Inadmissible Evidence

Play

Writers: John Osborne

Overview

Show Information

Category
Play
Number of Acts
2
First Produced
1964
Genres
Drama
Settings
Period, Unit/Single Set
Time & Place
A lawyer's office, England, 1964
Cast Size
medium
Ideal for
College/University, Professional Theatre, Regional Theatre, Star Vehicle Male
Casting Notes

Includes adult, young adult, mature adult, late teen characters

Synopsis

Inadmissible Evidence is arguably John Osborne’s most personal play, written at a time when he was governed by fear and anxiety. The play revolves around Bill Maitland, a seedy, sex-obsessed lawyer in middle-aged meltdown. Plagued by neurotic headaches and endlessly searching for pills that he can never find, Bill is Osborne’s Everyman coming apart in the dawn of new technologies and hopelessly trying to figure out his place in the world. As the play opens, Bill is trapped on trial in the courtroom of his own mind for the terrible crime that is his own mediocre existence. He has come to realize that his life is an utter disaster. He is bored with the family he has created and the women he keeps on the side, and the sordid divorce cases that dominate his flatlining career. His cruelty towards them and his colleagues brings justice upon his head when he is ultimately abandoned by everyone who shares his life in some way.

Both compelling and provocative, Inadmissible Evidence shows us a man in the midst of tearing apart his own life and unable (and unwilling) to put it back together. It is a challenging role for a lead male actor to get their teeth into, with many lengthy monologues throughout the play.

Lead Characters


Inadmissible Evidence guide sections