Characters (Scottish Highers English): Revision Notes
Characters
Understanding characterisation
Characterisation refers to the techniques a writer uses to create and develop characters. In drama, writers build characters through dialogue, behaviour, relationships and interactions with others. Stage directions play a particularly important role in The Slab Boys, providing insight into characters' actions, emotions and physical presence on stage.
Stage directions in The Slab Boys are especially crucial for understanding character development. Unlike novels where authors can directly describe thoughts and feelings, drama relies on observable actions and dialogue. Pay close attention to how Byrne uses stage directions to reveal what characters are thinking and feeling beneath their spoken words.
Phil
Phil is the central character of the play, an energetic and rebellious young man trapped in a menial job at Stobo's design studio. He dominates the action of the slab room, driving much of the comedy and conflict. The play follows his fate over a single day: waiting to hear about his art college application, dealing with his mother's mental health crisis, and ultimately facing dismissal from his job.
Talent and frustration
Phil possesses genuine artistic talent but feels stifled by his work grinding colours in the slab room. He has applied to art college and assembled a portfolio, demonstrating his ambition to escape the factory. The limited opportunities available to working-class young men in 1957 Scotland make this escape difficult. His creative urges clash constantly with the unimaginative work ethic demanded by his bosses.
Phil's artistic ambition is not just a character trait—it represents the central conflict of the play. His struggle to escape the slab room symbolizes the broader theme of working-class youth trapped by limited social mobility in post-war Scotland. Understanding this helps explain why his art college rejection is such a devastating blow.
When Phil declares "Giotto was a Slab Boy!" and performs a cartwheel, he asserts the value of artistic talent regardless of social position. This moment captures his youthful spirit and refusal to accept defeat, even after losing his job.
Rebellious attitude
Phil shows little respect for authority figures like Curry, whose war reminiscences and rigid values he openly mocks. His sharp wit becomes his weapon against the establishment. When pushed too far, this rebelliousness turns into direct confrontation, as when he attacks Curry verbally and blames him for the dismissal. Phil's impatience and excess energy occasionally manifest as aggression, particularly toward Alan, whose comfortable middle-class life contrasts sharply with Phil's struggles.
Phil stayed at school to study Highers but dropped out before completing them, suggesting both capability and a pattern of not following through. This detail is important—it shows Phil has intelligence and potential, but also a tendency toward self-sabotage that contributes to his current predicament.
Compassion beneath the surface
Despite his tough exterior, Phil shows unexpected kindness. He pleads with Lucille to give Hector a chance and reluctantly agrees to donate half his wages to help his friend. In his tirade against Alan, Phil explains how the attention he and Spanky give Hector has helped him cope with mental health difficulties and build confidence. This reveals Phil's awareness of others' vulnerabilities, drawn perhaps from his own experience caring for his mother.
Phil lives daily with the worry of his mother's mental illness. The pain and fear he experiences come through at moments, though he typically uses humour as his coping mechanism. Curry's failure to recognise this genuine suffering leads him to dismiss Phil as "callow" (immature and inexperienced), showing a profound misunderstanding of Phil's character.
The contrast between Phil's humorous exterior and his genuine suffering is crucial to understanding his character. Many readers might initially see Phil as simply a troublemaker, but his comedy masks real pain. Curry's inability to see past the jokes to Phil's genuine struggles represents a common failure to recognise when young people are genuinely suffering.
Spanky
Spanky serves as Phil's closest ally and partner in their comedy routines. The two create much of the play's humour through their quick-witted exchanges, easily slipping into different voices and characters, building on each other's jokes with practiced familiarity.
Supportive friend
Spanky understands the pressures Phil faces and actively supports him. He covers for Phil's lateness, uses comedy to distract Phil during difficult moments, and physically intervenes to prevent disaster when Phil attempts to attack Alan. His support demonstrates loyalty beyond simple friendship.
Spanky shows more consideration toward Hector than Phil does, recognising when the makeover goes too far. He initiates the collection to give Hector money after his "dismissal," showing practical compassion.
Less reckless than Phil
Where Phil possesses fierce creative ambition, Spanky lacks the same drive to escape the slab room. He complains constantly about the work but accepts it, hoping for promotion to a designer's desk in eighteen months, though this may never happen. He is less willing to confront the bosses directly and more prepared to endure the humdrum reality of factory life. Whether this makes him more sensible or less courageous depends on perspective.
The contrast between Phil and Spanky's attitudes toward their work is significant. While Phil desperately seeks escape through art college, Spanky has resigned himself to slow advancement within the system. This difference highlights how individuals respond differently to the same limited opportunities—some fight to escape, others adapt and endure.
Hector
The character list describes Hector as "the runt of the litter," positioning him as the weakest member of the group. He becomes the main target of Phil and Spanky's extended practical joke, suffering through being locked in a cupboard, forcibly stripped and given a drastic haircut that injures his ear, then dressed up and deceived into believing he can win Lucille's affection.
Victim or willing participant?
The situation appears complex. Hector has experienced serious mental health problems in the past, and Phil argues that the attention from himself and Spanky, though mocking, has actually helped Hector develop confidence. Hector eagerly seeks acceptance from the slab boys and willingly believes their exaggerated promises about Lucille's interest. His readiness to imagine Lucille falling for him suggests either naivety or vanity, a lack of realistic self-awareness.
The treatment of Hector raises difficult ethical questions. While Phil and Spanky's behaviour appears cruel, Phil genuinely believes their attention—even mocking attention—has helped Hector's mental health. This complexity is intentional: Byrne doesn't present simple heroes and villains. Consider whether the play condemns or condones their treatment of Hector, and how this relates to themes of masculinity and friendship in working-class communities.
Transformation and betrayal
Hector's character undergoes a striking change once he receives his promotion to designer. He quickly abandons his former friends, cosying up to Curry and even taking him to the dance using the ticket originally purchased for Lucille. He bosses Spanky around and shows indifference to Phil's job loss. He keeps the money the slab boys collected for him, despite his improved financial situation meaning he needs it far less than they do.
This transformation reveals an opportunistic side to Hector's character. He achieves a form of revenge but loses the audience's sympathy in the process.
Alan
Alan represents the privileged middle class. At nineteen, he is a university student whose father works as a well-known designer. His comfortable lifestyle, complete with aspirations and opportunities unavailable to the slab boys, makes him a target for their mockery.
Class markers
Several details establish Alan's social position:
- He carries an expensive pen and a purse full of cash
- Stobo pays him more than Phil and Spanky for the same work
- Most significantly, Alan does not speak in Scots dialect like the other young characters, marking his "superior" class and education through language itself
The slab boys refuse to use his correct name throughout most of the play, a small act of resistance against what he represents. Phil only uses "Alan" at the climax of a speech about poverty and injustice, giving the correct name weight at that crucial moment.
Language becomes a powerful class marker in The Slab Boys. Alan's standard English contrasts sharply with the Scots dialect spoken by Phil, Spanky, and Hector. This linguistic divide immediately signals social class and educational background to the audience, making class visible even before any explicit discussion of money or opportunity.
Attitudes and behaviour
Alan's positive attitude toward work contrasts sharply with Phil and Spanky's rebelliousness. He even praises the canteen food, suggesting either genuine contentment or an inability to recognise poor quality. He treats Sadie courteously, charming her with his good manners. However, his politeness appears more like middle-class breeding than genuine warmth.
Alan shares the universal desire to ask Lucille out, but he succeeds not through personal attractiveness but because his father owns a sporty car. He cannot recognise James Dean, marking him as out of touch with his own generation's youth culture.
Lack of empathy
Alan accuses Phil and Spanky of cruelty toward Hector, showing some moral awareness. However, he delivers the news of Phil's art college rejection in an offhand manner, showing no understanding of what this means for Phil's future. When Phil reacts with despair, Alan dismisses him as feeling sorry for himself. This response reveals a callous streak. Having never faced financial hardship or crushed dreams himself, Alan cannot grasp the magnitude of Phil's loss.
Alan's inability to empathize with Phil's devastation is a key moment in the play. His dismissal of Phil's reaction as "feeling sorry for yourself" reveals how privilege blinds people to others' genuine suffering. Someone who has always had opportunities cannot understand what it means to have the only escape route closed off. This moment crystallizes the class divide at the heart of the play.
Curry
Curry embodies the authority that the slab boys despise. As a supervisor, he represents an older generation with different values: hard work, respect for hierarchy, and pride in completing tasks properly.
Living in the past
Curry constantly reminisces about the war, revealing his nostalgia for a time when clear rules governed behaviour and everyone knew their place. He does not understand the younger generation and feels frustrated by their attitude. His references to wartime service antagonise the slab boys further because they doubt he played an active combat role, viewing him as a hypocrite who claims borrowed glory.
Managing the unmanageable
When confronting Phil and Spanky, Curry adopts a "schoolteacher" manner, nagging rather than truly controlling them. He cannot change their behaviour, only express annoyance about it. This ineffectiveness undermines his authority, making him seem powerless despite his position.
Curry's inability to control the slab boys reflects a broader generational shift. The post-war generation no longer automatically respects authority figures or accepts their place in the hierarchy. Curry's frustration stems partly from watching his world view become obsolete—where once respect for supervisors was automatic, now it must be earned, and Curry lacks the skills to earn it.
Class prejudice
Curry readily praises Alan because of his social class and his connection to Bob Downie. The contrast between Curry's responses to the art portfolio when he believes it belongs to Alan versus when he discovers it is Phil's work reveals his bias. He focuses on Phil's rule-breaking rather than acknowledging his talent, showing lack of appreciation for ability divorced from social standing.
Curry's comments about Phil's mother demonstrate insensitivity and lack of understanding about mental health issues.
Surprising complexity
Despite appearing as a straightforward antagonist, Curry reveals unexpected depth at the play's end. When Phil accuses him of resentment and jealousy, Curry discloses that he has actually defended Phil to Mr Barton and attempted to save his job. This revelation complicates the audience's view of his character, suggesting his frustration stems partly from caring about Phil's wasted potential.
Curry's final revelation is crucial for understanding the play's nuanced approach to character. He is not simply a villain—he has tried to help Phil despite their antagonistic relationship. This complexity forces the audience to reconsider their judgment of Curry and recognize that his frustration may stem from seeing Phil waste his talent through self-destructive behaviour.
Jack
Though close in age to Phil, Spanky and Hector, Jack has crossed into the establishment. As a young designer, he represents what the slab boys might become if they achieve promotion. He spends his time chasing up unfinished work and delivering messages from management, acting as a go-between linking the slab room to authority.
Jack offers unhelpful comments about the difficulty of getting into art college, dampening rather than encouraging ambition. If he once possessed youthful energy or creative spark, he appears to have traded these qualities for the security of a designer's desk. He functions as a warning: success within the system may require sacrificing vitality and independence.
Jack serves as a cautionary figure for the slab boys. He shows what "success" within Stobo's actually means—becoming a messenger for management, losing your rebellious spirit, and dampening others' ambitions. His character suggests that promotion within the factory system means accepting its values and abandoning the energy and creativity of youth.
Sadie
Sadie operates as a tough but nurturing mother figure within the workplace. She brings tea and cakes to the slab boys, offers advice whether wanted or not, and generally nags in a maternal way.
Protective instincts
Sadie looks out for Hector specifically, giving him cream cookies while others receive rock-hard fairy cakes. She responds warmly to Alan's polite manners. Her motherly role makes Phil's coarse insult calling her an "old trollop" particularly shocking, though Sadie's physical retaliation demonstrates her ability to defend herself.
Personal struggles
Sadie's conversation with Lucille reveals the challenges in her own life. A breast cancer survivor, she remains trapped in a loveless marriage with a husband she considers useless. She plans to leave him when she can afford it, but probably never will, lacking the financial independence to escape. Her situation mirrors the limited options available to women of her class and generation, contrasting with Lucille's youthful freedom.
Sadie's trapped marriage provides important context for understanding the play's themes. Her inability to leave despite wanting to shows how economic dependence trapped women in unhappy situations. The contrast between Sadie's resignation and Lucille's determination not to end up the same way highlights generational changes in women's attitudes toward marriage and independence.
Lucille
The character list describes Lucille as "Every Slab Boy's dream," and she functions primarily in this role. A sketcher by trade, though the play mentions her job only briefly, she becomes the goal all the young men pursue.
Independent spirit
Lucille lives life on her own terms. As a young woman in 1957, she refuses to be trapped in unsatisfying relationships. Her conversation with Sadie highlights the contrast between generations: Lucille represents youth and freedom, focused on enjoying life now rather than planning for a future that might disappoint.
When Sadie discusses her trapped marriage, Lucille responds with callous honesty: "Who wants to get to your age?" This cruelty reveals her determination to avoid Sadie's fate.
Practical choices
Lucille is clearly attracted to Phil, but she agrees to attend the dance with Alan because he can access his father's car. She makes this choice on her own terms and prepares to go alone if Alan arrives late. This practical approach to the dance invitation shows her independence.
She refuses to attend with Hector simply to make him happy temporarily, lacking either the compassion or the willingness to deceive him. She expresses genuine outrage at the "pigsty" state of the slab room, showing she takes work seriously despite her fun-loving attitude. Like Phil and Spanky, she represents youth, but unlike them, she successfully balances rebellion with conformity enough to keep her job.
Lucille's character challenges simple stereotypes of 1950s women. While she is the object of male desire, she maintains agency over her own choices. Her decision to go with Alan for practical reasons (access to a car) rather than romantic ones shows a clear-eyed pragmatism. She represents a new generation of young women beginning to claim independence, though still constrained by the social expectations of the era.
Unseen characters
Two important characters never appear on stage but significantly influence the action.
Mr Barton
Barton holds ultimate authority as the boss whose decisions determine the slab boys' futures. Curry and Jack act as intermediaries, delivering his messages and reports. The fact that Barton never appears on stage emphasises the powerlessness of the young workers, who have no influence over decisions affecting their lives. They face an invisible force that controls their fates without ever having to justify itself directly.
Phil's mum
Though never seen, Phil's mother profoundly affects the play's action through her mental health struggles. Phil lives with constant worry about her condition. Years of coping with her illness have shaped his character and his use of humour as a defence mechanism. At certain moments, the pain beneath the jokes becomes visible, revealing the genuine suffering that Curry and others fail to recognise.
The absence of Mr Barton and Phil's mum from the stage is theatrically significant. By keeping these powerful influences offstage, Byrne emphasizes how the young workers are controlled by forces they cannot directly confront or influence. Mr Barton's invisibility represents the faceless authority of capitalism, while Phil's mum's absence makes her mental illness an ever-present shadow that haunts Phil without being fully visible to others.
Key Points to Remember:
- Phil dominates the play as a talented, rebellious young man fighting against limited opportunities while coping with his mother's mental illness
- Character pairs create meaning through contrast: Phil and Spanky work as comedy partners; Phil and Alan represent working-class versus middle-class; Curry and the slab boys embody generational conflict
- Transformation matters in Hector's character, who shifts from victim to opportunist once promoted
- Class divisions run throughout, shown through:
- Language (Alan's standard English versus the others' Scots)
- Opportunities (Alan's university versus Phil's art college rejection)
- Attitudes (Curry's preferential treatment of Alan)
- Unseen characters Mr Barton and Phil's mum influence the action significantly despite never appearing, emphasising the invisible forces that control the young workers' lives
- Complexity over simplicity: Characters like Curry and Hector reveal unexpected depths that complicate simple judgments about heroes and villains