Be My Baby (NHB Modern Plays)
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About this ebook
Be My Baby follows the fortunes of Mary Adams, aged 19, unmarried and seven months pregnant. Forcibly sent to a Mother and Baby Home in the north of England by a mother intent on keeping up appearances, Mary - along with the other girls in the home - has to cope with both the shame and the dawning realisation that she will have to give the baby up for adoption whether she likes it or not. Despite this - and an overbearing matron - the girls' youthful effervescence keeps breaking through as they sing along to the girl-group songs of the period.
Be My Baby was first performed at the Pleasance Theatre, London, in November 1998.This edition includes new scenes added for several successful revivals of the play.
'you don't have to be young, female or unmarried to find it immensely touching' The Times
Amanda Whittington
Amanda Whittington is one of the most widely performed playwrights in the UK. Her plays include Be My Baby (Soho Theatre, 1998), Satin ’n’ Steel (Nottingham Playhouse, 2005), Ladies' Day (Hull Truck, 2005) and its sequels Ladies Down Under (Hull Truck, 2007) and Ladies Unleashed (Hull Truck, 2022), The Thrill of Love (New Vic Theatre, Newcastle-under-Lyme, 2013), Kiss Me Quickstep (New Vic Theatre, 2016), Mighty Atoms (Hull Truck, 2017) and The Invincibles (Queen's Theatre, Hornchurch, 2023). She has adapted Saturday Night and Sunday Morning, My Judy Garland Life and Tipping the Velvet for the stage. She writes regularly for BBC Radio 4, contributing to the Woman's Hour serial and Afternoon Play slots. Her stage plays have also become a popular choice for amateur, community and school productions across the country.
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Book preview
Be My Baby (NHB Modern Plays) - Amanda Whittington
Introduction
Be My Baby was commissioned by Soho Theatre in 1997 and started life as the present-day story of a mother’s reunion with her adopted, grown-up child. Starting work on the play, I was immediately faced with questions about the mother’s past. Was she unmarried? Who did she tell about the pregnancy? And where did she go to have the baby?
Perhaps she had been packed off to one of the Church-run maternity homes that were active in the 1960s? I set out to look for some background information. Not surprisingly, I found no Official History of Unmarried Mother and Baby Homes. What I did discover were many ‘first-person’ accounts of such places in books and documentaries on adoption.
The sixties weren’t swinging for these young women. They spoke of being sent away like criminals, to live out their pregnancy in secrecy and shame. The more I learned about these homes, the more I knew it was a world I wanted to explore. Hoping Soho Theatre wouldn’t mind a few small changes, I took the middle-aged mother of my story back to where it all began. She became nineteen-year-old Mary Adams – pregnant, unmarried and wanting only to keep her baby. The play sets out to discover why she can’t.
Setting Be My Baby in 1964 also gave the chance to include some fantastic ‘girl-group’ music by The Shangri-La’s, The Dixie Cups and the Ronettes. These three-minute pop dramas seemed to perfectly capture the passionate innocence of the play’s characters – and gave an uplifting soundtrack to what becomes a pretty dark tale.
I am extremely grateful to the birth mothers and adoptees who spoke to me about their lives. Be My Baby is not the story of one person or place. It draws on the many accounts I have heard and read over three years of working on the play. During this time, I was surprised by the number of people who told me they or someone close to them had been touched by adoption. Many families, it seems, have their story to tell – and who knows how many more still keep the secret? I hope that in some way, Be My Baby speaks for them.
I would like to thank Abigail Morris and Paul Sirett of Soho Theatre for their guidance, encouragement and belief in the play. It would not have been written without them. Be My Baby is dedicated to my parents, who have always been there for me.
Amanda Whittington
Be My Baby was first presented by Soho Theatre Company at the Pleasance Theatre, London, on 10 November 1998, directed by Abigail Morris and designed by Jonathan Fensom, with the following cast:
The production was revived, supported by the Peter Woolf Trust, at Soho Theatre, London, on 18 May 2000, with the following cast:
The production was toured in Autumn 2002, with the following cast:
Be My Baby has subsequently been revived at Salisbury Playhouse (director Raz Shaw), Oldham Coliseum (director Natalie Wilson) and Hull Truck Theatre (director Gareth Tudor Price), all in 2004. The play has been widely performed by amateur theatre companies and in schools and colleges.
Characters
MARY, aged nineteen; seven months pregnant
DOLORES, aged seventeen; three months pregnant
QUEENIE, aged twenty; four months pregnant
NORMA, aged twenty; eight months pregnant
MATRON, Head of St Saviour’s
MRS ADAMS, Mary’s mother
Be My Baby takes