Synopses & Reviews
Seven passengers meet in the saloon bar of a ship as it sets sail from an unidentified English port. The travelers have more in common than they dare to suspect. A February 2012 production at the Finborough Theatre is the long overdue revival of this highly successful drama, last revived on Broadway in 1938.
Review
Justifies revival
Vane is clearly saying something about a 1920s England riddled with social injustice and spiritual ennui”
The GuardianRetains an uncanny compulsion” The Times
They really dont make em like this anymore
entertaining, grippingly paced, economically written, with big characters” Time Out
Synopsis
A smash hit, written in 1923, that enjoyed successful runs on the West End and Broadway.
Synopsis
Seven passengers meet in the saloon bar of a ship as it sets sail from an unidentified English port. Socialite Mrs Cliveden-Banks is on her way to join her husband, a Colonel in the army; Mr Lingley has important businessin Marseilles; charlady Mrs Midget is making her first passage by sea; Reverend William Duke is looking forward to a holiday, while Tom Prior intends to spend the journey in the ship's saloon bar. Also on board are Henry and Ann, a young couple who seem anxious for the ship to leave port. But the travellers have more incommon than they dare suspect. Out at sea, an eerie calm settles over the ship as Tom is the first to discover the fate which awaits his fellow passengers...
Outward Bound was one of the biggest West End and Broadway hits of the 1920s and was twice filmed. Its production at the Finborough Theatre in 2012 marks its first London run in more than fifty years.
About the Author
Sutton Vane (18881963) was a British actor and playwright. He started his career as an actor until the outbreak of the First World War. He joined up in 1914 at the age of 26 and served until he was invalided out due to shell-shock. Vane was haunted by his war experiences, and once he sufficiently recovered, he returned to the combat area as a civilian, appearing for the entertainment of troops near the front lines during the latter half of the war. After the Armistice, Vane turned to writing plays, and authored two conventional works that caused little stir. Outward Bound was his third play and the work for which he is now remembered.