I think this last play of Greene’s has to be characterized as in that infamous category: “You had to be there to get it.”
I suspect those British theatre goers of the time probably laughed unroariously at all the cute linguistic tricks, historic references, sly sexual innuendoes, witty repartee, allusions to Oscar Wilde and the wildly non-historical juxtaposition of so many characters: Lord Alfred Douglas (“Bosie”), his father, the Marquess of Queensberry, the Prince of Wales of England (“Bertie”), Captain von Blixen (later of Africa), and a handful of others.
Unfortunately for me, I have not read the novel, The Amateur Cracksman, by E. W. Hornung, about the “notorious and ever-popular” A. J. Raffles. But, if I understand the historical fiction, he was killed off by Hornung in South Africa in the Boer War. So, his sudden return from the dead in this Greene play was something of a feat of imagination. In the “Author’s Note” in both the U.K. and U.S. editions of the play, Greene says: “…I am prepared to defend the truth of Raffles’ return from South Africa alive….”
As I say, “you had to be there.” According to Greene’s bibliographers, Jon Wise and Mike Hill, the play was performed by the Royal Shakespeare Company at the Aldwych Theatre in London, beginning on 4 December 1975 with Denholm Elliott as Raffles. It ran for six weeks.