Kitchen sink realism
Kitchen sink realism is a British cultural movement that developed in the late 1950s and early 1960s in theatre, art, novels, mainstream and independent cinema, and television, whose protagonists usually could be described as "angry young men" who were disillusioned with modern society. It used a style of social realism which depicted the domestic situations of working-class Britons, living in cramped rented accommodation and spending their off-hours drinking in grimy pubs, to explore controversial social and political issues ranging from abortion to homelessness. The harsh, realistic style contrasted sharply with the escapism of the previous generation's so-called "well-made plays".
The films, plays and novels employing this style are often set in poorer industrial areas in the North of England, and use the accents and slang heard in those regions. The films It Always Rains on Sunday and The Blue Lamp are precursors of the genre, and the John Osborne play Look Back in Anger is thought of as the first of the genre. The gritty love-triangle of Look Back in Anger, for example, takes place in a cramped, one-room flat in the English Midlands. Shelagh Delaney's 1958 play A Taste of Honey is about a white teenage schoolgirl who has an affair with a black sailor, gets pregnant and then moves in with a gay male acquaintance; it raises issues such as class, ethnicity, gender and sexual orientation. The conventions of the genre have continued into the 2000s, finding expression in such television shows as Coronation Street and EastEnders.
The term "Kitchen Sink School" was first used in the visual arts, where the art critic David Sylvester used it in 1954 to describe a group of painters who called themselves the Beaux Arts Quartet, and depicted social realist–type scenes of domestic life.
History
The cultural movement was rooted in the ideals of social realism, an artistic movement expressed in the visual and other realist arts which depicts working class activities. Many artists who subscribed to social realism were painters with socialist political views. While the movement has some commonalities with Socialist Realism, another style of realism which was the "official art" advocated by the governments of the Soviet Union and other Eastern Bloc countries, the two had several differences. While social realism is a broader type of art that realistically depicts subjects of social concern, Socialist realism is characterized by the glorified depiction of socialist values, such as the emancipation of the proletariat, in a realistic manner.Unlike Socialist realism, social realism is not an official art produced by or under the supervision of the government. The leading characters are often 'anti-heroes' rather than part of a class to be admired, as in Socialist realism. Typically, protagonists in social realism are dissatisfied with their working class lives and the world, rather than being idealised workers who are part of a Socialist utopia in the process of creation. As such, social realism allows more space for the subjectivity of the author to be displayed.
Partly, social realism developed as a reaction against Romanticism, which promoted lofty concepts such as the "ineffable" beauty and truth of art and music and even turned them into spiritual ideals. As such, social realism focused on the "ugly realities of contemporary life and sympathized with working-class people, particularly the poor.".
Features
Kitchen sink realism involves working class settings and accents, including accents from Northern England. The films and plays often explore taboo subjects such as adultery, pre-marital sex, abortion, and crime.Origins of the term
In the United Kingdom, the term "kitchen sink" derived from expressionist paintings by John Bratby that contained an image of a kitchen sink. Bratby did various kitchen and bathroom-themed paintings, including three paintings of toilets. Bratby's paintings of people often depicted the faces of his subjects as desperate and unsightly. Kitchen sink realism artists painted everyday objects, such as trash cans and beer bottles. The critic David Sylvester wrote an article in 1954 about trends in recent English art, calling his article "The Kitchen Sink" in reference to Bratby's picture. Sylvester argued that there was a new interest among young painters in domestic scenes, with stress on the banality of life. Other artists associated with the kitchen sink style include Derrick Greaves, Edward Middleditch and Jack Smith.1950s to 1960s
Before the 1950s, the United Kingdom's working class were often depicted stereotypically in Noël Coward's drawing room comedies and British films. Kitchen sink realism was seen as being in opposition to the "well-made play", the kind which theatre critic Kenneth Tynan once denounced as being set in "Loamshire", of dramatists like Terence Rattigan. "Well-made plays" were a dramatic genre from nineteenth-century theatre which found its early 20th-century codification in Britain in the form of William Archer's Play-Making: A Manual of Craftmanship, and in the United States with George Pierce Baker's Dramatic Technique. Kitchen sink works were created with the intention of changing that. Their political views were initially labeled as radical, sometimes even anarchic.John Osborne's play Look Back in Anger depicted young men in a way that is similar to the then-contemporary "Angry Young Men" movement of film and theatre directors. The "angry young men" were a group of mostly working and middle class British playwrights and novelists who became prominent in the 1950s. Following the success of the Osborne play, the label "angry young men" was later applied by British media to describe young writers who were characterised by a disillusionment with traditional British society. The hero of Look Back In Anger is a graduate, but he is working in a manual occupation. It dealt with social alienation, the claustrophobia and frustrations of a provincial life on low incomes.
The impact of this work inspired Arnold Wesker, Shelagh Delaney, and numerous others, to write plays of their own. The English Stage Company at the Royal Court Theatre, headed by George Devine and Theatre Workshop organised by Joan Littlewood were particularly prominent in bringing these plays to public attention. Critic John Heilpern wrote that Look Back in Anger expressed such "immensity of feeling and class hatred" that it altered the course of English theatre. The term "Angry theatre" was coined by critic John Russell Taylor.
This was all part of the British New Wave—a transposition of the concurrent nouvelle vague film movement in France, some of whose works, such as The 400 Blows of 1959, also emphasised the lives of the urban proletariat. British filmmakers such as Tony Richardson and Lindsay Anderson channelled their vitriolic anger into film making. Confrontational films such as Saturday Night and Sunday Morning and A [Taste of Honey (film)|A Taste of Honey] were noteworthy movies in the genre. Saturday Night and Sunday Morning is about a young machinist who spends his wages at weekends on drinking and having a good time, until his affair with a married woman leads to her getting pregnant and him being beaten by her husband's cousins to the point of hospitalisation. A Taste of Honey is about a 16-year old schoolgirl with an abusive, alcoholic mother. The schoolgirl starts a relationship with a black sailor and gets pregnant. After the sailor leaves on his ship, Jo moves in with a homosexual acquaintance who assumes the role of surrogate father. A Taste of Honey raises the issues of class, race, gender and sexual orientation.
Later, as many of these writers and directors diversified, kitchen sink realism was taken up by television directors who produced television plays. The single play was then a staple of the medium, and Armchair Theatre, produced by the ITV contractor Weekend TV|ABC], The Wednesday Play and Play for Today, both BBC series, contained many works of this kind. Jeremy Sandford's television play Cathy Come Home for instance, addressed the issue of homelessness.
Kitchen sink realism was used in the novels of Stan Barstow, John Braine, Alan Sillitoe and others.
Since the 1960s
Internationally, the style of kitchen sink realism has been utilized in various films from different cultures. For example, in the United States, such films as Nothing but a Man ; One Potato, Two Potato ; A Patch of Blue ; and The Subject Was Roses, among others, have been specifically identified with the terminology.The influence of kitchen sink realism has continued in the work of other more recent British directors such as Ken Loach and Mike Leigh. Subsequent re-emergence in the 1980s produced such female-centric contemporary kitchen sink-influenced films as Wish You Were Here ; Educating Rita and Shirley Valentine —both directed by Alfies Lewis Gilbert; the titular twins' biopic, The Krays ; Rita, Sue and Bob Too ; and others.
Other present-day directors who have continued working within the spirit of kitchen sink realism include Andrea Arnold, Shane Meadows, Lynne Ramsay, Clio Barnard, and Andrew Haigh. The term "neo kitchen sink" has been used for films such as Leigh's Vera Drake, Loach's I, Daniel Blake, Arnold's Fish Tank, Ramsay's Ratcatcher, Meadows's This Is England, Haigh's Weekend, and Barnard's The Selfish Giant. This also includes directorial debuts from actors Gary Oldman, Nil by Mouth ; Tim Roth, The War Zone ; Peter Mullan, My Name Is Joe ; Richard Ayoade, Submarine ; and Paddy Considine, Tyrannosaur ; among others.
Notable figures of the movement
Actors
- Jenny Agutter
- Harry Andrews
- Jane Asher
- Richard Attenborough
- Hermione Baddeley
- Harry Baird
- Stanley Baker
- Anne Bancroft
- Ian Bannen
- Alan Bates
- Tom Bell
- Hywel Bennett
- Norman Bird
- Colin Blakely
- Claire Bloom
- Dirk Bogarde
- James Bolam
- James Booth
- Wilfrid Brambell
- Dora Bryan
- Johnny Briggs
- Eleanor Bron
- Avis Bunnage
- Richard Burton
- Sean Caffrey
- Michael Caine
- Earl Cameron
- Julie Christie
- Diane Cilento
- Bonar Colleano
- Sean Connery
- Tom Courtenay
- Brian Cox
- Michael Craig
- Michael Crawford
- Rosalie Crutchley
- Peggy Cummins
- Roland Curram
- Finlay Currie
- Cyril Cusack
- Phil Daniels
- Nigel Davenport
- Bette Davis
- Daniel Day-Lewis
- Brenda de Banzie
- Judi Dench
- Diana Dors
- Ruth Dunning
- Samantha Eggar
- Denholm Elliott
- Edith Evans
- Adam Faith
- Hilda Fenemore
- Barbara Ferris
- Shirley Anne Field
- Peter Finch
- Albert Finney
- Julia Foster
- Pamela Franklin
- Liz Fraser
- Judy Geeson
- Susan George
- Julian Glover
- Vanda Godsell
- Kenneth Haigh
- Richard Harris
- Kathleen Harrison
- William Hartnell
- Laurence Harvey
- Murray Head
- David Hemmings
- Ian Hendry
- Anne Heywood
- Thora Hird
- Ian Holm
- John Hurt
- Glenda Jackson
- Geoffrey Keen
- Suzy Kendall
- Deborah Kerr
- Avice Landone
- Angela Lansbury
- Bernard Lee
- Herbert Lom
- Alfred Lynch
- Ann Lynn
- Patrick Magee
- Alfred Marks
- Millicent Martin
- Virginia Maskell
- James Mason
- David McCallum
- John McCallum
- Malcolm McDowell
- Peter McEnery
- Virginia McKenna
- Ian McShane
- Murray Melvin
- Vivien Merchant
- Sarah Miles
- Hayley Mills
- John Mills
- Warren Mitchell
- Yvonne Mitchell
- Terence Morgan
- Kenneth More
- Janet Munro
- John Neville
- Anthony Newley
- Nanette Newman
- Dandy Nichols
- Peter O’Toole
- Laurence Olivier
- Nigel Patrick
- Donald Pleasence
- Joan Plowright
- Eric Portman
- Adrienne Posta
- Dennis Price
- Anthony Quayle
- Charlotte Rampling
- Andrew Ray
- Gary Raymond
- Lynn Redgrave
- Michael Redgrave
- Vanessa Redgrave
- Oliver Reed
- Beryl Reid
- Marjorie Rhodes
- June Ritchie
- Rachel Roberts
- Paul Rogers
- Norman Rossington
- Tim Roth
- Peter Sellers
- Robert Shaw
- Susan Shaw
- Geraldine Sherman
- Simone Signoret
- Alastair Sim
- Gerald Sim
- John Gordon Sinclair
- Maggie Smith
- Terence Stamp
- Ringo Starr
- Robert Stephens
- Francis L. Sullivan
- Dudley Sutton
- Sylvia Syms
- Sydney Tafler
- Richard Todd
- Rita Tushingham
- Mary Ure
- James Villiers
- Kay Walsh
- David Warner
- Mona Washbourne
- Alan Webb
- Carol White
- Billie Whitelaw
- Stuart Whitman
- Richard Widmark
- Billy Dee Williams
- Ray Winstone
- Googie Withers
- Donald Wolfit
- Susannah York
- Mai Zetterling
Cinematographers / directors / writers
- Lindsay Anderson
- Roy Ward Baker
- Lynne Reid Banks
- Stan Barstow
- Mary Hayley Bell
- Boulting Brothers
- Muriel Box
- Sydney Box
- John Braine
- Jack Cardiff
- Alan Clarke
- T. E. B. Clarke
- Jack Clayton
- Peter Collinson
- Lance Comfort
- Denys Coop
- Charles Crichton
- Jules Dassin
- Desmond Davis
- Basil Dearden
- Shelagh Delaney
- Clive Donner
- Nell Dunn
- Clive Exton
- Richard Fleischer
- Bryan Forbes
- Bill Forsyth
- Freddie Francis
- William Friedkin
- Sidney J. Furie
- Lewis Gilbert
- Sidney Gilliat
- Peter Glenville
- Guy Green
- Janet Green
- Val Guest
- Peter Hall
- Willis Hall
- Robert Hamer
- Vernon Harris
- Sidney Hayers
- James Hill
- Barry Hines
- Ken Hughes
- Nigel Kneale
- Hanif Kureishi
- Gavin Lambert
- Walter Lassally
- David Lean
- Jack Lee
- Stephen Lewis
- Mike Leigh
- Richard Lester
- Joan Littlewood
- Ken Loach
- Joseph Losey
- Sidney Lumet
- Stanley Mann
- Lorenza Mazzetti
- Paul McCartney
- Peter Medak
- David Mercer
- John Mortimer
- Silvio Narizzano
- Bill Naughton
- Peter Nichols
- Edna O’Brien
- Joe Orton
- John Osborne
- Horace Ové
- Alun Owen
- Gordon Parry
- Trevor Peacock
- Nicholas Phipps
- Harold Pinter
- Barney Platts-Mills
- Frederic Raphael
- Carol Reed
- Karel Reisz
- Tony Richardson
- Mordecai Richler
- Wolf Rilla
- Bruce Robinson
- Jeremy Sandford
- John Schlesinger
- Menelik Shabazz
- Alan Sillitoe
- Anthony Simmons
- David Storey
- Ralph Thomas
- J. Lee Thompson
- Keith Waterhouse
- Jiří Weiss
- Arnold Wesker
- Ted Willis
- Michael Winner
List of films
1947–1958
- Holiday Camp
- It Always Rains on Sunday
- Made Me a Fugitive">Made (1972 film)">Made Me a Fugitive
- Brighton Rock
- Good-Time Girl
- London Belongs to Me
- The Lost People
- The Small Back Room
- The Blue Lamp
- The Clouded Yellow
- Dance Hall
- Night and the City
- Pool of London
- There Is Another Sun
- Hunted
- Wide Boy
- Women of Twilight
- Cosh Boy
- Street Corner
- Turn the Key Softly
- The Good Die Young
- Hobson's Choice
- Cast a Dark Shadow
- A Kid for Two Farthings
- Together
- A Town Like Alice
- Yield to the Night
- The Heart Within
- Hell Drivers
- Woman in a Dressing Gown
- Carve Her Name with Pride
- A Cry from the Streets
- Innocent Sinners
- Nowhere to Go
- Passport to Shame
- Room at the Top
- Tread Softly Stranger
- ''Violent Playground''
1959–1963
- Blind Date
- Look Back in Anger
- No Trees in the Street
- Sapphire
- Serious Charge
- Subway in the Sky
- Tiger Bay
- We Are the Lambeth Boys
- The Angry Silence
- Beat Girl
- The Concrete Jungle
- The Entertainer
- Hell Is a City
- Jackpot
- Never Let Go
- Never Take Sweets from a Stranger
- Peeping Tom
- Saturday Night and Sunday Morning
- Sons and Lovers
- Too Young to Love
- The Day the Earth Caught Fire
- Flame in the Streets
- The Frightened City
- The Greengage Summer
- Hand in Hand
- The Innocents
- The Kitchen
- The Mark
- No Love for Johnnie
- Offbeat
- Payroll
- Rag Doll
- Spare the Rod
- A Taste of Honey
- Victim
- Whistle [Down the Wind (film)|Whistle Down the Wind]
- The [Wind of Change (film)|The Wind of Change]
- All Night Long
- The Boys
- A Kind of Loving
- The L-Shaped Room
- Life for Ruth
- Live Now – Pay Later
- The [Loneliness of the Long Distance Runner (film)|The Loneliness of the Long Distance Runner]
- Lunch Hour
- Only Two Can Play
- The Painted Smile
- A Prize of Arms
- Reach for Glory
- Some People
- Term of Trial
- These Are the Damned
- The Wild and the Willing
- Billy Liar
- Bitter Harvest
- The Caretaker
- The Informers
- Lord of the Flies
- The Mind Benders
- A Place to Go
- The Servant
- The Small World of Sammy Lee
- Sparrows Can't Sing
- That Kind of Girl
- This Sporting Life
- Tom Jones
- Tomorrow at Ten
- Two Left Feet
- West 11
- What a Crazy World
- The World Ten Times Over
- ''The Yellow Teddy Bears''
1964–1969
- The Comedy Man
- Girl with Green Eyes
- Guns at Batasi
- A [Hard Day's Night (film)|A Hard Day's Night]
- It Happened Here
- King & Country
- The Leather Boys
- Night Must Fall
- Nothing but the Best
- The Pumpkin Eater
- Séance on a Wet Afternoon
- The System
- This Is My Street
- 90° in the Shade
- Bunny Lake Is Missing
- Catch Us If You Can
- The Collector
- Darling
- Four in the Morning
- He Who Rides a Tiger
- The Knack...and How to Get It
- Life at the Top
- The Little Ones
- Return from the Ashes
- The Spy Who Came [In from the Cold (film)|The Spy Who Came in from the Cold]
- Alfie
- Blowup
- Cathy Come Home
- The Family Way
- Georgy Girl
- I Was Happy Here
- Morgan – A Suitable Case for Treatment
- The War Game
- Accident
- The Deadly Affair
- I'll Never Forget What's'isname
- Our Mother's House
- The Penthouse
- Poor Cow
- Red, White and Zero
- Robbery
- Two for the Road
- The Whisperers
- The Birthday Party
- Charlie Bubbles
- Deadfall
- If....
- Inadmissible Evidence
- The Long Day's Dying
- Negatives
- Secret Ceremony
- Twisted Nerve
- Up the Junction
- 3 into 2 Won't Go
- All Neat in Black Stockings
- Kes
- The [Prime of Miss Jean Brodie (film)|The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie]
- Three
- Where's Jack?
- ''Women in Love''
1970–1980
- All the Right Noises
- And Soon the Darkness
- Bronco Bullfrog
- The Buttercup Chain
- Connecting Rooms
- Deep End
- Entertaining Mr Sloane
- Goodbye Gemini
- I Start Counting
- Loot
- Mumsy, Nanny, Sonny and Girly
- Performance.
- Spring and Port Wine
- The Walking Stick
- 10 Rillington Place
- Bleak Moments
- Family Life
- The Go-Between
- Gumshoe
- The Night Digger
- Private Road
- The Raging Moon
- Say Hello to Yesterday
- Straw Dogs
- Sunday Bloody Sunday
- Unman, Wittering and Zigo
- When Eight Bells Toll
- A Day in the Death of Joe Egg
- Endless Night
- Frenzy
- Made
- The Ragman's Daughter
- The Ruling Class
- Running Scared
- Straight On 'till Morning
- The 14
- The Hireling
- The Homecoming
- O Lucky Man!
- The Offence
- That'll Be the Day
- Voices
- Butley
- Little Malcolm and His Struggle Against the Eunuchs
- Stardust
- In Celebration
- The Romantic Englishwoman
- Pressure
- Voyage of the Damned
- Equus
- Stevie
- Quadrophenia
- Scum
- That Sinking Feeling
- Gregory's Girl
- ''The Long Good Friday''
1981–1991
- The [French Lieutenant's Woman (film)|The French Lieutenant's Woman]
- Looks and Smiles
- Britannia Hospital
- Burning an Illusion
- Educating Rita
- Local Hero
- Made in Britain
- Meantime
- The Chain
- Dance with a Stranger
- My Beautiful Laundrette
- Sid & Nancy
- Prick Up Your Ears
- Rita, Sue and Bob Too
- Wish You Were Here
- Withnail and I
- We Think the World of You
- Shirley Valentine
- The Krays
- Truly, Madly, Deeply
- Let Him Have It
- ''London Kills Me''