Jonathan Maitland
Jonathan Maitland is a British playwright and former broadcaster.
Early life
[edit]Maitland attended boarding schools from the age of three[1] including Epsom College. He graduated from King's College London with a degree in law.[citation needed] He describes his mother as abusive: his parents divorced when he was six years old.[1]
Journalism
[edit]Maitland started his writing career in the 1980s as a reporter on The Sutton Guardian. He reported for BBC Radio Bristol and BBC Radio 4's Today programme. He was also a general correspondent for BBC News. From 1995–98 he presented and produced factual shows on BBC 1. He was also one of the reporters for Watchdog and presented a spin off called The Big Dinner
In 1999 he was poached by ITV to present BAFTA winning current affairs show Tonight and the BAFTA nominated House of Horrors, the first show to secretly film and expose rogue traders and builders.
Writing
[edit]Maitland has written five books including How to Make your Million from the Internet (and what to do if you don't), which explored the dot com boom. His memoir How to Survive your Mother described his unconventional childhood in suburban Surrey. Aged three he was sent to boarding school, and at 13 his mother turned the family hotel in Epsom into a retreat for homosexuals.
Maitland has written two radio plays and seven stage plays. Dead Sheep, about the Geoffrey Howe speech which led to Margaret Thatcher's downfall, was staged at the Park Theatre in London in 2015. It received positive reviews and the Independent called it a "...fine, often very funny debut play."[2] It went on a national tour in 2016.[3] In June 2023, a BBC Radio 4 adaptation, Wasps in a Jam Jar, starred Dame Penelope Wilton, Dame Harriet Walter and James Fleet.[4] Maitland's second play at the Park was An Audience With Jimmy Savile. The Observer described the play's central performance by Alistair McGowan as "Uncanny ... creepily powerful ... shocking."[5] The show was transferred to the Edinburgh Fringe in August.[6] Maitland's third play, Deny Deny Deny, about medical and ethical dilemmas, was also staged at the Park. The Daily Telegraph called it "a gripping, Faustian take on Olympic doping."[7]
Maitland's other radio play, The Remco, about the corrupt machinations of the committees which make huge pay awards to City fat cats, aired in 2018 and started by Deborah Findlay and James Purefoy.
In May 2019, The Last Temptation of Boris Johnson opened at the Park Theatre.[8] Act One centred on the February 2016 dinner party at Johnson's home in Islington with Michael Gove, after which he decided to campaign for Vote Leave. The second act posited that Johnson resigned as Prime Minister in 2022 (this actually happened in real life) and is set in 2029 when he makes another run at the leadership, based on taking the UK back into the EU. The play broke previous box office records and sold out its entire run but received mixed reviews; Ann Treneman in The Times gave the play four stars out of five, calling it 'politics...served deliciously pink'.[9] In The New European, Martin McQuillan praised Maitland's "remarkable play" with a five-star review,[10] but Michael Billington in The Guardian gave it two stars, concluding that "Maitland's mind-changing hero is not nearly as interesting as he thinks he is."[11] The play completed an eight week national tour in March 2020.
Maitland's fifth play, The Interview, about the Martin Bashir/Princess Diana Panorama programme, premiered at the Park Theatre on 27 October 2023. It received mostly positive reviews.[citation needed] His play with music about Wilko Johnson, the guitarist and founder of the band Dr Feelgood, premiered at the Queen's Theatre, Hornchurch on 1 February 2024 and received positive reviews.[12] The Reviews Hub, awarding it fours stars, called it "an extraordinary story... magnificent"[13] and The Guardian's three star review praised director Dugald Bruce-Lockhart's "nifty production" and Johnson Willis's "stonking star turn".[14] Maitland's play How to Survive Your Mother, based on the memoir of the same name, premieres at the King's Head Theatre in London on October 23rd 2024.[15]
Other appearances
[edit]Maitland part funded Chris Morris's debut feature film Four Lions (2010) in which he has a cameo as a newsreader.
He also presented Profile and two series of Lyrical Journey, both for BBC Radio 4. The latter, which he devised, takes musicians to a place they have written a song about. They then perform it in front of people for whom it has special significance. The series featured songs by the Proclaimers, Squeeze and Billy Bragg.
References
[edit]- ^ a b Maitland, Jonathan (10 March 2024). "My mother, the monster – and how I came to understand and forgive her". The Observer. Retrieved 10 March 2024.
- ^ Lister, David (6 April 2015). "There's nothing woolly about this". The Independent. Archived from the original on 30 March 2019.
- ^ "Dead Sheep to tour the UK". westendtheatres.com (Press release). 3 May 2016. Retrieved 15 March 2024.
- ^ "Turning Point, Wasps in a Jam Jar". BBC Radio 4. 10 June 2023. Retrieved 15 March 2024.
- ^ Kellaway, Kate (14 June 2015). "An Audience With Jimmy Savile review – an obscene jester is brought to account". The Observer. Retrieved 15 March 2024.
- ^ Conlan, Tara (10 July 2015). "An Audience with Jimmy Savile goes to Edinburgh Festival Fringe". The Guardian. Retrieved 15 March 2024.
- ^ Cavendish, Dominic (6 November 2016). "Deny, Deny, Deny is a gripping, Faustian take on Olympic doping scandals – review". The Sunday Telegraph. Retrieved 15 March 2024.
- ^ "The Last Temptation of Boris Johnson". Park Theatre. Archived from the original on 6 June 2019.
- ^ Treneman, Ann (14 May 2019). "Review: The Last Temptation of Boris Johnson at Park Theatre, N4". The Times. Retrieved 15 March 2024.
- ^ McQuillan, Martin (27 May 2019). "Boris takes centre stage in a disturbing drama". The New European. Archived from the original on 3 June 2019.
- ^ Billington, Michael (14 May 2019). "The Last Temptation of Boris Johnson review – satire fails to skewer". The Guardian. Retrieved 15 March 2024.
- ^ "Wilco | A world premiere production of a new play". Queen's Theatre Hornchurch. Archived from the original on 8 February 2024. Retrieved 15 March 2024.
- ^ Lilly, Chris (8 February 2024). "Wilko – Queen's Theatre, Hornchurch". The Reviews Hub. Retrieved 15 March 2024.
- ^ Jays, David (8 February 2024). "Wilko review – the life and riffs of a pub rock pioneer, with a stonking star turn". The Guardian. Retrieved 15 March 2024.
- ^ "What's On | How to Survive Your Mother". King's Head Theatre. Archived from the original on 30 January 2024. Retrieved 15 March 2024.