Gas Light
(known in the USA as Angel Street
) is a 1938 play by the British dramatist Patrick Hamilton.
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ANGEL STREET TICKETS
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Synopsis
The play is set in
fog-bound
London in 1880 at the
lower middle class home of Jack Manningham and his wife Bella. It is late afternoon, a time which Hamilton notes as being the time "before the feeble dawn of gaslight and tea".
At the opening of the drama Bella is clearly on edge, and the stern reproaches from her overbearing husband (who flirts with the servants) makes matters worse. What most perturbs Bella is Manningham's unexplained disappearances from the house: he will not tell her where he is going, and this increases her anxiety. As the drama unfolds, it becomes clear that Manningham is intent on convincing Bella that she is going mad, even to the point of assuring her she is 'imagining' the gas light in the house is dipping.
The appearance of a police detective called Rough soon leads Bella to realise that far from going mad, she is married to a
psychopath. Rough explains that the apartment above was once occupied by one Alice Barlow, a wealthy woman who was murdered for her jewels but that the murderer never uncovered them.
It transpires that Manningham goes to the flat each night, searching for the jewels and causing the light in the house below to go down. Rough convinces Bella to assist him in exposing Manningham as the murderer, which she does, but not before she takes revenge on Manningham by pretending to help him escape. At the last minute she reminds him that, having gone 'mad', she is not accountable for her actions. The play closes with Manningham being led away by the police.
Critical reception
Gas Light
was an immense hit on its release, and it remains one of the
longest-running non-musicals in
Broadway history.
[1] It remains a perennial favourite with both
repertory and amateur theatre companies.
Film adaptations
The play has been filmed twice under the title
Gaslight
:
- Gaslight (1940 film)
- Gaslight (1944 film)