Joe Orton was born John Kingsley Orton in Leicester 1933. A gifted farceur and black humourist, Orton's major works are
Entertaining Mr Sloane(1964),
Loot(1966), and the posthumously produced
What the Butler Saw(1969). His style mixed the comic business of farce with an incisive portrait of a society in transition amidst the social and sexual liberation of the 1960s and the linguistic anarchy unleashed by the burgeoning influence of the mass media. Terence Rattigan, amongst Orton's early admirers and champions, observed that: “What Orton had to say about England and society had never been said before. The first thing it showed was a society diminished by telly-technology. Everybody expresses themselves as if they were brought up on television.” Rattigan is referring here to…
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Citation: Dorney, Kate. "Joe Orton". The Literary Encyclopedia. First published 21 October 2005; last revised 03 July 2022. [https://www.litencyc.com/php/speople.php?rec=true&UID=3432, accessed 23 November 2024.]