The National Health

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The National Health is a play by Peter Nichols.

Reminiscent of the Carry On film series, this black comedy with tragic overtones focuses on the appalling conditions in an under-funded national health hospital, which are contrasted comically with a Dr. Kildare-style soap opera airing on the ward television.

Originally entitled The End Beds, the play - based on hospitals in which Nichols was treated for a collapsed lung - originally was written for television, but the playwright received no enthusiastic response from anyone to whom he submitted it. When Kenneth Tynan and Laurence Olivier approached him to write a play for the National Theatre, Nichols offered them the slightly revised work, retitled The National Health. It premiered in 1969 and proved to be a critical and commercial success, named Best New Play by the Evening Standard. Ironically, the BBC then asked Nichols if he would like to adapt the play for a television production [1].

In 1973, Nichols adapted his play for a film version directed by Jack Gold. It starred Jim Dale, Bob Hoskins, Lynn Redgrave, Donald Sinden, Clive Swift, Mervyn Johns, Eleanor Bron, Gillian Barge, and Colin Blakely. It won the Evening Standard British Film Award for Best Comedy.

After 23 previews, the Broadway production, produced by Theodore Mann and directed by Arvin Brown, opened on October 10, 1974 at the Circle in the Square Theatre, where it ran for only 53 performances, its subject matter too perplexingly foreign even for sophisticated theater-goers. The cast included Leonard Frey, Olivia Cole, Rita Moreno, and Paul Rudd. Tony Award nominations went to the play, Brown, and Frey; the play also received a Drama Desk Award nomination as Outstanding New Foreign Play.

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