Flights Review

Omnibus Theatre, Clapham – until 29 February 2020

Reviewed by Riley Anderson

3.5***

The themes explored in Flights are timeless, and for anybody who has been exposed to Irish theatre of late, probably nothing new.

We meet our characters Cusack (Connor Madden), Barry (Colin Campbell), and Pa (Rhys Dunlop) who join each other on a stormy night in a tarpaulin covered shed in rural west Ireland. They join each other to remember their friend Liam, who died 17 years ago aged 17. Although ‘The Lads’ are in their thirties, they quickly resume the jovial, laddish behaviour you’d expect to see in 17/18 year old lads.

Their lives have clearly taken them different directions and it becomes apparent early on that they are each dealing with their own issues. Even through the surface of laughs and jokes and drinks and smokes, there is a melancholy that starts to slowly break through to centre stage.

The fist reveal that opens up the story more melancholic notions is when Pa reveals that Barrys girlfriend has been sleeping with another of their friends. This comes as a surprise to Barry as they were supposed to be moving to London on the Sunday. At this stage in the play the drinking increases, the drug taking increases and swathes of emotion and trauma fill the auditorium.

The characterisation and narrative are second to-non, the performances are nuanced, tactile and offer the audience a real insight into the struggle each character is facing, whether it be grief, inadequacy or love. There is a real sense of journey, exploring where the lads lives deviated, what pulls them back together, and how the passing of their friend Liam has effected them, and with each character delivering a monologue as Liam, we see a few shades of nostalgic colour on bleak, grey night.

At two and half hours long, the play does run a little dry toward the end and could perhaps do with being three quarters of an hour shorter, nevertheless, the play has its lighter moments and manages to entertain throughout. Given the bleak circumstance, it’s still good craic and encapsulates the enduring nature of the human being.

Interview with Susan Hill

The Woman in Black arrives in Birmingham from Tuesday 31st March to Saturday 4th April as part of its UK Tour and has been running in the West End for 30 years! We sat down with the acclaimed author of the original novel, Susan Hill, to find out all about how she came up with the spooky story of The Woman in Black and what it’s like seeing your work told on stage.

Did you anticipate this longevity when the show first opened?

Oh no, we thought it would run for six weeks! It opened in Scarborough in 1988, and it started because they had a pantomime on in the theatre and Alan Aykborn who was the Artistic Director wanted to have something to put into the studio theatre alongside the pantomime. Stephen Mallatrat went on holiday and at the airport he picked up The Woman in Black. He was then lying on a beach in Greece and thought he could make this work on the stage. When he wrote to me asking if he could adapt it I thought it was mad but it’s a truly remarkable piece of theatre.

Were you nervous about handing over your story to a new team when you were originally approached about adapting the novel to the stage?

Not at all! The play is very true to the book and yet simultaneously very different by nature of being a piece of theatre. It works brilliantly in theatrical terms and it is still my book, but it is also not – and that is exciting.

What was it like the first time you saw your characters appearing in the flesh on stage?

The Woman in Black herself very much existed in my mind, I knew what she felt like, so it is very peculiar to feel her presence in a theatre. They two gentlemen are such brilliantly developed characters and utilised so well by Stephen’s writing for the stage that they become quite different. I’m always interested to see new actors taking it over, because although it is the same text, every pair of actors bring something different to it, it really does change!

Stephen Mallatratt’s adaptation utilises some very traditional theatrical techniques in very innovative ways. Does the play capture the atmosphere of Eel Marsh House the way you envisioned it?

I think the great thing about the show is that it really does use the theatre, the stage, and it makes the audience work. Stephen Mallatratt’s writing makes you use your imagination, and that’s the brilliance of it and also what makes some elements all the more scary!

Where did your original idea for The Woman in Black come from?

I have always loved reading ghost stories but had realised that in recent years not a lot had been written. People were writing horror, but horror is different to me. You can have a horror story that doesn’t have a ghost, whereas a ghost story could be horror but also could be unnerving in a different way or even heartbreaking.

I ended up making a list of the key elements I thought a good ghost story should have and worked from that. I thought it should have atmosphere, lots of atmosphere, an isolated location which in itself is unnerving, and I was absolutely sure that the ghost needed a reason to be there. I wasn’t sure at first whether that would be because they wanted revenge, or they needed to communicate with the living world but I knew they had to have motivation.

The Woman in Black, she came to me straight away – I wanted her to be a woman and of her period. Then various things that I had found alarming as a child came back into my mind and I wanted to incorporate them including the image of the dusty, cobweb covered nursery which I always think has elements of Miss Havisham in it.

Why do you think we as readers or audience members enjoy being scared?

It’s a funny thing isn’t it? It’s a very primitive instinct, to be frightened. However, the joy of a ghost story is that it is just practice really, we are being frightened delightfully. Whilst we may jump and scream in the theatre, we know that we are safe and can allow ourselves to be scared which I think is essential! Perhaps it is our way of learning to manage our fears?

How does it make you feel when you hear the audience reactions to The Woman in Black?

I’ve seen it so many times and yet sometimes it even makes me jump! I like to watch the show from is from the wings and be able to see the audience from that angle. It’s especially good when you have school parties in who aren’t expecting to be frightened but then as it begins to get tense suddenly you see the body language of the whole audience shift. Sometimes people react really strongly and shout things out almost involuntarily as they’re so involved in the action on stage!

Do you believe in ghosts?

I think I do, in a sense. I’ve never seen one (as far as I know!), but enough people I know have been in a place which emanates a sense of evil and have felt the urge to immediately get away from it. Also, you always hear of dogs having that sense of something not being right, being spooked, and why would an animal make that up?

For lots of young people, coming to see The Woman in Black will be their first experience of live theatre. What do you advise they look out for?

Go into the theatre with an open mind and try to immerse yourself in the show. Allow yourself to imagine everything the show invites you to!

Northampton, New Towns and government ‘masterplans’ | Royal & Derngate, Oct 2020

60 Miles by Road or Rail
Royal & Derngate, 19-21 Guildhall Road, Northampton NN1 1DP
Wednesday 7th – Saturday 10th October 2020

On 14th February 1968, 52 years ago, Northampton was designated a New Town as part of the government’s ‘masterplan’ for post-war revitalisation. 60 Miles by Road or Rail provides a unique opportunity to celebrate these New Town stories in an unprecedented way, during a period of county-wide political and financial uncertainty.

As thousands of families migrated to quickly expanding Northampton, a 1960s marketing campaign advertised the town as being only 60 miles from London, by road or rail. Now a new project, 60 Miles by Road or Rail, champions Northampton’s rarely heard New Town story through arts, heritage and community activities. These will include a theatre production, sharing its name with the project and campaign, supported by and staged at Royal & Derngate in October 2020. Investigating the long-reaching ramifications of becoming a New Town, and the premature withdrawal of government funding, 60 Miles by Road or Rail will be led by local Northants artists and actors.

The Northampton Borough Council (NBC) have recently set up their initiative ‘Northampton Forward’ and, similarly to the Northampton Development Corporation (NDC) in the 1970s, they have released a masterplan to redevelop the town centre. Just as 50 years ago, this has divided opinion with some arguing the town needs to be overhauled, whilst others fighting for the preservation of its identity. Following its shattering financial collapse in 2018 and subsequent reduction of social services, Northamptonshire County Council voted to scrap itself and be restructured into unitary governments. 60 Miles by Road of Rail could not be more relevant, exploring the tensions between central and local government and the roles of local communities.

In the lead up to this vital production there will be a series of events exploring Northampton’s heritage and its complicated history with the government over the last five decades. In addition to telling Northampton’s New Town story, the project will deliver activity in Corby, which itself was designated a New Town 70 years ago in 1950. Local artists will work closely with groups in Northampton and Corby to capture residents’ unique relationships to their hometown and present a community-led response. Old Town New Town will include three events led by the New Town Heritage Research Network. Hometown will see community-led sessions resulting in presentations, and Your Story will be about recording and archiving personal stories of the New Town experience with oral histories, written stories, a digital photo gallery and filmed interviews. The oral histories of members of the community will be archived at East Midlands Oral History Archive and the filmed interviews will be part of a documentary made in collaboration with award-winning production company Eight Engines, all of which will be documented at www.60milesbyroadorrail.co.uk.

New Towns were designed to combat London’s overspill problem after World War II. Heralded as utopias, presenting affordable new lives, towns such as Northampton expanded rapidly with new houses and estates. A number of the new estates are now considered some of the most deprived parts of the town and Northamptonshire is currently struggling after the financial collapse of the County Council. In 2020, there remain divided feelings about Northampton’s New Town designation, which offered invaluable fresh starts for many new families, but has left some Northampton natives claiming the town expanded too quickly and was unable to accommodate the change.

60 Miles shines a light on the largely untold stories of Northampton communities and gives local residents the vital opportunity to share their history. Founder and director Andy Routledge has brought together a new collective of Northants artists for the project, interviewing over 100 local residents as part of the 2018 pilot project.

Routledge comments, It feels essential to be delivering an intergenerational project that places Northamptonian experiences at its heart. Our New Town heritage has played a complex yet fundamental role in the makeup of our town and its identity, yet we rarely talk about it. It was a period of sudden expansion, mass migration and political upheaval. As Northampton undergoes further financial adversity, political uncertainty, and new masterplans are unveiled for the regeneration of our town, it feels vital that we are coming together to question and strengthen our shared sense of civic identity in this unprecedented way. We’re thrilled to also be hosting heritage
and community events in Corby, which was designated a New Town 18 years before Northampton. Whilst the project unashamedly prioritises our local experiences, I believe it will capture the moods and rhythms of many large towns up and down the country.

The company of performers consists of Subika Anwar-Khan, Helen Crevel, Jo Blake, Dan McGarry and Davin Eadie.

60 Miles by Road or Rail is generously supported by Arts Council England, National Lottery Heritage Fund, National Lottery Community Fund and Northamptonshire Community Foundation. Our project supporting partners include Carbon Theatre, Northampton Past, New Town Heritage Research Network, Eight Engines and Warts and All Theatre. The production is made with support from Royal & Derngate, Northampton, after receiving development support through the theatre’s Generate programme.

Maureen Nolan Is ‘Just Right For St Helens Easter Panto

A person smiling for the camera

Description automatically generated

MAUREEN NOLAN ‘IS JUST RIGHT’ FOR
ST HELENS EASTER PANTO

FULL CAST ANNOUNCED FOR GOLDILOCKS AND
THE THREE BEARS AT ST HELENS THEATRE ROYAL

Regal Entertainments are delighted to announce the cast for Goldilocks and the Three Bears when the circus rolls into St Helens from 8 – 18 April for the Easter holiday.

Singing sensation Maureen Nolan leads the cast as Baroness Von Vippemall. Maureen rose to fame as a member of The Nolan Sisters and is best known on stage for her role as Mrs Johnstone in West End hit Blood Brothers.

Rebecca d’Lacey plays Goldilocks; with the help of Three Bears she must try and save her Big Top from a rival circus owner. Rebecca recently graduated from Trinity Laban Conservatoire of Music and Dance.

Conor Barrie will play The Ringmaster. Conor has appeared in a number of pantomimes across the region including playing Genie for five years at The Floral Pavillion.

Pantomime veteran Reece Sibbald plays Silly Billy. Reece has completed 11 consecutive pantomime seasons and can also be seen in Regal Entertainments half term pantomime The Wizard of Oz.

Completing the cast as Dame Gertie is the ever-talented Jamie Greer. Jamie who has almost 20 years pantomime experience is no stranger to the life of a Dame. He recently appeared in Follow the Yellow Breck Road at Liverpool’s Royal Court.

Goldilocks and the Three Bears promises to be just right with its mix of unbelievable circus tricks, madcap comedy capers, and a smash hit selection of chart hits to sing and dance along to.

Get ready for a whole lot of family fun – it promises to be panto GOLD!

St Helens Theatre Royal manager, Chantelle Nolan said: “We are delighted to announce this year’s Easter pantomime as Goldilocks and the Three Bears and to welcome the talented Maureen Nolan to the production.  We can’t wait to get started on rehearsals with this fabulous cast!”

St Helens Theatre Royal invites audiences to roll up and enjoy the magic of this years East pantomime from Wednesday 8 – Saturday 18 April.

Tickets are on sale now! Be sure to book early to avoid disappointment.

For more information, please visit: www.sthelenstheatreroyal.com

Like us on Facebook:  www.facebook.com/St-Helens-Theatre-Royal

Follow us on Twitter: @TheatreRoyalStH

LISTING DETAILS

Regal Entertainments Ltd presents Goldilocks and the Three Bears

Dates: Wednesday 8– Saturday 18 April

Times: Various

Tickets: From £12*

*All prices are inclusive of a £1 per seat transaction fee. On-line bookings are subject to an additional 50p per seat on-line processing fee.

THEATRE ROYAL BOOKING DETAILS

Book in person at the Theatre Royal Box Office, Corporation Street, St. Helens, Merseyside WA10 1LQ (Mon – Sat 10am – 5pm). Alternatively, call 01744 756 000 or log on to: www.sthelenstheatreroyal.com.

Special Recognition Award recipients announced for Olivier Awards 2020

Special Recognition Award recipients announced for Olivier Awards 2020 with Mastercard

  • Jo Hawes, Thelma Holt, Stephen Jameson, Sarah Preece and Peter Roberts to be honoured
  • Special Recognition Awards recognise outstanding contributions to the theatre industry
  • Awards to be presented at Olivier Awards Nominees’ Celebration on 13 March

Ahead of the Olivier Awards 2020 with Mastercard, five individuals have been announced as this year’s winners of Special Recognition Awards, honouring their outstanding contributions to the theatre industry.

Children’s casting director and chaperone Jo Hawes CDG will receive a Special Recognition Award for driving the industry’s work on child casting and licensing, and her leadership in chaperoning. The award will be presented by actor Jonathan Sayer.

Producer Thelma Holt is being honoured for her long and prolific career and will be presented with her award by producer and theatre owner Nica Burns.

Mountview joint Chief Executives Stephen Jameson and Sarah Preece are awarded for their achievement of moving the school, their dedication to the community and commitment to improving diversity and accessibility. Actor and Mountview alum Giles Terera will present their awards.

Theatre consultant and former Delfont Mackintosh Technical Director Peter Roberts will be recognised for his outstanding skill and effort in helping to consolidate theatre’s access to radio spectrum. The award will be presented to him by producer Nick Allott.

The Special Recognition Awards will be formally presented on Friday 13 March, during an Olivier Awards Nominees’ Celebration at The May Fair Hotel in London (part of Edwardian Hotels London, official hotel partner for the Olivier Awards).

Julian Bird, Chief Executive of Society of London Theatre and Executive Producer of the Olivier Awards, said:

‘It is a privilege to publicly honour the inspirational careers of these five people, all working in very different fields, but who have all had a huge impact behind the scenes and inspired countless theatre industry colleagues.’

The Olivier Awards 2020 with Mastercard will take place on Sunday 5 April at the Royal Albert Hall, hosted by Jason Manford. Nominations will be announced on Tuesday 3 March, and tickets for the ceremony are now on sale through priceless.com. Further details of plans for this year’s Olivier Awards will be revealed soon.

OlivierAwards.com | Facebook | Twitter | Instagram

#OlivierAwards

Curve (Leicester) Announces New Initiatives To Support Creativity in the Midlands

CURVE ANNOUNCES NEW INITIATIVES TO SUPPORT CREATIVITY IN THE MIDLANDS

Leicester’s Curve theatre has announced exciting new initiatives to support creativity and performing arts in the Midlands, as well as revealing the selected regional artist who will take their work to the Edinburgh Fringe Festival this year as part of a partnership with the city’s Pleasance Theatre.

Launched today, Curve Connect is a free membership scheme open to all theatre-makers in the region – from writers to actors, directors, producers, designers, choreographers, dancers and beyond. Curve Connect will act as a central community hub and allow members to network with one another and access a number of benefits, including meetings with staff members at Curve, invitations to workshops, training and events and discounted tickets to Made at Curve productions.

Curve is also actively looking for exceptionally talented individuals and theatre companies of all backgrounds and artforms to become Curve Resident Creatives. The selected theatre-makers will develop their skillset and make new work in partnership with Curve on specific projects of their choice. Curve Resident Creatives will receive bespoke support including access to rehearsal space, financial investment, technical support, expertise from staff members and invites to events at Curve. The Resident Creatives will also have the opportunity to present work at the theatre.

Curve has recently partnered with a number of organisations to develop and forge pathways for theatre-makers in the Midlands. The theatre is currently working with the Pleasance Theatre to support a regional artist in taking their work to the Edinburgh Fringe Festival and has revealed that the selected creative is emerging writer Holly Boyden. Further partnerships and opportunities will be announced soon.

These new initiatives are part of Curve’s ongoing commitment to nurturing talent in the region and creating exciting new work for audiences. Speaking about the new initiatives, the theatre’s New Work Associate Beth Shouler said:

“At Curve we recognise new work is made in a variety of ways and no artist has the same career pathway as anyone else. Curve Connect is an opportunity for us to get to know the creatives in the region better. Artists are our industry colleagues who are essential to what we do at Curve. Through this we can share our resources and have a more open dialogue with the brilliant independent artistic community in the region.

“Having Resident Creatives will allow us to find bespoke ways to support and champion exceptional talent, focusing our resources on the individual needs and ambition of an artist or project. As the Resident Creatives will be embedded within the organisation, we hope to develop new audiences and celebrate the extraordinary Midlands talent, stories and culture in our region.

“We’re so thrilled to be working with Holly Boyden to take her work to the Edinburgh Fringe this year. Holly has a really distinctive Midlands voice which is incredibly funny whilst also shining a light on young women growing up in the post-industrial areas away from the cities. We really want to find more brilliant creatives who come from or are creating work in our region who we could support so do get in touch via the website!”

Curve Connect is now open for theatre-makers to join. Applications to become a Curve Resident Creative are open and will close Sun 1 Mar at 11pm, with interviews scheduled for the week commencing 9 Mar.

To find out more about creative opportunities at Curve and apply now, visit www.curveonline.co.uk

Harvey Virdi cast as Beverley in Abigail’s Party

Watford Palace Theatre in association with Rifco Theatre Company present:
Abigail’s Party
The classic joyous satire on the aspirations and tastes of a new middle class set against the backdrop of multicultural 1970s Britain
by Mike Leigh | Directed by Pravesh Kumar
Watford Palace Theatre, 29 April – 23 May 2020

@watfordpalace | #AbigailsPartyWatford | watfordpalacetheatre.co.uk

Set against the backdrop of an evolving Britain of the 70s, this fresh production shows the classic Mike Leigh satire in a new light. Performed in traverse with intimate on-stage seating offering audience the chance to join Beverly and Laurence’s soireé, bringing them closer to the experience.

Abigail’s Party stars Harvey Virdi as Beverly, the role famously originated by Alison Steadman, and is directed by Pravesh Kumar, Artistic Director of Rifco Theatre Company, Watford Palace Theatre’s Resident Company.

Welcome to 1970s suburbia and its heady mix of free-flowing drinks, classic disco and cheese & pineapple sticks. Aspirational Beverly and her estate agent husband Laurence are hosting drinks for their newlywed neighbours. They are joined by a very anxious Susan, who has been banished from her daughter Abigail’s party. As the evening goes on, marital tensions rise and tempers flare as the characters’ true natures are hilariously but ruthlessly exposed.

Harvey Virdi leads the cast as Beverly. Harvey is best known as series regular Dr Misbah Maalik in Hollyoaks, Mrs Malik in Citizen Khan and Teetu’s Mum in Bend It Like Beckham. In theatre she has worked extensively at the RSC and Leicester Haymarket, as well as frequently collaborating with Watford’s own Rifco Theatre Company – both as an actress and a writer (Meri Christmas, Miss Meena and the Masala Queens).

Director Pravesh Kumar said, ‘I’m thrilled to be directing one of my favourite plays by Mike Leigh. I wanted to bring a freshness to it by casting Harvey Virdi as Beverly and open the play to whole new audience that may not have seen it. I’m really excited to be bringing this production to the Watford Palace Theatre in traverse, with intimate on-stage seating so that our audiences can get a feel part of the party mayhem.’

Pravesh Kumar is the Artistic Director of Rifco Theatre Company. He started the company in 2000 to make a different kind of theatre for a community that could not see themselves represented on English stages. He has been at the forefront of bringing new British Asian audiences into theatres all over the country. His theatrical directorial debut was in 2000 with a UK tour of Bollywood – Yet Another Love Story. He has gone on to achieve critical acclaim for Rifco’s productions: Dishoom!, Pyar Actually, Miss Meena & the Masala Queens, Laila The Musical, Britain’s Got Bhangra, Happy Birthday Sunita, It Ain’t All Bollywood, There’s Something About Simmy, Airport 2000, Meri Christmas, Where’s My Desi Soulmate?, The Deranged Marriage and Break The Floorboards. His short film, Gods on Mountains was nominated for the Satyajit Ray Short Film Award. Most recently Pravesh wrote the book for the acclaimed rap musical, Mushy: Lyrically Speaking. Pravesh is currently writing a new main stage musical and leads on the Rifco Associates programme finding new British Asian voices of the future.

Mike Leigh OBE is a celebrated English writer and director of film and theatre. He trained at the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art, at Camberwell and Central Art Schools in London, and at the London Film School.

Carrie Hope Fletcher to star as Cinderella in Andrew Lloyd Webber’s new production at the Gillian Lynne Theatre

CARRIE HOPE FLETCHER

TO STAR IN TITLE ROLE IN

ANDREW LLOYD WEBBER’S

CINDERELLA

WORLD PREMIERE PRODUCTION

TO BEGIN PERFORMANCES ON FRIDAY 28 AUGUST

New version of the classic story from Killing Eve’s Emerald Fennell

Further information and exclusive priority purchase for tickets at

www.andrewlloydwebberscinderella.com

Carrie Hope Fletcher will play Cinderella in Andrew Lloyd Webber’s highly anticipated new production at the Gillian Lynne Theatre, with performances confirmed to begin on Friday 28 August, producers have announced today.

Tickets will go on General Sale on Friday 20 March. For all information, including exclusive priority purchase for tickets, see www.andrewlloydwebberscinderella.com

Carrie Hope Fletcher has starred in Heathers (Theatre Royal Haymarket), The Addams Family (UK Tour), Chitty Chitty Bang Bang (UK Tour), Mary Poppins (Prince Edward Theatre), and is currently playing Fantine in Les Miserables at the newly named Sondheim Theatre.

Carrie is the recipient of 3 Whatsonstage Awards and a prolific writer of children’s Fiction. Her passionate support for body positivity has, together with her acting, music and writing career, attracted loyal followings across her social media platforms and saw her named in the 2019 Sunday Times Influencer List as one of the top 100 influencers in the United Kingdom.

The production, a complete reinvention of the classic fairytale, is based on an original idea by Emerald Fennell, the Emmy Award nominated lead scriptwriter of the second season of international smash hit Killing Eve, with a brand new score from the legendary composer and lyrics by David Zippel.

Fennell’s new film A Promising Young Woman, that she has written and directed and which stars Carey Mulligan, will open this Spring.  As an actress she played Patsy Mount on the BBC’s Call The Midwife and currently depicts Camilla Parker Bowles on the Netflix hit The Crown.

The show’s lyrics are by David Zippel, a multi-award winner for Broadway productions including City of AngelsThe Goodbye GirlThe Woman in White and Liza at the Palace, as well as for work on film including Disney’s Hercules and Mulan, both of which received Oscar nominations.

Cinderella will be directed by Laurence Connor, with choreography from JoAnn Hunter, who previously partnered on School of Rock and the recent, sold out production of Joseph & the Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat at The London Palladium. 

Andrew Lloyd Webber said: “I’m absolutely thrilled that Carrie will be our Cinderella at the Gillian Lynne Theatre this Autumn.  She has totally wowed my fellow writers and creative team and was a big success at the sing through of the show late last year.

I am hugely confident that she will make this new take on Cinderella very much her own, and I’m looking forward to working and recording with her as soon as possible.”

All further creative team and cast announcements regarding Cinderella will be made at a later date.

Ahead of Cinderella’s arrival at the Gillian Lynne Theatre, owners LW Theatres will carry out internal upgrade work to the building including the addition of more toilets, refurbishment to areas of the auditorium and Front of House, as well as the potential increase in seating capacity on the circle level of the theatre.

JUDI DENCH IN CONVERSATION WITH GYLES BRANDRETH AT THE BRIDGE THEATRE

JUDI DENCH

IN CONVERSATION WITH GYLES BRANDRETH

I  REMEMBER IT WELL

13 NIGHTS ONLY AT THE BRIDGE THEATRE

Fane and the London Theatre Company present Judi Dench live at the Bridge Theatre in conversation with Gyles Brandreth.For 13 nights only I Remember It Well runs from 20 March – 4 April 2020. 

Since her theatre debut with the Old Vic over 60 years ago, Dench has gone on to play some of the most iconic roles in theatre, film and television. 

This is a rare opportunity to see one of our best-loved actresses in conversation and performance.

All performances begin at 7.30pm.  Ticket are from £15.   Booking opens today for Bridge Priority members with public booking opening at 10am on 19 February 2020.

LISTINGS INFORMATION

Address:                               Bridge Theatre, 3 Potters Fields Park, London, SE1 2SG

Box Office:                           0333 320 0051 or [email protected]

Access:                                0333 320 0051 or [email protected]

Website:                               www.bridgetheatre.co.uk

Twitter:                                @_bridgetheatre

Instagram:                           _bridgetheatre

Facebook:                             facebook.com/bridgetheatrelondon

Waitress announces dates for first ever UK and Ireland tour

BARRY & FRAN WEISSLER AND DAVID IAN 
PRESENT THE FIRST EVER UK AND IRELAND
TOUR OF
 
THE SMASH HIT MUSICAL
 

OPENING AT 
BORD GÁIS ENERGY THEATRE 
14TH NOVEMBER 2020

Barry & Fran Weissler and David Ian present the first ever UK and Ireland tour of the smash hit Broadway and West End musical Waitress, opening at the Bord Gáis Energy Theatre on 14th November 2020. Further venue and on-sale details can be found below. Full casting to be announced soon.

Waitress is based on the 2007 movie written by Adrienne Shelley. Music and lyrics are written by GRAMMY award-winning, singer-songwriter sensation Sara Bareilles, who recently appeared on the Graham Norton TV show, performing the hit song from the show She Used To Be Mine. With a book by Jessie Nelson, direction by Tony-award winner Diane Paulus and choreography by Lorin Latarro, Waitress has garnered multiple awards and nominations in both America and the UK, receiving acclaim from both audiences and critics alike.

Waitress opened on Broadway on 24th April 2016 at the Brooks Atkinson Theatre, where it ran until 5th January 2020. Waitress celebrated its official opening night at the Adelphi Theatre in London’s West End on 7 March 2019. In addition to London, Waitress is currently on a North American tour, and is set to open in Australia, the Netherlands and Japan.

Waitress tells the story of Jenna, an expert pie maker in a small town, who dreams of a way out of her loveless marriage. A baking contest in a nearby county and the town’s new doctor may offer her a chance at a new life, while her fellow waitresses offer their own recipes to happiness. But Jenna must find the courage and strength within herself to rebuild her life. This beautiful musical celebrates friendship, motherhood, and the magic of a well-made pie.

Book by Jessie Nelson
Music and lyrics by Grammy Award-winner Sara Bareilles
Based upon the motion picture written by Adrienne Shelley
Directed by Tony Award-winner Diane Paulus

Waitress was originally produced by Barry & Fran Weissler and Norton & Elayne Herrick. The tour is produced by Barry Fran Weissler and David Ian Productions.

LISTINGS

WAITRESS UK & IRELAND TOUR

Saturday 14 November – Saturday 21 November 2020
Bord Gáis Energy Theatre
Grand Canal Square, Docklands, Dublin, Ireland
Public on sale: 21 February

Tuesday 24 November – Saturday 28 November 2020
Churchill Theatre
High St, Bromley BR1 1HA
Public on sale: 21 February

Monday 30 November – Saturday 5 December 2020
Manchester Opera House
3 Quay St, Manchester M3 3HP
Public on sale: 21 February

Tuesday 12 January – Saturday 16 January 2021
Edinburgh Playhouse
18-22 Greenside Pl, Edinburgh EH1 3AA
Public on sale: 21 February

Tuesday 26 January – Saturday 30 January 2021
Sheffield Lyceum Theatre
55 Norfolk St, Sheffield City Centre, Sheffield S1 1DA
Public on sale: ON SALE SOON

Monday 1 February – Saturday 6 February 2021
Sunderland Empire
4-5 High St W, Sunderland SR1 3EX
Public on sale: 21 February

Monday 8 February – Saturday 13 February 2021
Hull New Theatre
Kingston Square, Hull HU1 3HF
Public on sale: 21 February

Monday 15 February – Saturday 20 February 2021
Cliffs Pavilion
Station Road, Southend on Sea, Essex SS0 7RA
Public on sale: 25 February

Tuesday 23 February – Saturday 27 February 2021
His Majesty’s Theatre
Rosemount Viaduct, Aberdeen AB25 1GL
Public on sale: 28 February

Tuesday 9 March – Saturday 13 March 2021
Bristol Hippodrome
St Augustine’s Parade, Bristol BS1 4UZ
Public on sale: 21 February

Monday 15 March – Saturday 20 March 2021
Eastbourne Theatres
Compton St, Eastbourne BN21 4BP
Public on sale: 21 February

Monday 29 March – Saturday 3 April 2021
Birmingham Hippodrome
Hurst St, Southside, Birmingham B5 4TB
Public on sale: ON SALE SOON

Further dates to be announced soon.