Narrow Road to the Deep North
Narrow Road to the Deep North is a 1968 satirical play on the British Empire by the English playwright Edward Bond.
It is a political parable set in Japan in the Edo period. It deals with the poet Basho and the changing political landscape over about 35 years.
The play won Bond the John Whiting Award for 1968.
Quotation
The censor
Because of the play's scenes of violence, it was originally refused a theatrical license by the Lord Chamberlain, though permission was eventually given after Bond agreed to some last minute amendments.Original production
It was first performed in 1968 for the Peoples and Cities conference at the Belgrade Theatre, Coventry, in a production directed by Jane Howell:- Basho, old, a priest - Peter Needham
- Kiro, twenty - Paul Howes
- Argi - Malcolm Ingram
- Tola - Christopher Matthews
- Heigoo - John Rowe
- Breebree - Gordon Reid
- Shogo, twenty-five - Edward Peel
- Prime Minister - Peter Sproule
- Commodore, forty-seven - Nigel Hawthorne
- Georgina, thirty-nine - Susan Williamson
- Peasants, soldiers, tars, tribesmen, etc. -
- Alison King
- Diana Berriman
- Alan David
- Geoffrey White
- Vandra Edwards
- Malcolm Ingram
- Christopher Matthews
- John Rowe
- Gordon Reid
- Peter Sproule
Royal Court Theatre
Critical reception
Bond said he "knew the critics would like it, and they did." The IndependentAnn Marie Demling noted that it is one of the Bond plays to which "awards and citations of excellence have been given" along with Saved, Lear, Bingo and The Fool. Richard Stayton of Los Angeles Times wrote that "Bond’s metaphor for the Vietnam War unfortunately travels neatly into the 1990s as a mirror to such tragedies as Bosnia", but panned the performance he had seen. Gerry Colgan of The Irish Times wrote in 2001 that while Bond's works were not generally well-known in Ireland, Narrow Road to the Deep North was a play that had " down the years" along with Saved. Michael Mangan described it as one of Bond's "major plays" in a 2018 book on the dramatist. Academic Amer Hamed Suliman dubbed it "one of Edward Bond's most significant works" in 2019.