, from the BMA. From the very beginning, this small body of politically poisoned people have decided to fight the Health Act itself and to stir up as much emotion as they can in the profession. It has been suggested that one of the reasons why the medical profession are so stirred up is because of personal deficiencies of my own but it can hardly be suggested that conflict between the British Medical Association and the Minister of the day is a consequence of any deficiencies that I possess, because we have never been able yet to appoint a Minister of Health with whom the BMA agreed. My distinguished fellow countryman (Lloyd George) had quite a little difficulty with them. He was a Liberal, and they found him an anathema. Then there was Mr Ernest Brown who was a Liberal National, whatever that might mean, representing a Scottish constituency. They found him abominable. As for Mr Willink, a Conservative representing an English constituency, they found him intolerable. I am a Welshman, a Socialist representing a Welsh constituency, and they find me even more impossible. It is a quality which I appear to share in common with every Minister of Health whom the British Medical Association have met.
May I say this in conclusion? I think it is a sad reflection that this great Act, to which every Party has made its contribution should have so stormy a birth.
We ought to take pride in the fact that, despite our financial and economic anxieties, we are still able to do the most civilised thing in the