The Matchgirls
by Bill Owen, Tony Russell

The Matchgirls Book Cover
The Matchgirls Cover

Highlights

Synopsis

Based on fact, the story tells of a strike by the girls in a match factory in 1888, when unions were still groping for recognition and mass withdrawal of labour was an almost unheard-of strategy in industrial relations.

The match-cutters finally rebel against working conditions in which young girls had their jaws rotted away by phosphorus, and discipline was maintained by a system of crippling fines and sanctions.

A grim episode, perhaps, but not many minutes of the play are allowed to pass before the natural ebullience of the traditional Cockney sparrow helps to create sparkling entertainment which warms the heart, yet retains the essential drama of the central theme.

The incongruously named "Hope Court" is the setting for much of the play, for it is there the workers live in shabby tenements.

Desperation turns Kate, the tenement girl, into a reckless strike-leader, and complicates her courtship with Joe, a docker.

Annie Besant, the liberal reformer, champions the strikers' cause and plays a vital part in bringing about their ultimate victory over what was then a callous management."

Publication

PublisherSamuel French
Year1967
BindingPaperback
Pages66
LanguageEnglish
ISBN-139780573080449
ISBN-100573080445
LCCML50.R99/

The Matchgirls is a British play written by Bill Owen and published by Samuel French (1967).

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Paperback

Samuel French · 1967 · 66 pp

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