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Funeral Games is a 50 minute television play by Joe Orton. Along with Orton's The Good and Faithful Servant, the play was originally written for the Associated Rediffusion series Seven Deadly Virtues, the sequel to its earlier Seven Deadly Sins, which had included his The Erpingham Camp. The play can be seen as a satire on the theme of Christian charity. It is also an attack on hypocrisy in general, and on religion and middle-class morality in particular. It displays Orton's hallmarks of black humour, outrageous characters, deliberate bad taste and surreal situations.

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  • Funeral Games is a 50 minute television play by Joe Orton. Along with Orton's The Good and Faithful Servant, the play was originally written for the Associated Rediffusion series Seven Deadly Virtues, the sequel to its earlier Seven Deadly Sins, which had included his The Erpingham Camp. Funeral Games followed the general format of the other plays by other writers in the series, in that viewers were expected to decide which virtue they were witnessing before the answer was revealed in the closing credits. The choices were courage, faith, hope, prudence, justice, charity, and temperance. The Good And Faithful Servant and Funeral Games represented faith and justice respectively, but ultimately only the first was included in the series, with the justice episode being The Whole Truth by John Bowen. Both were directed by James Ormerod, who had previously handled The Erpingham Camp. The Funeral Games script eventually passed to Yorkshire Television, which produced it - along with an adaptation Entertaining Mr Sloane - as contributions to the Playhouse series. Sloane (directed by Peter Moffatt) was broadcast on 15 July 1968, and Games (directed by Ormerod) on 26 August 1968, both post-dating Orton's death. Both these plays still exist. The play can be seen as a satire on the theme of Christian charity. It is also an attack on hypocrisy in general, and on religion and middle-class morality in particular. It displays Orton's hallmarks of black humour, outrageous characters, deliberate bad taste and surreal situations. (en)
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  • Pringle, Caulfield, Tess, McCorquodale, Police Officers
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  • 0273618
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  • 1968-08-26 (xsd:date)
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  • 1968-01-01 (xsd:gYear)
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  • 26977505 (xsd:integer)
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  • 5599 (xsd:nonNegativeInteger)
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  • 1083282549 (xsd:integer)
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  • Cover of First edition, Methuen 1970 (en)
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  • Pringle, Caulfield, Tess, McCorquodale, Police Officers (en)
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  • Funeral Games (en)
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  • 1968-08-26 (xsd:date)
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  • Funeral Games is a 50 minute television play by Joe Orton. Along with Orton's The Good and Faithful Servant, the play was originally written for the Associated Rediffusion series Seven Deadly Virtues, the sequel to its earlier Seven Deadly Sins, which had included his The Erpingham Camp. The play can be seen as a satire on the theme of Christian charity. It is also an attack on hypocrisy in general, and on religion and middle-class morality in particular. It displays Orton's hallmarks of black humour, outrageous characters, deliberate bad taste and surreal situations. (en)
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  • Funeral Games (play) (en)
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  • Funeral Games (en)
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