Habeas Corpus

E772918

Habeas Corpus is a 1973 stage farce by British playwright Alan Bennett that satirizes sexual liberation and middle-class morality through rapid-fire wordplay and mistaken identities.

All labels observed (1)

Label Occurrences
Habeas Corpus canonical 2

How this entity was disambiguated

Statements (47)

Predicate Object
instanceOf farce
stage play
adaptedAs television film
author Alan Bennett NERFINISHED
countryOfOrigin United Kingdom
dateOfFirstPerformance 1973
dramaticStructure two-act play
firstPublishedIn 1973
genre comedy
farce
hasAdaptation Habeas Corpus (television adaptation) NERFINISHED
hasCharacterType aristocrat
bored housewife
clergyman
earnest youth
lecherous doctor
spinster
hasCriticalReception acclaimed for wit and structure
hasFeature mistaken identity
hasNarrativeDevice direct address to audience
fast-paced dialogue
physical comedy
literaryStyle wordplay
mainCharacter Canon Throbbing NERFINISHED
Constance Wicksteed NERFINISHED
Dennis Wicksteed NERFINISHED
Dr Arthur Wicksteed NERFINISHED
Felicity Rumpers NERFINISHED
Lady Rumpers NERFINISHED
Mr Shanks NERFINISHED
Muriel Wicksteed NERFINISHED
Sir Percy Shorter NERFINISHED
movement post-war British theatre
originalLanguage English
partOf Alan Bennett plays NERFINISHED
placeOfFirstPerformance Lyric Theatre, London NERFINISHED
publisher Faber and Faber NERFINISHED
setInPeriod 20th century
settingLocation Hove, England NERFINISHED
subject middle-class morality
sexual liberation
targetOfSatire British middle class
Church of England clergy NERFINISHED
medical profession
theme aging and sexuality
hypocrisy of respectability
repression and desire

How these facts were elicited

Referenced by (2)

Full triples — surface form annotated when it differs from this entity's canonical label.

Alan Bennett notableWork Habeas Corpus
Alan Bennett wrote Habeas Corpus