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Tell Me Lies (1968)

Directed by Peter Brook

Overview

Adapted and directed by Peter Brook from the Royal Shakespeare Company’s ‘production-in-progress US’, this long-unseen agitprop drama-doc – shot in London in 1967 and released only briefly in the UK and New York at the height of the Vietnam War – remains both thought-provoking and disturbing. A theatrical and cinematic social comment on US intervention in Vietnam, Brook’s film also reveals a 1960s London where art, theatre and political protest actively collude and where a young Glenda Jackson and RSC icons such as Peggy Ashcroft and Paul Scofield feature prominently on the front line. Multi-layered scenarios staged by Brook combine with newsreel footage, demonstrations, satirical songs and skits to illustrate the intensity of anti-war opinion within London’s artistic and intellectual community.

Length 118 minutes

Actors

Mark Jones | Robert Langdon Llyod | Pauline Munro | Ursula Mohan | Hugh Armstrong | Peggy Ashcroft | Patrick Wymark | Paul Scofield | Barry Stanton | Henry Woolf | Glenda Jackson | John Hussey | Tom Driberg | Ivor Seward Richard | Kingsley Amis | Reginald Paget | Peregrine Worsthorne | Michael Williams | Marjie Lawrence | Leon Lissek | Ian Hogg | Eric Allan | Stokely Carmichael | Jacqueline Porcher | Mark James Walter Cameron | Clifford Rose | Bill Macy | Mary Allen | Jeremy Anthony | Noel Collins | Joanne Lindsay | William Morgan Sheppard | Hugh Sullivan