FULL CASTING ANNOUNCED FOR MADAME RUBINSTEIN AT PARK THEATRE

MADAME RUBINSTEIN

 

FULL CASTING ANNOUNCED FOR

THE WORLD PREMIERE OF A BRAND NEW COMEDY

WRITTEN BY JOHN MISTO

DIRECTED BY JEZ BOND

 

FRANCES BARBER AND JONATHAN FORBES

TO STAR ALONGSIDE MIRIAM MARGOLYES


Park Theatre’s Artistic Director Jez Bond will direct Miriam Margolyes, Frances Barber and Jonathan Forbes in the world premiere of Madame Rubinstein, a brand new comedy by John Misto, playing at Park Theatre from 26 April – 27 May, with a press night on 3 May.

Set against the glamorous skylines of 1950s Manhattan, world-leading cosmetics entrepreneur Helen Rubinstein is locked in a power struggle with rivals Elizabeth Arden and Revlon. From humble beginnings as a Polish-Jewish immigrant, this is the story behind one of the best-known faces in the world of beauty. But as her professional and family conflicts reach fever pitch, will the ghosts of a turbulent past topple one of the world’s richest business women. Madame Rubinstein is a bright new comedy where the nails are painted and the gloves are off. Yet when the lipstick bleeds and the makeup fades, what is there left to hide behind?

 

BAFTA award-winning Miriam Margolyes (Harry Potter, Romeo & Juliet, The Age of Innocence) will star as ‘Helena Rubinstein’, Frances Barber (Doctor Who, Silk, Julius Caesar) will star as ‘Elizabeth Arden’, and Jonathan Forbes (‘Fergal’ in Channel 4’s hit show Catastrophe) will star as ’Irish’.

Jez Bond said, “I’m thrilled to have assembled such a stellar cast for our next in-house production, which I’m pleased to say is already the fastest selling show in Park Theatre’s history. Both in terms of the current, continuing debate on feminism and identity, and in terms of their incredible struggle in a male dominated world, the true story of these 20th Century pioneers – one of whom was an Eastern European migrant – continues to resonate in 2017. I’m delighted to be directing this world premiere that I’m sure will delight and amuse as well as inform and challenge audiences.

 

MADAME RUBINSTEIN is presented by Park Theatre and Oliver Mackwood in association with TBO Productions, with lighting by Mark Howland, design by Al Turner, sound design by David Gregory, composition by Dimitri Scarlato, and casting by Ellie Collyer-Bristow.

 

Park Theatre is fast becoming recognised as a powerhouse of theatre; in just under four years, it has enjoyed two West End transfers (including Daytona starring Maureen Lipman and The Boys in the Band starring Mark Gatiss), two National Theatre transfers, three national tours, an Olivier Award nomination and a Theatre of the Year award from The Stage.

 

Jez Bond is the Founder and Artistic Director of Park Theatre. He graduated Hull University with a BA Honours in Drama and was later awarded the Channel Four Theatre Director Bursary. Directing credits include; I Have Been Here Before (Watford Palace Theatre), The Fame Game (Tour of Austria), Sleeping Beauty (Salisbury Playhouse), The Twits (Tour of Switzerland), Misconceptions (Hong Kong Arts Centre), Big Boys (Croydon Warehouse), Shot of Genius (Leicester Square), Canaries Sometimes Sing (Kings Head & France) and A Season in South Africa (Old Vic). For Park Theatre; Madame Rubinstein, Hurling Rubble at the Sun, Adult Supervision plus Rapunzel, Sleeping Beauty,Jack and the Beanstalk, which he also co-wrote and composed. As a dramaturge he began working with writers at Soho Theatre, Royal Court and Young Vic before championing new work at Park Theatre, where he has developed a number of new plays many of which have gone on to production. Having led the £2.6m conversion of Park Theatre, Jez has been a guest speaker at the Theatres Trust Conference: Converting Spaces, the RIBA Conference: 150 years of Engineering, Bruford on the Southbank: New Build / ReBuild and The International Theatre Conference in Colombia. He has also consulted on a number of new theatre buildings internationally.

Quarter Life Crisis by Yolanda Mercy | Ovalhouse | April 2017

Quarter Life Crisis by Yolanda Mercy

Ovalhouse, 52-54 Kennington Oval, London SE11 5SW

Thursday 13th – Saturday 15th April 2017

Press Night: Friday 14th April, 7.45pm

All things British… All things me… And when I say me, I mean all things fabulous

Following the success of her debut solo show On The Edge of Me, Ovalhouse’s Associate Artist Yolanda Mercy returns with a coming of age comedy about growing up and being totally unprepared for the inevitability of entering adulthood.

Featuring live music, audience participation and a special guest from the local community, this is a relatable, funny and moving exploration of what it means to grow up in 21st Century Britain.

Quarter Life Crisis presents an upbeat take on the millennial phenomenon of big dreams, no cash, going viral, YouTube tutorials, having numerous zero-hour contracts, surrendering the 16–25 railcard and trying desperately to cheat adulthood.

Join Alicia who is living in soon-to-be post-Brexit London. She is realising that even though she is second-generation Nigerian, her routes and stories from the past can help her navigate through everchanging London. Help Alicia find a new way for her to live.

Yolanda Mercy comments, I am interested in making work which reacts to the world we inhabit. I love creating work that doesn’t just have an impact for the hour that we are in the theatre, but resonates beyond that. I place this world on stage with live music, words and an audience who I hope feel comfortable enough to want to interact with the piece… then talk about it after the show…and even a week, month, or year later.

In addition to the run at Ovalhouse, Yolanda Mercy will perform a double bill of Quarter Life Crisis and On The Edge of Me at Vault Festival from 11th February 2017; On The Edge of Me at Vault Festival on 12th February 2017; and Quarter Life Crisis at Arc Stockton on 12th April 2017.

Quarter Life Crisis is funded by Arts Council England and supported by Ovalhouse Theatre and Arc Stockton. Mentored by Third Angel.

Sasha Regan returns with the world premiere of her all-male The Mikado

Regan De Wynter Williams Productions present

Sasha Regan’s all-male

The Mikado or The Town of Titipu

UK Tour: April – July 2017

Following the highly successful all-male tours of H.M.S. Pinafore and The Pirates of Penzance, Sasha Regan returns with the world premiere of the irresistible The Mikado – one of Gilbert and Sullivan’s most famous operettas.

In true topsy –turvy fashion, Gilbert and Sullivan’s inherent humour and timeless tunefulness are married with Regan’s wicked sense of fun. This vibrant production successfully pokes playful fun at British politics and institutions. The crazy storyline takes us to 1950s England where a school camping trip is visiting the far away land of Titipu – a place where flirting is banned on pain of death and where tailors can become Lord High Executioners but cannot cut off another’s head, until they have cut off their own!

Regan’s idea to transform these much-loved classics into all-male productions stems from her own experiences performing Gilbert and Sullivan at a single-sex school. Her shows are now renowned for playing on the humour that can emerge from these gender changes.

Regan comments, Nothing gives me greater pleasure than seeing our work playing in some of the most beautiful theatres our country has to offer. 2017 is going to be a great year for us as we bring a brand new staging to our audiences – it’s beyond exciting.

Rollickingly silly, beautifully sung and imaginatively reframed (Libby Purves – H.M.S. Pinafore 2016).

Sasha was recently awarded the Special Achievement Award at the Off West End Awards 2017 for her contribution to musical theatre.

Hundreds of £10 tickets released for those aged 16 – 25

Hundreds of discounted tickets released for those under 26 to
The Woman in Black 

At The Lowry
Monday 20 & Tuesday 21 March 2017

Hundreds of tickets have been priced at £10 for The Woman in Black at The Lowry on Mon 20 and Tue 21 March 2017. These tickets are part of The Lowry’s Under 26 Scheme and are available to anyone between 16 and 25 years of age.

The Lowry launched their Under 26 Scheme in July 2016. The scheme aims to encourage young people to experience as much live performance as possible.

To qualify for the discount theatregoers need to register either via The Lowry’s website or call or visit the box office. Tickets are limited to two per person. The Under 26 Scheme also offers its members discounts on food and drink in The Lowry’s bar and restaurant Pier Eight prior to the show.

Stephen Mallatratt’s adaptation of Susan Hill’s best-selling novel has terrified over 64,400 theatregoers across its previous seven visits to The Lowry. The show will make its eighth visit from Mon 20 – Sat 25 March 2017.  

Robin Herford’s gripping production is a brilliantly successful study in atmosphere, illusion and controlled horror.

Stephen Mallatratt’s adaptation of Susan Hill’s novel tells the story of a lawyer obsessed with a curse that he believes has been cast over him and his family by the spectre of a ‘Woman in Black’. He engages a young actor to help him tell his story and exorcise the fear that grips his soul. It begins innocently enough, but as they delve further into his darkest memories, they find themselves caught up in a world of eerie marshes and moaning winds. The borders between make believe and reality begin to blur and the flesh begins to creep.

David Acton will play the role of Mr Kipps and The Actor will be playedMatthew Spencer.

The production’s huge popularity has reached a global level, having toured to the United States, South America, Tokyo and Singapore. In 2012, Susan Hill’s novel The Woman in Black was released as a major motion picture, starring Daniel Radcliffe, which became the highest grossing British horror film in 20 years. The sequel to that film, The Woman in Black 2: Angel Of Death, came out in 2014.

The West End show and tour are produced by PW Productions – the company behind the New Arts Theatre at Leicester Square.

Peter Wilson comments, “Everyone at PWP Is proud to continue presenting this perfect piece of theatre. The 2016/17 tour of The Woman in Black is dedicated to the Herford family who have done so much to support, love and create this landmark production.”

The production is directed by Robin Herford, with designs by Michael Holt, lighting by Kevin Sleep and sound by Gareth Owen.

The UK tour runs concurrently with the West End production.

Listings Info
The Woman in Black
Mon 20 – Sat 25 March 2017
Times: 7.30pm, Wed, Thu & Sat 2pm
Tickets: £21.50-£30.50 (inc booking fee)
Box office: 0843 208 6000
Website

Not Dead Enough Review

Mayflower, Southampton – until Sat 11 March 2017.  Reviewed by Sharon MacDonald-Armitage

With a story based on the writing of acclaimed author Peter James and set in a police station and mortuary in Brighton you’d expect Not Dead Enough to have the makings of a strong murder mystery. Perhaps the translation to stage is where the thrill of the thriller is lost, as this production fell rather flat for a number of reasons.

When Katie Bishop (Charlotte Sutherland) is murdered her husband and prime suspect Brian (Stephen Billington) claims he was miles away in bed. However, Detective Superintendent Roy Grace (Shane Richie), haunted by the disappearance of his own wife many years earlier, becomes affected more than usual over this case. Intertwined with Grace’s own demons and his personal relationships it becomes clear there is more to this case than originally thought.

Despite a well-known cast lead by Richie, who gives a believable and solid performance portraying Grace as a troubled and obsessed man, it is a step too far for him to carry the whole production. Laura Whitmore as mortuary technician Cleo Morey tries hard to make her character believable and there are glimpses of solid acting when she does, but mostly she appears rather out of her depth and her performance suffers because of this. Billington is rather caricaturist in his portrayal of the suspect leaving very little for the audience to engage with.

The production seems rather amateurish and Michael Holt’s split set looks messy and highlights what can go wrong when it is badly thought through. Of course this is a touring production that needs to be adaptable, but there is nothing remotely interesting or innovative in this one.

There were clear issues with the sound coming through the actor’s mics. Michael Quartey’s (Gless Branson) mic sounded a lot louder than the other cast members and when characters got into very close contact with each other mics seemed to drop in and out.

On the whole the production was rather stilted and there was little to engage or engross the audience, even the writing was laboured and pedestrian making it very difficult to have any feelings about the characters.

 

 

Wonderland Review

Grand Opera House York.  Reviewed by Michelle Richardson

Frank Wildhoorn’s Wonderland is now playing at the Grand Opera House, York, running until Saturday 11th March and touring throughout the UK until August.

This is a musical adaptation of Lewis Carroll’s Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland and Through The Looking Glass. Given a modern twist, full of heart, magic and love.

Standing outside a block of dreary flats we see Alice, Rachael Wooding, a downtrodden single mum on her 40th birthday. She is reading a letter from her ex-husband informing her he has remarried, then realises that her car has been stolen, making her late for work and resulting her in getting the sack. We meet her daughter Ellie, Naomi Morris, who appears to be the adult in their relationship, and quiet, nerdy neighbour Jack, or is it John, Stephen Webb.

When Alice utters the magic words, “I don’t want to live in the real world”, the White Rabbit appears. The 3 of them follow him down the rabbit hole, via a lift, to Wonderland. There we meet such iconic characters as the Mad Hatter, Caterpillar, Tweedle Dee, Tweedle Dum, March Hare and the Queen of Hearts, amongst others, but not quite as we remember them.

We are introduced to the Looking Glass, a portal to who you really want to be. We see Ellie turn into a petulant teenager, certainly reminded me of my teenagers and bought a smile to my face, and Jack turns into a cheesy, and I mean CHEESY, boyband singer reminiscent of the 1990’s. Webb did a fantastic cheesy job of entertaining us with easily forgettable songs along with his other boyband members, it was great fun and I loved those bits.

The Mad Hatter, Natalie McQueen, upon going through the Looking Glass plots against the Queen of Hearts, Wendi Peters, famous for Coronation Street. Peters is not actually on stage for that long but she does pack a punch with her singing, and it would have been nice to have seen her a bit more.

After a lot of madness and a bonkers story we do have a happy ending, with Alice, Ellie and Jack going back through the Looking Glass, returning home with a new outlook on life.

This is certainly a colourful show and all the cast worked very hard. There was some great singing but unfortunately for me none of the songs really stood out, and I am struggling to even recall one as I type this. Saying that it is an uplifting show and gives you a chance to escape to Wonderland for a few hours.

Legendary Mikhail Baryshnikov to star London’s West End

Bird&Carrot proudly presents the UK premiere of Brodsky/Baryshnikov

Apollo Theatre, 31 Shaftesbury Avenue, London W1D 7ES

Wednesday 3rd – Saturday 6th May 2017

Brodsky/Baryshnikov is a one-man show, performed by legendary dancer Mikhail Baryshnikov, based on the poems of Nobel laureate Joseph Brodsky. The production is an emotional journey deep into the poet’s visceral and complex compositions. For the UK premiere, the show comes to the West End’s Apollo Theatre for a limited run of four nights only.

Brodsky/Baryshnikov is conceived and directed by Alvis Hermanis, noted Latvian director of The New Riga Theatre. Performed in Russian with English surtitles, Baryshnikov recites a selection of his long-time friend’s poignant and eloquent works. His subtle physicality transports the audience into Hermanis’ reverent imagining of Brodsky’s interior world.

Baryshnikov first remembers reading Brodksy’s poetry when he was aged 16, having just arrived in Leningrad to study ballet. Brodsky and Baryshnikov were introduced at a party in New York, soon after Brodsky’s forcible exile from the Soviet Union in 1972. This marked the start of their 22 year friendship which lasted until Brodsky’s death in 1996.

The two men spoke nearly every day and even opened a restaurant together. Found somewhere between a play, a poetry recital and a piece of performance art, Brodsky/Baryshnikov is Baryshnikov’s nostalgic tribute to his once dear friend.

But the main drama is in the use of the language. Sometimes Baryshnikov reads the poems from one of the books; sometimes he whispers the words, sometimes he yells them, sometimes he just opens his mouth and lets them fall out. Usually he speaks them from memory. Unnervingly, sometimes Brodsky reads the poems, over the sound system. (At those times, an old reel-to-reel tape recorder turns on one of the benches.) But then sometimes Baryshnikov too reads the poems on tape, and you’re not always sure which of them is speaking…. (New York Review of Books).

Brodsky/Baryshnikov in London is made possible thanks to the generous support of Norvik Banka and Blavatnik Family Foundation. It is a co-production between The New Riga Theatre and Baryshnikov Productions.

Bunker Without Borders – a week-long festival of theatre, spoken word, dance, and music

A festival of theatre, spoken word, dance, and music

The Bunker, 53A Southwark Street, London SE1 1RU

Tuesday 4th – Saturday 8th April 2017

Bunker Without Borders is a week-long festival at The Bunker exploring the question ‘what might a world without borders look like, sound like, feel like, be like?’. The festival seeks to share stories in search of a united way forward in the current global climate.

Curated with playwright Firdos Ali, spoken word artist James Chelliah, and artists from the Bhumi Collective, The Bunker’s Artistic Director Joshua McTaggart has programmed a series of evenings that place a diverse range of voices on stage from a variety of different backgrounds, cultures, countries, and perspectives.

Ali has worked to present a kaleidoscope of responses to the world around us. Across the week, work from seven playwrights Ali, Amber Hsu, Mahad Ali, Rabiah Hussain, Daniel York, Alexandra Donnachie, and Nicole Latchana will be performed. Highlights of the festival include Latchna’s Fennel-Spiked Lamb which tells the true story of a Bangladeshi immigrant forced into modernday slavery in Scotland and Hussain’s Dissected in which two young female Muslim pathologists must their belief under the microscope as faith and forensics collide.

The week also features 15 of the city’s most exciting spoken word artists, who will perform in sets of three. Chelliah has scoured the London spoken word scene for an eclectic mix of performers who can bring their distinct words to The Bunker, ranging from Charlie de Courcy, the founder of London’s definitive spoken word evening Word Up, to rapper, singer, and spoken word artist Kitty Got Claws and poet Lex Sciore.

McTaggart comments, Bunker Without Borders is about celebrating and representing the incredible breadth and depth of story-telling the artists in this city has to offer. The Bunker came to fruition in a turbulent world, and it is our duty as theatre-makers to face those turbulences head on and ask ‘why?’ and, more importantly, ‘what next?’. It was important to us at The Bunker that we looked beyond just theatre, and we are thrilled to be continuing The Bunker’s tradition of music, spoken word, and dance, alongside a unique set of theatrical offerings. We want Bunker Without Borders to be the start of something bigger, not just a week-long festival and with the energy and excitement this incredible group of artists is bringing to The Bunker, I cannot wait to see what we discover and how, as a united group, we can move forward together.

Each evening of Bunker Without Borders will be complete with music and dance, and accompanied by The Bunker’s usual ‘stick around’ ethos with space for responses, discussions, and drinks at the bar.

Matthew Bourne at York Theatre Royal

Matthew Bourne’s Early Adventures

Town and Country, The Infernal Galop and Watch With Mother

York Theatre Royal, 24 & 25 March

Press performance Fri 24 March, 7.30pm

We are delighted to announce that Matthew Bourne’s EARLY ADVENTURES will arrive at York Theatre Royal on 24 and 25 March as part of a year-long celebration of work to commemorate the 30th Anniversary of the Company.

In EARLY ADVENTURES Matthew Bourne returns to his roots with a programme of hit pieces that launched his career and saw the birth of the style, wit and sheer entertainment that have become hallmarks of the New Adventures Company today. Town and Country and The Infernal Galop were last seen on tour in 2012 and Watch with Mother has not been seen for nearly 25 years.

The cast includes New Adventures favourites: Reece Causton, Tom Clark, Daniel Collins, Sophia Hurdley, Mari Kamata, Jamie McDonald and Edwin Ray as well as Joao Carolino and Paris Fitzpatrick who are making their New Adventures debut.

EARLY ADVENTURES is directed and choreographed by Matthew Bourne with designs by long-time collaborator Lez Brotherston.

Town and Country – Lie back and think of England…Moving and hilarious, this heartfelt pastiche explores notions of national character from a bygone era through the evocative music of Edward Elgar, Noël Coward and Percy Grainger, amongst others.

The Infernal Galop – A French dance with English subtitles. This is France as seen by the uptight English imagination, with all the traditional clichés joyously paraded for our entertainment and climaxing in Offenbach’s inevitable Can-Can!

Watch with Mother – Seen but not heard? – Conkers, Hopscotch, Doctors & Nurses; Children’s games can be all-consuming, competitive and sometimes cruel. Based on Joyce Grenfell’s famous Nursery School sketches (“George… Don’t do that”) and set to Percy Grainger’s own piano compositions and arrangements of Bach and Faure, this 1991 piece has not been seen for nearly 25 years.

There will be a post-show Q & A with Matthew Bourne on Friday 24 March.

 

The King and I – York Theatre Royal

The King and I

Rehearsals are well under way for a spectacular, lavish production of Rodgers and Hammerstein’s classic musical, the ever-popular King and I.

The company is led by veteran member John Hall as the King and Emma Dickinson as governess Anna Leonowens. Emma was seen as Milly last year in our popular production of Seven Bride for Seven Brothers.

John of course is no stranger to the York Theatre Royal stage and was last seen in our production of The Sound of Music when he starred as Captain Von Trapp.

Other principal roles include: Geoffrey Turner, The Kralahone; Sally Lewis, Lady Thiang; and from our very talented youth group, Jack Porter, Prince Chululongkorn; Flynn Coultous and Ruben Lally, sharing the role of Louis Leonowens, Anna’s son.

Supporting roles include: Richard Hawley, Sir Edward Ramsey; Phillip Jackson, The Captain; Martin Lay, Phra Alach; Finn East, The Interpreter. The young Princess Ying Yawolak, another shared role by members of our Youth group, Jess Parnell and Zoe Blenkiron.

At the helm of this production once again will be professional Director Martyn Knight, assisted by Sue Hawksworth, who has spent many hours putting the cast through their paces and polishing the scenes.

Possibly her biggest challenge has been the fifteen minute ballet The Small House of Uncle Thomas. It promises to be visually stunning and worth all the hard work.

With colourful scenery, stunning costumes and a musical score to die for including: Shall We Dance; Getting to Know You; I Have Dreamed; Something Wonderful; Hello, Young Lovers; I Whistle A Happy Tune; March of the Siamese Children and We Kiss In The Shadow. The King and I is a show not to be missed.

The King and I Runs from 8 – 18 March at York Theatre Royal.

Tickets available from the Box Office 01904 623568 or online at

yorktheateroyal.co.uk