Look Back in Anger Summary
Look
Back in Anger begins
in the attic flat apartment of Jimmy Porter and Alison Porter. The setting is mid-1950's small town
England. Jimmy and Alison share their apartment with Cliff Lewis, a young working class man who is best friends with Jimmy.
Cliff and Jimmy both come from a working class background, though Jimmy has had
more education than Cliff. They are in business together running a sweet-stall.
Alison comes from a more prominent family and it is clear from the beginning
that Jimmy resents this fact.
The
first act opens on a Sunday in April. Jimmy and Cliff are reading the Sunday
papers while Alison is ironing in a corner of the room. Jimmy is a hot tempered
young man and he begins to try and provoke both Cliff and Alison. He is
antagonistic towards Cliff's working class background and makes fun of him for
his low intelligence. Cliff is good natured and takes the antagonism. Jimmy
attempts to provoke his wife, Alison, by making fun of her family and her
well-heeled life before she married him. Jimmy also seems to display a
nostalgia for England's powerful past. He notes that the world has entered a "dreary"
American age, a fact he begrudgingly accepts. Alison tires of Jimmy's rants and
begs for peace. This makes Jimmy more fevered in his insults. Cliff attempts to
keep peace between the two and this leads to a playful scuffle between the two.
Their wrestling ends up running into Alison, causing her to fall down. Jimmy is
sorry for the incident, but Alison makes him leave the room.
After Jimmy leaves, Alison confides to
Cliff that she is pregnant with Jimmy's child, though she has not yet told
Jimmy. Cliff advises her to tell him, but when Cliff goes out and Jimmy
re-enters the room, the two instead fall into an intimate game. Jimmy
impersonates a stuffed bear and Alison impersonates a toy squirrel. Cliff
returns to tell Alison that her old friend, Helena Charles, has called her on the phone. Alison
leaves to take the call and returns with the news that Helena is coming to stay
for a visit. Jimmy does not like Helena and goes into a rage in which he wishes
that Alison would suffer in order to know what it means to be a real person. He
curses her and wishes that she could have a child only to watch it die.
Two
weeks later, Helena has arrived and Alison discusses her relationship with
Jimmy. She tells of how they met and how, in their younger days, they used to
crash parties with their friend Hugh Tanner. Jimmy maintains an affection for
Hugh's mother, though his relationship with Hugh was strained when Hugh left to
travel the world and Jimmy stayed to be with Alison. Jimmy seems to regret that
he could not leave, but he is also angry at Hugh for abandoning his mother.
Helena inquires about Alison's affectionate relationship with Cliff and Alison
tells her that they are strictly friends.
Cliff
and Jimmy return to the flat and Helena tells them that she and Alison are
leaving for church. Jimmy goes into an anti-religious rant and ends up
insulting Alison's family once again. Helena becomes angry and Jimmy dares her
to slap him on the face, warning her that he will slap her back. He tells her
of how he watched his father die as a young man. His father had been injured
fighting in the Spanish Civil War and had returned to England only to die
shortly after. Alison and Helena begin to leave for church and Jimmy feels
betrayed by his wife.
A
phone call comes in for Jimmy and he leaves the room. Helena tells Alison that
she has called Alison's father to come get her and take her away from this
abusive home. Alison relents and says that she will go when her father picks
her up the next day. When Jimmy returns, he tells Alison that Mrs. Tanner,
Hugh's mother, has become sick and is going to die. Jimmy decides to visit her
and he demands that Alison make a choice of whether to go with Helena or with
him. Alison picks up her things and leaves for church and Jimmy collapses on
the bed, heartbroken by his wife's decision.
The next evening Alison is packing and
talking with her father, Colonel Redfern. The Colonel is a soft spoken man who
realizes that he does not quite understand the love that exists between Jimmy
and Alison. He admits that the actions of him and his wife are partly to blame
for their split. The Colonel was an officer in the British military and served
in India and he is nostalgic for his time there. He considers his service to be
some of the best years of his life. Alison observes that her father is hurt because
the present is not the past and that Jimmy is hurt because he feels the present
is only the past. Alison begins to pack her toy squirrel, but then she decides
not to do so.
Helena
and Cliff soon enter the scene. Alison leaves a letter for Jimmy explaining why
she has left and she gives it to Cliff. After Alison leaves, Cliff becomes
angry and gives the letter to Helena, blaming her for the situation. Jimmy
returns, bewildered that he was almost hit by Colonel Redfern's car and that
Cliff pretended not to see him when he was walking by on the street. He reads
Alison's letter and becomes very angry. Helena tells him that Alison is
pregnant, but Jimmy tells her that he does not care. He insults Helena and she
slaps him, then passionately kisses him.
Several
months pass and the third act opens with Jimmy and Cliff once again reading the
Sunday papers while Helena stands in the corner ironing. Jimmy and Cliff still
engage in their angry banter and Helena's religious tendencies have taken the
brunt of Jimmy's punishment. Jimmy and Cliff perform scenes from musicals and
comedy shows but when Helena leaves, Cliff notes that things do not feel the
same with her here. Cliff then tells Jimmy that he wants to move out of the
apartment. Jimmy takes the news calmly and tells him that he has been a loyal
friend and is worth more than any woman. When Helena returns, the three plan to
go out. Alison suddenly enters.
Alison
and Helena talk while Jimmy leaves the room. He begins to loudly play his
trumpet. Alison has lost her baby and looks sick. Helena tells Alison that she
should be angry with her for what she has done, but Alison is only grieved by
the loss of her baby. Helena is driven to distraction by Jimmy's trumpet
playing and demands that he come into the room. When he comes back in, he
laments the fact that Alison has lost the baby but shrugs it off. Helena then
tells Jimmy and Alison that her sense of morality -- right and wrong -- has not
diminished and that she knows she must leave. Alison attempts to persuade her
to stay, telling her that Jimmy will be alone if she leaves.
When
Helena leaves, Jimmy attempts to once again become angry but Alison tells him
that she has now gone through the emotional and physical suffering that he has
always wanted her to feel. He realizes that she has suffered greatly, has
become like him, and becomes softer and more tender towards her. The play ends
with Jimmy and Alison embracing, once again playing their game of bear and
squirrel.
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