By Oliver Tearle
In 1956, the young playwright John Osborne wrote a play, Look Back in Anger (much of it supposedly written while the young Osborne sat in a deckchair on Morecambe pier). With this play, Osborne heralded the arrival of the ‘Angry Young Men’: British working-class twentysomethings who rebelled against the status quo and ushered in a new era of youthful expression in theatre, fiction, and music, without straying too far from the kitchen sink.