Single Spies | |
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Written by | Alan Bennett |
Date premiered | 1988 |
Place premiered | Lyttelton, National Theatre London |
Original language | English |
Genre | Comedy/Drama |
Single Spies is a 1988 double bill written by the English playwright Alan Bennett. It consists of An Englishman Abroad and A Question of Attribution, the former an adaptation of a television play the author had written for the BBC in 1983. Both plays depict members of the Cambridge spy ring and touch on their moral, political and aesthetic beliefs: the first shows Guy Burgess in exile in Moscow in 1958, seven years after absconding from Britain. The second focuses on Sir Anthony Blunt while he still holds high office in the Royal Household although known to the security services as a former Soviet agent. The title comes from a speech in Hamlet: ‘When sorrows come, they come not single spies, but in battalions.’[1]
The double bill was presented at the National Theatre in December 1988, and transferred to the Queen's Theatre in the West End in February 1989.