KILN THEATRE ANNOUNCE LIVE STREAMED STAGED READING OF GIRL ON AN ALTAR – A NEWLY COMMISSIONED WORK BY MARINA CARR, FREE PANEL DISCUSSION SERIES, NEW ASSOCIATE DESIGNER TOM PIPER ANNOUNCED AS KILN RESIDENT ASSISTANT DESIGNER SCHEME LAUNCHED

KILN THEATRE ANNOUNCE

  • LIVE STREAMED STAGED REHEARSED READING OF GIRL ON AN ALTAR – A NEWLY COMMISSIONED WORK BY MARINA CARR
  • FREE PANEL DISCUSSION SERIES KILN COLLABORATIONS
  • NEW ASSOCIATE DESIGNER TOM PIPER ANNOUNCED AS KILN RESIDENT ASSISTANT DESIGNER SCHEME LAUNCHED TODAY

Artistic Director of Kiln Theatre, Indhu Rubasingham, today announces programming for Spring 2021, including a live stream of the staged rehearsed reading of Girl on an Altar – a newly commissioned work by Marina Carr, and Kiln Collaborations, a series of online panel discussions from leading industry figures. Also announced today, Tom Piper joins Kiln Theatre as Associate Designer and recruitment is live for brand new scheme Kiln Resident Assistant Designer which sees the creation of two opportunities for early career designers.

Artistic Director of Kiln Theatre, Indhu Rubasingham said today, “As we continue to work on reopening it is important we keep finding ways to connect with our communities. It is wonderful to have the opportunity to embed Tom into the organisation, advocating for freelancers and to add a Resident Assistant Designer into our team. These are firsts for Kiln and we couldn’t do it without the support of Backstage Trust. It is vital in these difficult times that we continually look at how to support and engage with the pathways into theatre careers.

“The play-reading of Girl on an Altar is an opportunity for audiences to have an insight into a process of play to stage. They will be watching a commissioned play before it’s first production and will witness a part of the process rarely seen by the public. 

“The Collaborations series will create much needed conversations about how we want to collaborate and how we want to move forward as a whole industry.”

The cast of Girl on an Altar includes Adjoa Andoh (Clytemnestra), Ayesha Antoine (Cassandra), Sharon Duncan-Brewster (Cilissa), Finbar Lynch (Aegisthus), Joseph Mydell (Tyndareus), Patrick O’Kane (Agamemnon). The reading will be live streamed for free online on 5 March at 7pm.

With many freelancers and theatre workers facing isolation and uncertainty, Kiln Theatre has created Kiln Collaborations – a series of online panel discussions where theatre creators come together to share experiences, approaches and advice on how to navigate the theatre industry by sticking together and working collaboratively. The initial panels will take place on 24 Feb 2021 and 11 March at 6.30pm, and will feature discussions from creatives Ayesha AntoinePolly Bennett, Kinnetia Isidore, Tony JayawardenaShelley Maxwell, Coral Messam, Tom Piper, Kiln Associate Directors Taio Lawson and Susie McKenna and Artistic Director Indhu Rubasingham. The panels will also discuss current difficulties facing freelancers and how to plan and prepare for the future. Both events are free and will be via Zoom.

Tom Piper joins Kiln Theatre as the first Associate Designer and has been integral to the creation of a brand new scheme to support and diversify opportunities for early careers designers in the face of the uncertainties facing the industry and those attempting to forge careers in theatre design specifically.  The scheme will see the creation of two 9 month full-time roles over the next 18 months, and will involve training, mentoring and the opportunity to work alongside Piper to support opening up pathways into theatre design for those of all backgrounds. This has been made possible by the generous support of Backstage Trust. For more information and to apply, visit https://kilntheatre.com/our-story/jobs/

Piper has a longstanding relationship with Kiln Theatre Artistic Director Indhu Rubasingham and has designed numerous shows for the company including Red VelvetThe House That Will Not StandThe Wolf in Snakeskin Shoes and most recently White Teeth. He also supported the redesign and refurbishment of Kiln Theatre in 2018.  

Tom Piper today said “I am passionate about design education and early career opportunities, and the status of freelancers within the arts. I hope that this will be the first in a number of opportunities to help diversify and give those wanting to pursue a career a valuable start.”

Jean Chan, a theatre designer who was previously part of the RSC trainee designer which Piper set up, said today “the [RSC] scheme gave me one of the best starting opportunities to learn first-hand how theatre productions are put together in the real world. The scheme helped me grow in knowledge and confidence to become the designer that I am today, I am sure the new Kiln Theatre scheme will offer the same great opportunities.”

GIRL ON AN ALTAR

By Marina Carr

Available at Kiln Player on 5 March 2021, 7pm

A re-telling of the ancient myth of Clytemnestra and Agamemnon.

A girl child is sacrificed on an altar for the wind to change so the Achaeans can sail to Ilium. Her father Agamemnon is to blame. Following his return ten years later, his wife Clytemnestra wants justice for her daughter.

Marina Carr’s new telling of the infamous Greek myth brings Clytemnestra’s story to the forefront and shows us the true strength of a mother’s love. 

Kiln Player brings you the unique opportunity to see a rehearsed reading of this newly commissioned work live streamed for free. Ticket bookers will have the opportunity to make a donation to Kiln Theatre as part of the checkout process. Donations will go towards the Kiln Community Appeal, supporting Kiln Theatre’s many communities through new and existing projects. Read more at https://kilntheatre.com/kiln-community/.

Marina Carr’s work for the stage includes Blood Wedding (Young Vic), Anna Karenina (Abbey Theatre), Mary Gordon (National Concert Hall), Hecuba (RSC), new contemporary translation of Verdi’s opera Rigoletto (Opera Theatre Company, Irish National Tour), 16 Possible Glimpses (The Abbey Theatre), Phaedra Backwards (McCarter Theatre, Princeton), The Giant Blue Hand (Ark Theatre Commission), Impossible Things Before Breakfast: Quartet (Traverse Theatre), MARBLE (Abbey Theatre), The Cordelia Dream (RSC at Wilton’s Music Hall), Woman And Scarecrow (Royal Court Theatre), By The Bog Of Cats (Abbey Theatre, Wyndham’s Theatre), Ariel (Abbey Theatre), On Raftery’s Hill (Town Hall Theatre Galway, Royal Court Theatre Downstairs, Kennedy Center Washington DC), Portia Coughlan (Abbey Theatre, Royal Court Theatre), The Mai (Peacock Theatre, Dublin – Winner of Best New Irish Play at Dublin Theatre Festival), Low In The Dark (Projects Arts Centre, Dublin) and Ullaloo (Dublin Theatre Festival, Abbey Theatre). Carr was awarded the 2017 Windham-Campbell Prize.

Adjoa Andoh returns to Klin Theatre to play Clytemnestra. Her theatre credits includeRichard II (Shakespeare’s Globe),Troilus and Cressida (RSC),Leave Taking (Bush Theatre), Assata Taught Me (Gate Theatre), Soul (Royal & Derngate/Hackney Empire), Les Liaisons Dangereuses (Donmar Warehouse), A Wolf in Snakeskin Shoes (Tricycle Theatre), Great Expectations (Bristol Old Vic), Julius Caesar (RSC/Noël Coward Theatre/BAM), Or You Could Kiss MeThe Revenger’s TragedyHis Dark Materials, Stuff Happens (National Theatre), Sugar Mummies, Breath Boom (Royal Court Theatre), Nights At The CircusPericles (Lyric Hammersmith) and Joe Turner’s Come and Gone (Young Vic). For television, her credits include as series regular Lady Danbury in Bridgerton, as DI Nina Rosen in Silent WitnessAcceptable RiskCucumber and The Awakening. For film her credits include BrightonFractured and Brotherhood.

Ayesha Antoine returns to the theatre to play Cassandra – she previously appeared in White Teeth and Red Velvet (Garrick Theatre), A Wolf in Snakeskin Shoes and The House That Will Not Stand. Her other theatre work includes Hamlet (Garrick Theatre), Life of Galileo, Trade (Young Vic), Dirty Great Love Story (Arts Theatre), The Suicide (National Theatre), The Ghost Train (Royal Exchange/Told By An Idiot), We Are Proud to Present… (Bush Theatre), Tartuffe (Birmingham REP), Absurd Person Singular, My Wonderful Day, Surprises (Stephen Joseph Theatre/ 59E59), One Monkey Don’t Stop No Show (Sheffield Crucible/Eclipse Theatre Company tour), Carrot (Theatre503), The Mountaintop (Derby Playhouse), Blue/Orange (Tiata Fahodzi/Arcola Theatre), Madblud, Family Man, Cinderella, Red Riding Hood (Theatre Royal Stratford East), Big White Fog (Almeida Theatre) and The Firework Maker’s Daughter (Lyric Hammersmith/Told By An Idiot tour). For television her work includes Thunderbirds are Go!, Chewing Gum, Pompidou, Doctor Who, Holby City, Bellamy’s People, Mongrels, Mouth to Mouth, and Grange Hill.

Sharon Duncan-Brewster returns to Kiln Theatre to play Cilissa – she previously appeared in Not Black and White season. Her theatre credits include Victory Condition (Royal Court Theatre), Meet Me at Dawn, Swallow (Traverse Theatre), The Almighty Sometimes (Royal Exchange Theatre, Manchester) and A Midsummer Night’s Dream (Liverpool Everyman). For television, her work includes Intergalactic, Sex Education, Years and Years, The Long Song, Top Boy, The Bible, Cucumber, The Mimic, Bad Girls – as series regular Crystal Gordon, Doctor Who and EastEnders – as series regular Trina Johnson; or for film, Dune, The Intent 2: The Come Up, Rogue One: A Star Wars Story and Three and Out.

Finbar Lynch plays Aegisthus. His extensive theatre work includes Indecent (Menier Chocolate Factory), Girl From the North Country (Noel Coward Theatre, Gielgud Theatre and Toronto), The Lady From the Sea, Hecuba, To the Green Fields Beyond, Fool for Love, Translations (Donmar Warehouse), Richard III (Almeida Theatre), Ma Rainey’s Black Bottom, Antony and Cleopatra, Not About the Nightingales (National Theatre), Antigone (Barbican and world tour), Desire Under the Elms (Lyric Hammersmith), The Fairy Queen (Glyndebourne, Paris, New York), The Duchess of Malfi (The Old Vic), Faith Healer (Bristol Old Vic), The Big Fellah (Out of Joint), The Raggered Trousered Philanthropist (Chichester Festival Theatre), as well as for the RSC, A Midsummer Night’s Dream, Measure for Measure, Amphibians, and A Woman Killed with Kindness. For television, his work includes Treasdstone, The Mallorca Files, The Feed, Foyle’s War, DCI Banks, Breathless, Game of Thrones, Silk and Proof; and for film, Adventures of a Mathematician, The World We Knew, Property of the State, Departure, Suffragette, To Kill a King and The Scold’s Bride.

Joseph Mydell plays Tyndareus. His theatre credits include The Visit, Evening at the Talk House, The Comedy of Errors, Edmond, Alice’s Adventures Underground, Angels In America – for which he won Olivier Award for Best Supporting Actor (National Theatre), Death Of A Salesman (Young Vic/Piccadilly Theatre), A Season in the CongoElektra (Young Vic), The Tragedy of King Richard IIRichard III (Almeida Theatre), Hamlet (RSC), Cat on a Hot Tin Roof (Novello Theatre), Mother Christmas and Anna in the Tropics (Hampstead Theatre). His television credits include Mrs. WilsonHomelandThe Missing and Space Precinct; and for film, The Eternal Daughter, Seven and Me, Woman in GoldTonight You’re MineMammoth and Manderlay.

Patrick O’Kane plays Agamemnon. His theatre credits include Macbeth, War Horse, Scenes From The Big Picture, Closing Time, Peer Gynt, Romeo and Juliet, The Playboy of the Western World (National Theatre), Woyzeck in Winter (Black Box, Barbican, Dublin Theatre Festival), Red, The Crucible (Lyric Theatre Belfast), Quietly (Abbey Theatre, Public Theater Irish Repertory, Soho Theatre, Traverse Theatre), Seven Acts of Mercy, Macbeth (RSC), Antigone (Barbican, Theatre de la Ville, BAM), Sixteen Possible Glimpses (Abbey Theatre), Titanic: Scenes From The British Wreck Commissioners Inquiry (MAC Belfast) and Doctor Faustus (Royal Exchange Theatre, Manchester). His television credits include Doctor Who, Come Home, DCI Banks, The Secret, Jamaica Inn, Strike Back, The Borgias, The Fall, Game of Thrones, Wire in the Blood, Five Days, If…, Waking the Dead, Gunpowder, Treason & Plot, Any Time Now, As The Beast Sleeps, In Deep and Liverpool 1; and for film, Female Human Animal, The Last Jedi, Boat, The Music Room, Prometheus, Exorcist – The Beginnings, Octane and Stealing Rembrandt.

Kiln Theatre Listings

Information for all events can be found at www.KilnTheatre.com

Kiln Collaborations 1 – Designer, Costume Supervisor and Actor

24 Feb 2021 – 6.30pm

Kiln Theatre Associate Director Taio Lawson hosts an evening with Designer Tom Piper, Costume Designer Kinnetia Isidore and Actors Ayesha Antoine and Tony Jayawardena.

Girl on an Altar

5 Mar 2021 – 7pm

Marina Carr’s new telling of the infamous Greek myth brings Clytemnestra’s story to the forefront and shows us the true strength of a mother’s love. 

Kiln Collaborations 2 – Choreographer, Movement Director and Director

11 Mar 2021 – 6.30pm

Kiln Theatre Associate Director Susie McKenna hosts an evening with Artistic Director Indhu Rubasingham, Movement Directors / Choreographers Polly Bennett, Shelley Maxwell and Coral Messam.

Girl on an Altar is supported by Jon and NoraLee Sedmak.

Kiln Collaborations are funded by the Kiln Community appeal.

Tom Piper and the new Resident Assistant Designer have been appointed due to generous funding from the Backstage Trust.

MARY OLIVER APPOINTED VICE PRINCIPAL OF ROSE BRUFORD COLLEGE

MARY OLIVER

APPOINTED VICE PRINCIPAL OF

ROSE BRUFORD COLLEGE

Rose Bruford College, one of the UK’s leading theatre and performance institutions, is delighted to announce the appointment of their new Vice Principal (Academic). Mary Oliver will take up the role on 1 June 2021, following the departure of the previous Vice Principal, Dr Andrew Walker. She joins as Bernardine Evaristo OBE begins her role as President of the College.

Mary Oliver is coming to Rose Bruford from her role as Professor and Dean at the Arts University Bournemouth where she has been leading the School of Media and Performance and has helped take the university to its recent success as the top specialist art and design university in the UK.

A pioneer of immersive and digital performance as writer, performer and producer, her extensive portfolio of original devised theatre work has been performed internationally. Mary Oliver’s previous academic posts include Head of Media at Manchester Metropolitan University, where she was instrumental in the creation of the new School of Digital Arts at the Manchester School of Art. She was awarded a National Teaching Fellowship in 2013 for Innovative Pedagogy in the teaching of contemporary performance and has led learning and research developments across a range of subject disciplines relevant to Rose Bruford’s current portfolio.

A key part of Mary’s academic leadership has been to develop strong industry partnerships; future proofing learning to ensure graduates are gaining skills which are shaping the future of the creative sector. A drive for innovation, particularly in the digital space, are also key elements of the training currently being undertaken at Rose Bruford College.

Mary Oliver said, “I am delighted to have the opportunity to join the progressive leadership team at Rose Bruford and bring my innovative approach to the teaching of theatre and performance. With the recent launch of the Centre for Digital Production, as well as the new BA in Theatre and Social Change, Rose Bruford are actively enhancing their portfolio offer and reaching out to new and diverse communities of learners and I am excited to be part of these developments”.

Principal Clarie Middleton, who joined Rose Bruford in 2018 from her previous role of Chief Executive of Hackney Empire, is spearheading the College’s mission to create the change-makers of the future.

Clarie Middleton said “our goal is to achieve social as well as cultural impact through delivering the highest quality vocational training and education and shaping graduates who are creative, empowered, employable, inclusive and diverse, ethical and intercultural in outlook. Mary Oliver’s appointment is a key part of that vision, and we’re thrilled that she will help drive our strategic transformation in the years to come, both in terms of the growth and development of the curriculum, and in student numbers at all levels.”

Chair of the Rose Bruford College Board of Governors, Monisha Shah, said, “The Board of governors are delighted to welcome Mary Oliver to this key appointment, which will enhance and strengthen the existing team led by Clarie Middleton. Our priority for Bruford is a focus on consistently high academic quality with strong student outcomes, widening participation and supporting good mental health and wellbeing. We know that Mary brings brilliant and highly relevant experience and insight from her academic and creative work, and we are excited about the next phase of growth and development of this great College”.

World premiere of highly-anticipated new musical, Vanara, comes to Hackney Empire | Limited season, 22 – 31 October 2021

World premiere of highly-anticipated new musical
Vanara at Hackney Empire
Hackney Empire, 291 Mare Street, Hackney, London E8 1EJ
Friday 22nd – Sunday 31st October 2021

The world premiere of the highly-anticipated new musical Vanara will take place at Hackney Empire this October. Following two workshop performances, and an acclaimed concept album featuring some of the biggest names in musical theatre, the ground-breaking production will open in London for a strictly limited season before embarking on a UK-wide tour in 2022. Casting will be announced in due course.

As disaster threatens to destroy the world they know, two tribes are locked in an age-old battle. One young woman must make a choice: protect the traditions of her people or challenge everything she has been taught. With total devastation bearing down on them, will the two tribes reunite before it’s too late?

Vanara will once again bring together the acclaimed international creative team, with a soaring score by Gianluca Cucchiara, lyrics by Andrew James Whelan, and book by Michael Conley. Produced by Giovanna Romagnoli, the production will be co-directed by Adam Lenson and Eleesha Drennan, who will also take on the roles of Dramaturg and Choreographer, respectively.

With a prevailing message of hope and call for unity, the production resonates with the chaos of today’s society and the earth ravaged by natural disasters. This fiery phenomenon has gained cult status among fans throughout its development process. With its blend of theatre, contemporary dance, and technical innovation, Vanara is crafting a new language for musical theatre. It is an excitingly modern musical like nothing before

Producer Giovanna Romagnoli comments, I am delighted to reunite our creative team and we are extremely excited to bring the world premiere of Vanara to London’s Hackney Empire this Autumn. We look forward to welcoming audiences to discover the thrilling world we have created. A new musical legend is waiting for you!

All tickets for the preview performance, Friday 22nd October, will be £20 (plus booking fee).

EMPTY STAGE – Birmingham Royal Ballet premieres new short film commission dedicated to the live performance industry

Birmingham Royal Ballet premieres short film commission: Empty Stage, dedicated to the live performance industry 

CLICK HERE FOR FILM

Following the live and on demand stream of The Nutcracker at The REP, Birmingham Royal Ballet continues to find creative ways of keeping audiences entertained with the release of Carlos Acosta’s first major digital commission for the Company: Empty Stage.

Empty Stage is a poignant, hope-filled response to COVID’s impact on live performance and demonstrates the Birmingham Royal Ballet’s deep-rooted desire to keep ballet alive during difficult times. Directed by Roseanna Anderson and Joshua Ben-Tovim and named after the whimsical, heartstring-tugging song by Benjamin Scheuer, the film features a host of Birmingham Royal Ballet dancers as well as some of the Company members who all work behind the scenes to make performances possible, in a tribute to the industry.

An initial melancholic tone reflecting on what has been lost transforms into a message of hope as the lights go up and magic re-enters the theatre. The applause we hear is not just an encouragement but recognition of a shared live experience that nourishes all involved. This unique concept from Carlos Acosta, realised in collaboration with up-and-coming directors Roseanna Anderson and Joshua Ben-Tovim of award-winning company Impermanence and decorated singer songwriter Benjamin Scheuer, is another indication of his ambition to expand the creative horizons of the Company. 

Birmingham Royal Ballet looks towards the future with hope that at some point this year, the full production of Cinderella will fill the empty stages with dancers, and theatres with audiences as planned. But as uncertainty continues to build for the spring, we can only wait to see what might be possible. Watch this space!

Director of Birmingham Royal Ballet Carlos Acosta said ‘Everyone has been focused on creating digital content recently. We have been fortunate to have performed live on stage whether for audiences in the theatre or in their homes but this project is something else. I wanted to make a film that told the story of the past 9 months in a hopeful and optimistic way and to make it a work of art in its own right rather than a version of a live experience or a promotional vehicle. I find the ideal collaborators for this in Benjamin, Joshua and Roseanna.’

‘We felt it was important to start the new year on as positive a note as possible, whatever the situation regarding our plans looked like. As has been the case throughout 2020, Birmingham Royal Ballet’s focus has been on what is possible rather than what is not.’

The collaboration between Acosta, Impermanence and Scheuer came together serendipitously: In May 2020 when Carlos was featured in BBC Arts: Dance on Film, he came across a film by Impermanence. In September 2020, Scheuer wrote Empty Stage on a public piano in London, and sent the track to Nick Finney from NB Studio, (the design-firm behind Birmingham Royal Ballet’s 2020 rebrand). Finney introduced Carlos to Scheuer’s music – it was love at first listen. Thus the collaboration was born. Working with artists from different disciplines is a deep rooted desire for Acosta; whilst continuing to nurture and highlight the world class talent in his own company, there is also a strong pull to do the same though cross-art collaborations.

Says Scheuer: ‘In September 2020, I went for a walk in London, thinking about all the closed theatres. The phrase “all that’s left is an empty stage” was going round in my head. I spied a public piano, sat down, and wrote the song Empty Stage. The song has now blossomed into a joyful collaboration of song, dance, costume, film-making, and recording technology. It is a pleasure and honor to work with Carlos Acosta and Birmingham Royal Ballet; with the Royal Ballet Sinfonia, their marvellous conductor Paul Murphy and the extraordinary orchestral arranger Paul Davies; with Grammy Award-winning pianist Matt Rollings; with my co-producer of the song, Grammy Award-winning Robin Baynton; and with the brilliant Joshua Ben-Tovim and Roseanna Anderson, the directors of the film. They all bring the song to life in a way I could only have dreamed.’

Roseanna Anderson and Joshua Ben-Tovim of Impermanence said: ‘Carlos Acosta has an enthusiasm and drive to create and connect. That energy became part of this film which has been an amazing thing to be involved in. BRB is about entertainment, craft, skill, beautiful costumes; it’s about light and scale, and it’s about audiences. We wanted the film to show all that. Benjamin has an incredible song-writing ability and his history of performing in the theatre gave the whole project a feeling of genuine sentiment, which is so important. There was a big team involved and everyone went above and beyond to make this film happen.’

Whilst things remain in flux and plans continue to be revisited, Birmingham Royal Ballet proves once again that they are an agile and creative company and under Carlos Acosta’s directorship who knows where the road will take them.

21ST ANNUAL WHATSONSTAGE AWARDS TO TAKE PLACE ON SUNDAY 14 MARCH 2021 IN UNIQUE CEREMONY TO REFLECT OUR TIMES

20210201_WhatsOnStage_Gold_Crest_2021

21ST ANNUAL WHATSONSTAGE AWARDS

TO TAKE PLACE ON SUNDAY 14 MARCH 2021

IN UNIQUE CEREMONY TO REFLECT OUR TIMES

This time the audience are the winners!

A STATEMENT FROM SITA McINTOSH, COO OF WHATSONSTAGE

ON THIS YEAR’S WHATSONSTAGE AWARDS:

“Coronavirus has decimated the UK theatre industry. World War Two closed theatres for a few weeks. 9/11 closed Broadway for 48 hours. COVID-19 has closed UK theatres for almost a year and counting…

“Even though a handful of venues have reopened with socially distanced performances, the shared joy of live theatre has been temporarily lost to audiences up and down the country, not to mention the catastrophic impact on performers, musicians, creatives and a whole army of unseen whose work literally dried up overnight.

“At this time of year, we would normally be looking forward to the annual WhatsOnStage Awards Ceremony but to reflect the extraordinary times we find ourselves in, we have decided to take a different approach.

“This year, the 2021 WhatsOnStage Awards will adopt a unique format. A ceremony will be broadcast on Sunday 14 March at 7pm from The Turbine Theatre with our partners at stream.theatre. It’s a fitting date that will mark a full year since many theatres up and down the country played their last performance, as they officially closed two days later.

“Co-produced with Paul Taylor-Mills, it will incorporate a number of performances from shows that were cut short in 2020, along with shows that we hope to enjoy in 2021 and beyond. Plus, as we will be coming of age, we’re expecting some lovely 21st birthday messages from some of our favourite performers and creatives. 

“Finally, as the WOS Awards are and always have been centred around the audience, rather than ask them to nominate performers and creatives we will be inviting them to nominate Angels – someone in their life that has been a source of love, support and kindness during the pandemic. In theatre, Angels are traditionally people who invest in new shows enabling productions to get off the ground, so it seems a fitting term for people that go that extra mile to help others.

“We will then select 21 Angels from the nominations we’ve received and announce their names on the night, as well as treating them to a night at the theatre when live performances return. This is our way of recognising the heroes in our community as well as doing our bit to support shows, and encourage audiences back into theatres.

“Tickets for the 21st Annual WhatsOnStage Awards will be just £21.00* (a special early bird price of £15* is available if booked by midnight on Sunday 21 February 2021.)

“We look forward to joining together with audiences across the globe on Sunday 14 March, and to stand shoulder to shoulder with those in our industry celebrating the vital contribution theatre makes to the world, financially and emotionally. Theatre will be back, bigger, better and stronger than ever. Until then we will do our best to keep the lights on”

Tickets will go on sale at 11am on Friday 19 February and full details on how to nominate an Angel will be announced shortly on www.whatsonstage.com

Tickets are available from www.stream.theatre/WOSA2021 

*£15 plus transaction fee if booked by midnight on Sunday 21 February 2021

*£21 plus transaction fee from Monday 22 February 2021

Twitter @WhatsOnStage #WOSAwards

Instagram @WhatsOnStage

Graduates at Cadogan Hall announces cast and on sale today

Graduates at Cadogan Hall concert series announces cast and goes on sale today

40 musical theatre and drama graduates will take part in a series of three charity concerts streamed from London’s Cadogan Hall, hosted by West End performers Grace Mouat, Luke Bayer and Courtney Bowman

Watch along streams 26-28 March 2021

Then available on demand 28 March–4 April

To support performing arts graduates who have had their careers halted before they’ve even begun,40 young professionals are being given the opportunity to showcase their talents in three nights of on line musical theatre concerts, with all profits going to Acting for Others. The evenings will be hosted by Courtney Bowman(Everybody’s Talking About Jamie, SIX),Grace Mouat (& Juliet, SIX) and Luke Bayer (Everybody’s Talking About Jamie, Fiver).

The full concert cast is: Abel Law, Alice Croft, Amelia Atherton, Aoife O’Dea, Ayesha Patel, Ben Joyce, Beth Mabin, Bibi Jay, Cassie McCluskey, Charlotte Hannah Jones, Curtis Patrick, Darcy Finden, David Mairs-McKenzie, Dean Makowski-Clayton, Fallon Mondlane, Faye Wheeler, Gabe Hampton-Saint, George Maddison, Georgia Lennon, Harriet Waters, Henry Shine, India Chadwick, Jay Worley, Jennifer Adab, Jo Stephenson, Joely Colleen Emms, Karen Wilkinson, Kingsley Morton, Kyle Birch, Lewis Snell, Mark Lockhart, Markus Sodergren, Megan Cerys-Holland, Millie Cranston, Nardia Ruth. Nathan Shaw, Niels Bouwmeester, Olivia Lalloand Sam Rippon. With musical direction from Sam Young.

Ameena Hamid said“With over 200 applicants, we were blown away by the talent of 2020 and 2021 graduates and are so pleased to announce the 40 performers taking part in Graduates at Cadogan Hall. We are also delighted to announce Sam Young as MD for the events, a real talent we are looking forward to seeing big things from in the future, and fabulous West End performers Grace, Luke and Courtney hosting the show. Thanks to our partnership with the Rayvox Reignite Fund, all the applicants will get an SOVT Straw to develop and maintain their vocal health.”

@thegradfest | @ameena_hamid | #gradsatcad | www.thegradfest.co.uk |www.ameenahamidproductions.co.uk

Hosts: Grace Mouat, Luke Bayer, Courtney Bowman Musical director: Sam Young Producer: Ameena Hamid Marketing: Liam McLaughlin

FULL CAST ANNOUNCED FOR NEW DIGITAL PRODUCTION OF THE PICTURE OF DORIAN GRAY

FULL CAST ANNOUNCED FOR NEW DIGITAL PRODUCTION OF THE PICTURE OF DORIAN GRAY

L-R: Alfred Enoch, Joanna Lumley, Fionn Whitehead (Photo: Pip), Russell Tovey (Photo: Jason Dimmock), Emma McDonald and Stephen Fry (Photo: Claire Newman Williams)

 

The co-producers of the upcoming digital adaptation of The Picture of Dorian Gray have today announced the production’s full casting and creative team.

Joining previously announced Fionn Whitehead, in the title role, are Alfred Enoch as Harry Wotton, Joanna Lumley as Lady Narborough, Emma McDonald as Sibyl Vane and Russell Tovey as Basil Hallward with Stephen Fry as the Interviewer.

From the creative team behind the critically acclaimed What a Carve Up!, the beloved Faustian tale by Oscar Wilde is brought kicking and screaming into a world of Instagram, Facebook and dating apps. Set in a profile pic-obsessed, filter-fixated world, the contemporary take follows influencer Dorian Gray as he makes a deal for his social star never to fade.

The Picture of Dorian Gray will utilise elements found in radio plays, films, documentaries as well as traditional theatrical techniques. Tickets for the production are currently on sale internationally, and can be purchased via pictureofdoriangray.com

Based on the novel by Oscar Wilde, the production is written by Henry Filloux-Bennett with direction by Tamara Harvey, set and costume design by Holly Pigott, assistant direction by Eleri JonesBenjamin Collins as director of photography, sound design and original music by Harry Smith and original song by Jared Zeus.

Director Tamara Harvey said of the casting, “When trying to tell stories in Covid times, with very few resources and almost no time, the thing you need from your cast more even than talent is a spirit of collaboration, combined with patience, kindness and large doses of humour. Every member of our cast for Dorian Gray brought that and more. They are not only ridiculously talented but also – perhaps even more importantly – they’re all genuinely lovely people, which has made the making of this piece a joy.

Audience members receive a screening link which will activate on their booked performance date for a 48-hour period. Tickets are priced at £12 which will include both a link to the production as well as a digital programme. Closed captioning will be available for all dates during the run, with audio description available from 23-31 March.

Education packs, which will be packaged with performance links at £100 per school/group, are also available for the production and have been curated to be used across a range of curriculum areas, particularly to those studying Drama and Theatre, Performing Arts, Media and PSHE.

Box Office and education pack enquiries can be made by emailing [email protected]

The Barn Theatre in Cirencester, the Lawrence Batley Theatre in Huddersfield, the New Wolsey Theatre in Ipswich, Oxford Playhouse in Oxfordshire and Theatr Clwyd in Mold are co-producers for the production.

Get Up, Stand Up! The Bob Marley Musical postpones opening until October 2021

Playful Productions, Stage Play and Cedella Marley present 

GET UP, STAND UP!

THE BOB MARLEY MUSICAL

  • THE PRODUCERS OF GET UP, STAND UP! THE BOB MARLEY MUSICAL HAVE TAKEN THE DECISION TO RESCHEDULE THE WORLD PREMIERE
     
  • THE FIRST PREVIEW WILL NOW TAKE PLACE ON 1 OCTOBER WITH AN OPENING NIGHT ON 20 OCTOBER 2021
     
  • PATRONS WILL BE CONTACTED BY THE BOX OFFICE OR THEIR POINT OF PURCHASE IN DUE COURSE WITH UPDATED BOOKING DETAILS
     
  • TICKETS ARE NOW ON SALE UNTIL 3 APRIL 2022 FROM WWW.GETUPSTANDUPTHEMUSICAL.COM
     

Producers of the new musical Get Up, Stand Up! The Bob Marley Musical have today taken the decision to delay the start of performances until social distancing is lifted. The first preview will now take place at the Lyric Theatre on 1 October 2021 with an opening night on 20 October 2021. 

The producers are convinced that this joyous and uplifting show will be at its best when a full house can enjoy the legendary music of Bob Marley. For this reason they have decided to pause until a time when it is possible to open theatres at full capacity.

Patrons will be contacted by the box office or their point of purchase in due course with updated booking details.

AMBER JAMES, BLACK APRON ENTERTAINMENT AND ENGLISH TOURING THEATRE ANNOUNCE SHORT FILM SERIES CHILDREN’S CHILDREN

AMBER JAMES, BLACK APRON ENTERTAINMENT AND ENGLISH TOURING THEATRE ANNOUNCE SHORT FILM SERIES CHILDREN’S CHILDREN

Amber JamesBlack Apron Entertainment and English Touring Theatre today announce Children’s Children – a series of five short films, curated by Amber James, exploring the interaction of past with the present, and celebrating Black history. The full series, co-produced by ETT and Black Apron Entertainment, is available to watch from Wednesday 24 February 2021 via YouTube (www.youtube.com/user/ETTonYT) and Instagram (www.instagram.com/englishtouringtheatre)

Tristan Fynn-Aiduenu and Rikki Beadle-Blair direct five pieces performed by Gershwyn Eustache JnrAmber JamesKayla MeikleSule Rimi, and Khai Shaw.

‘Children have never been very good at listening to their elders. But they have never failed to imitate them’ James Baldwin

How much of our history do we carry? From the fields, across the waters and onto the streets; revolts become riots, rallies become tweets. This is the life. This is repeat. Uncovering texts from throughout history and the present day and presenting them for 2021, these films ask how much of the past remains in our present.

The series rediscovers the voices of black activists, poets, artists and real working people, across a period of more than a century. We conclude in the modern day after hearing from Sojourner Truth, Una Marson, Stanley Crooke, Desmond Pierre and Still Shadey.

Amber James said today, “These films were born out of two things really – rage and love. We’ve come together to create a journey of films that honour where we’ve come from, whilst being real about where we’re at. Black History, it’s a living breathing thing. Their stories are our stories, and ours will be our children’s – and that is both beautiful and terrifying.” 

Watch the behind the scenes trailer here: https://youtu.be/k2uaxLCOie4

Images available here: https://we.tl/t-DOub3qfIm3

Producers: Daniel M. Bailey and Ben Quashie; Director of Photography: Gino Green; 1st AC: Dan Bold Sound Designer: Will Berger for House of Noise; Sound Operator: Alistair Bean

Make Up Artist: Billie Mckenzie; Behind the Scenes Photographer: Morgan Quashie

Amber James is curator. Her recent credits include Snowflake (Kiln Theatre), Vassa (Almeida Theatre), A Midsummer Night’s Dream (Regent’s Park Open Air Theatre), Troilus And CressidaTitus AndronicusAntony And Cleopatra (RSC) and A Streetcar Named Desire (English Touring Theatre). Her television credits include VeraRansom and Doc Martin.

Gershwyn Eustache Jnr’stheatre credits include Pass Over (Kiln Theatre) Small Island, Pinocchio, Home, Nut (National Theatre), Anatomy of a Suicide, A Profoundly Affectionate Passionate Devotion to Someone (Royal Court Theatre), The Royale (Bush Theatre) and The Comedy of Errors (Shakespeare’s Globe). For television, his work includes I May Destroy YouSmall Axe, Britannia, Fortitude, Legends, Peter and Wendy and Run; and for film, The Yellow Birds, Second Coming and Starred Up.

Kayla Meikle’s theatre credits include Shoe LadyEar for EyePrimetime (Royal Court Theatre), VassaDance Nation (Almeida Theatre), All My Sons (The Old Vic), A Midsummer Night’s DreamJack and the Beanstalk (Lyric Hammersmith), MacbethRomeo and Juliet (National Theatre), The Taming of the Shrew (Arts Theatre) and All the Lives (Ovalhouse). Her television credits include WillAfter LifeThe Capture and Small Axe.

Sule Rimi’s theatre credits include Three Sisters (National Theatre), Glass! Kill! Bluebeard! Imp! (Royal Court), Sweat (Donmar Warehouse/West End), Measure for Measure (Donmar Warehouse), All My SonsThe American Clock (Old Vic), Love and InformationDesire Under the Elms (Sheffield), Barber Shop Chronicles (National Theatre, Australia, New Zealand), Mary StuartThey Drink it in the Congo (Almeida Theatre), The Suicide (National Theatre), The Rolling Stone (Royal Exchange, Manchester/WYP/Orange Tree), TheOdyssey: Missing Presumed Dead (ETT/Liverpool Everyman), Bordergame (National Theatre of Wales), Othello (Fluellen Theatre Company), Muscle (Shock N Awe), and Serious Money (Waking Exploits). His television credits include Manhunt IIBlack Earth RisingDeath in ParadiseBirds of a Feather Christmas SpecialStrikebackUnforgottenStellaDNN: Definitely Not Newsround4 O’Clock ClubMistressesCrashCaerdyddThe Black LionY PrisScrum IV. His film credits include Ashens & the Quest for the Game ChildBad FuckingThe Adventurer: Curse of the Midas BoxThe MachineElfie Hopkins and the GammonsDaddy’s GirlStarter for Ten, and Francis.

Khai Shaw’s theatre credits include Crongton Knights (UK tour), Little Baby Jesus (Orange Tree Theatre), The Suicide (Stratford Arts), Decades (Bridge Theatre Company), The Railway Children (Waterloo Railway Theatre), Daddy Cool (Shaftesbury Theatre), The Lion King (Lyceum Theatre) and Chitty Chitty Bang Bang (London Palladium). Screen credits include Bitesize Shakespeare (BBC), Casualty (BBC) and Meet The Adebanjos (MTA).

Rikki Beadle-Blair MBE is a writer, director, composer, choreographer, designer, producer and performer working in the film, theatre, television and radio. Having written and directed 30 plays over the last 20 years along with several feature films, shorts and tv episodes and series, he has won several awards including the Sony Award, the Los Angeles Outfest Screenwriting and Outstanding Achievement awards. Rikki’s passion for encouraging creativity and business sense in other has led him to becoming a committed mentor to a great many writers, actors, composers and directors around the world.

Tristan Fynn-Aiduenu is a British-Ghanaian theatre-maker whose work aims to stretch the imagination of his audiences with his unique brand of storytelling. Tristan has directed at venues including The Young Vic, Albany Deptford, Theatre Royal Stratford East, and National Theatre. He is an Associate Director of Initiative.dkf and Playback Drama. He is an Associate Producer for The Melanin Box Festival and a reader for the Orange Tree Theatre. Fynn-Aiduenu was trained on the Stonecrabs Young Directors Programme and the Young Vic Springboard Programme, and is the winner of the 2019 JMK Directors Award.

LAMBERT JACKSON PRODUCTIONS ANNOUNCES FILMED RELEASE OF BKLYN – THE MUSICAL WITH FULL CAST AVAILABLE ON STREAM.THEATRE

LAMBERT JACKSON PRODUCTIONS ANNOUNCES FILMED RELEASE OF

BKLYN – THE MUSICAL WITH FULL CAST

AVAILABLE ON STREAM.THEATRE

Lambert Jackson Productions today announce the filmed release of Mark Schoenfeld and Barri McPherson’s BKLYN – The Musical. The production, filmed at the Ugly Duck space,will be available 22 March  4 April via www.stream.theatre/season/51.

Dean Johnson directs Sejal Keshwala (Faith), Emma Kingston (Brooklyn), Newtion Matthews (Street Singer), Jamie Muscato (Taylor)and Marisha Wallace (Paradice), with musical direction from Leo Munby, production design by Andrew Exeter and video editing by Sam Diaz

BKLYN – The Musical is a story within a story. On the outside you have a troupe of incredibly talented street performers who are sharing a story from their lives… Then there is the story they tell – the story of a young girl who comes to the U.S. to find the father she never knew. Together these stories create a show that is both touching and inspiring – a real urban fairytale.

Jamie Lambert and Eliza Jackson today said, “It has been incredibly exciting, and of course extremely challenging, to create theatre and explore new ways to share our work over the last year, and we are incredibly proud of what we have produced. We cannot wait for audiences to see our latest offering, our most ambitious to date, it really is spectacular. We’d like to thank the licensing team, cast, creatives and crew for all their work and bravery in making this production happen. BKLYN is a show for all the dreamers out there, and we felt it was the perfect time to give people that story.”

Sejal Keshwala plays Faith. Her theatre credits include Bend It Like Beckham (Phoenix Theatre), Anita and Me (Birmingham Repertory Theatre), Trident Moon (Finborough Theatre), Bernstein’s Mass (Southbank Centre) and Company (Phoenix Arts Club). Her television credits include Britain’s Got Talent, Michael McIntyre’s Very Christmassy Christmas Show, Let’s Do Lunch with Gino and Mel and Search for a Musical Theatre Performer.

Emma Kingston plays Brooklyn. Her theatre credits include The Last Five Years (Minack Theatre), Zorro (Hope Mill Theatre), Evita (international tour), Fiddler On The Roof (Chichester Festival Theatre), Ann Duck (The National Theatre), Grinning Man (Bristol Old Vic), 21 Chump St (Tristan Bates Theatre), In The Heights (Kings Cross Theatre), Les Miserables (Queen’s Theatre), Priscilla Queen of the Desert and Grease (UK tour). Her film credits include Been So Long, and for television her credits include Magic At The Musicals and Sound of Musicals with Neil Brand.

Newtion Matthews plays Street Singer. He competed as a finalist on both The X Factor as well as The Voice and was signed to Warner Music, touring throughout the UK and Europe. His theatre credits include One Love: The Bob Marley Musical (Birmingham Repertory Theatre), The Frontline (Shakespeare’s Globe), The Harder They Come (US tour) and The Life (International tour). His television credits include Dance For Comic Relief, and for film credits his include Gulliver’s Travels.

Jamie Muscato plays Taylor. His theatre credits include West Side Story (Leicester Curve), Heathers (Theatre Royal Haymarket/The Other Palace), Big Fish (The Other Palace), Lazarus (Kings Cross Theatre), Bend It Like Beckham (Phoenix Theatre), Sweeney Todd (Welsh National Opera), Dogfight (Southwark Playhouse), The Light Princess (National Theatre), Rock Of Ages (Shaftesbury Theatre), Love Story (Chichester Festival Theatre/Duchess Theatre), Les Misérables (International tour), Spring Awakening (Lyric Hammersmith), Lift (Trafalgar Studios). His film credits include The Colour of Spring, The Nun, Les Misérables, The Euphoria of Drowning Feature, Wild Oats. His television credits include Cilla and The Trial of Christine Keeler.

Marisha Wallace plays Paradice. Her theatre credits include The Book of Mormon (US tour), Aladdin (New Amsterdam Theatre), Something Rotten! (St. James Theatre), Dreamgirls (Savoy Theatre), Waitress (Adelphi Theatre) and Hairspray (London Coliseum) and for film, her credits include Aladdin and The View. Wallace’s debut album Tomorrow was released in 2020.

Dean Johnson directs. His previous theatre credits include First Date (Lambert Jackson Productions), Godspell (St Paul’s Covent Garden/Cadogan Hall), Dogfight (Southwark Playhouse), Paperboy (Lyric Theatre Belfast), Spring Awakening, In The Heights (Stockwell Playhouse), Into The Woods and Rent (Belvoir Studio Theatre).

Leo Munby is Musical Director. His previous credits as musical director include: The Last Five Years (Southwark Playhouse/Minack Theatre), Gypsy (Royal Exchange, Manchester), Dogfight (Southwark Playhouse), Becoming Angela (National Theatre). His composer credits include: STOP (Edinburgh Fringe Festival). As a composer and musical director his credits include Annabel Mutale Reed (The Barn Theatre). His musical supervisor credits include An Evening With Jason Robert Brown and Guests (Theatre Royal Haymarket), his musical assistant credits include Company (Gielgud Theatre).

Munby will be joined by Richie Garrison on Saxophone and Georgina Lloyd-Owen on Cello.