Play Review "Educating Rita"
Play Review "Educating Rita"
Play Review "Educating Rita"
Gabriel Kunz
The pla Educating Rita written b the English pla wright Will Russell was first presented on
stage in London in The overall theme of the pla is Rita s transformation and development
from an uneducated, dissatisfied woman with no self-confidence into a new person gradually
educating and liberating herself from her social background and her teacher Frank.
The play opens with Rita, a 26-year-old hairdresser, attending an Open University course in the
attempt to discover herself, better her living conditions and have real choices. She meets her tutor
In the course of Act I Frank is often taken aback b Rita s unconventional refreshing and emotional
approach to literature. At the same time, it is his him who has the responsibility to teach and
support Rita in passing exams. Therefore, he explains to her that she has to restrain her emotional
thoughts and refer to established literary authorities in her essays in order to pass exams.
Half way through the play Rita attends a summer school in London and comes back a changed
person, having grown in confidence and understanding. Having split up with her husband who has
always been against her studying, she has moved in with a fellow student, Trish. With her
newfound knowledge including arrogance, Rita analyses literature in controlled, analytic terms and
loses her mind s spontaneit and originalit This development implicates a more distant relation to
Frank. He becomes more depressed and frustrated with his life while his drinking habit
deteriorates.
In the end Rita s flatmate Trish attempts suicide showing Rita that there is more to life than art and
literature. She and Frank part as friends, with the an unclear future for both of them.
The development of the pla s action clearl corresponds with its division into two acts
whilst the first act is separated in eight scenes, the second act only counts seven scenes. These two
halves consist of a series of conversations between Rita and Frank. But all of these conversations do
not only deal with literature, but with their private lives as well.
Russell also uses the literary technique of a frame story. In the very first scene Rita announces
determindly that Frank would have his hair cut the next time they meet. In the last scene of Act II
the pla wright refers back to this first scene and Rita s promise to cut Frank s hair as she slips into
her role of hairdresser and prepares to take ten years off him p l b cutting his hair
The whole pla is set in Frank s office at an Victorian-built university in the north of England.
(cf. stage directions p. 7). One can conclude that this university is located in Liverpool as Frank lives
Even though man different locations more precisel Rita s home the pub the hairdressing salon
the bistro and the summer school, are mentioned, none of the scenes are set there. Whereas Frank
is only associated with one setting throughout the pla Rita s character is connected with changing
locations as she, for instance, moves from her home with Denny to a flat shared with Trish.
Furthermore the pla is set sometime in the s At this time the working class s situation was
more than uneasy: a high level of unemployment, low salaries and poverty inevitably lead to
Gabriel Kunz
Rita and Frank are both the pla s main characters With regard to the terms protagonist and
antagonist one can notice that they two serve both functions at different times. In the first act,
which deals slightly more with Rita, it is Frank who serves as antagonist. In contrast, the second
act put more accent on Frank than Rita, who now serves as antagonist.
In addition, they can be called round characters because these two evidently develop in the
In the beginning, Rita is an outspoken, honest person having a great natural thirst to learn. She is
quite enthousiastic about literature, but has to learn almost everything regarding subjective
literary critism. Her behaviour is unconventional because of her spontaneous, direct and
passionate reactions to art, literature and her fellow human beings. During Act II her fundemental
change becomes apparent: She has developed into an educated, almost arrogant woman having
gained self-confidence and self-determination. In fact, she has become more reasonable
Frank on the contrar is reserved at first but then starts to recogni e Rita s uniqueness and is
fascinated by her enthousiasm, her energy and her independent mind. Due to the fact that Rita is
totally unaware of literature and traditional methods to approach it, he is forced to explain and
justify even the most basic concepts. But at the same time, he finds himself in a dilemma:
he is afraid that once she has learned the conventional methods of approaching literature she will
surpress her refreshing spontaneity and honesty in order to pass exams. Worst of all, he himself
would be responsible for an such change When he reali es Rita s new behaviour and
personality, his drinking problem deteriorates, he starts cursing and becomes even more
In Educating Rita Frank and Rita come from different social classes: Rita is a working class
The social differences between the characters can be seen in the language and vocabulary they use.
On the one hand Rita s earl language is typical of non-standart English used by the working class. It
is characterized by colloquial expressions and slang with a limited range of vocabulary, simple
On the other hand, Frank speaks upper-class English. Unlike Rita, he is able to formulate his
thoughts fluently in longer, more complicated sentences without using slang or abbreviated words.
Consequently, through their different language their communication often does not work leading
Russell often makes use of symbolism to give additional meaning to a point he is making.
First the most obvious e ample is Rita s change of name to highlight her transformation from Susan
the uneducated hairdresser, to Rita, the admirer of pulp fiction and then back to Susan, as she
Second Frank s stud is an important s mbol because it totall represents the traditional approach
to literature he is supposed to teach. It not only illustrates the kind of work he does, but also the
type of person he is, an academic who appreciates literature and seeks knowledge.
That is why Rita tells Frank that this is the sort of room she wants to have one day because it stands
Gabriel Kunz
Third it is Rita s habit to bu new dresses having a s mbolic meaning as well Whenever Rita started
to feel the that there was something msissing in her life she went out to buy another dress
(p. 24, l. 3) . But one day, she realized that always buying new dresses does not give her a true sense
of fulfillment, but rather a feeling of happiness for a limited period of time. Those new dresses were
Will Russell s pla also contains man important themes the most important one being education
and literature.
Rita s character highlights impressivel the value of education for personal development For Rita,
who wants to break away from her meaningsless life, education means emancipation, liberation and
having a prospect. As a result, the process of becoming educated is more than gaining access to a
better job and a higher social class, it also helps people to recognize and develop their own potential
Another important theme to mention is the differences and the divisions between the social classes,
as Rita and Frank come from different ones. These different social backgrounds do not only become
apparent in their language as mentioned above, but also in their social mores, their behaviour and
their views on the world and on literature. The division between the social classes in reinforced by
education because young working class people often leave school with hardly any qualifications.
Hence the cpoor and uneducated working class is at great disadvantage in contrast to the middle
class Moreover the pla wright also critici es the working class s nostalgic view of the past, its
inflexibility preventing people from developing and unleashing their full potential.
Will Russell s intention was to write a pla which for one thing entertains and for another thing
makes its audience aware of the impact of education for one s own development In the
I wanted to make a play which engaged and was relevant to those who had no knowledge of
literature, those who considered themselves uneducated, those whose daily language is not the
language of the universit or the theatre (p. 5, ll. 24 ff.). It was his main aim to write a play which
However, instead of refusing this pla these uneducated people could understand through Rita s
initial approach what all the allusions to famous pieces of literature actually represent.
Finally, in my opinion, Willy Russell has created a truly great piece of literature. I adore its
simpleness as only two characters are introduced and only one setting is used throughout the play.
Educating Rita is a pla which, in order to be understood, [does] [not] require a greater degree of
information than that contained in the in the pla itself (p. 5, ll. 16 ff.). This statement taken from
Therefore, I can highly recommend this play to everybody because of its amusing dialogues,