New Ghost Thriller to Open in London on 23 November

NEW SPINE-CHILLING GHOST STORY

WHEN DARKNESS FALLS

TO BE STAGED WITH A SOCIALLY DISTANCED AUDIENCE

AT THE UNION THEATRE, LONDON

FROM 23 NOVEMBER TO 12 DECEMBER 2020

TICKETS ON SALE TODAY – 10:00 THURSDAY 8 OCTOBER

“Seat Out to Help Out” Offer: 20 seats on sale at £15 each for the first three performances (23 – 25 November)

A new spine-chilling ghost story, WHEN DARKNESS FALLS, will play a limited season, from 23 November to 12 December 2020, at The Union Theatre in London.  Written by James Milton and Paul Morrissey and directed by Paul Morrissey, Will Barton will play John Blondel and Alex Phelps The Speaker.  The audience will be socially distanced.

Set on the island of Guernsey, John Blondel, a history teacher, runs the local Historical Society.  Tonight, as part of the Society’s weekly vlog, a young paranormal expert has been invited to give a talk on the island’s paranormal history. As John films, the Speaker’s stories – many of which are based on true events – unfold and delve into dark pasts, revealing disturbing truths and unforgettable terrors.

Director and co-writer, Paul Morrissey, says, “In many ways, maybe we’re all haunted. By the past. By regret. By shame. By things that have embedded themselves deep within us. A kind of trauma, that we relive. As we ‘see’ these events unfold, again and again, it’s quite clear that ghosts are very real. When Darkness Falls is a spine-chilling new play about the power of stories. Perhaps most importantly, the ones we tell ourselves.”

The producers added, “We are thrilled to welcome live audiences back to the theatre with this brand new ‘edge-of-your’ seat thriller. It has been a tough time for everyone, and so we couldn’t be more excited to be one of the first shows to get up and running in London.  Our seating capacity has been reduced and arranged to comply with government social distancing regulations, but this won’t stop us from giving audiences the most incredible night out.


“We are also delighted to be able to offer our own ‘Seat Out to Help Out’ subsidy to get people back into the theatre.”

Will Barton’s most recent theatre includes the title role in The Last Temptation of Boris Johnson (Park Theatre & National Tour), The Libertine (Theatre Royal Haymarket) and Toast (Park Theatre and New York).  He played Boris Johnson before, in the 2017 BBC 2 drama Theresa V Boris.  Other television includes A ConfessionVanity Fair and two series of How Do You Want Me?.

Alex Phelps’s theatre work includes Sir Andrew Aguecheek in Twelfth Night and Reynaldo/Priest and understudy Hamlet in Hamlet (both Shakespeare’s Rose Theatre), Raleigh in Journey’s End for Mesh Theatre Company, and Dennis Dutton in The Vertical Hour, Bob Acres in The Rivals and Orestes in Elektra (all at Theatre By The Lake).  He was due to appear in The Importance of Being Earnest for Say It Again, Sorry? at The Pleasance for this year’s Edinburgh Fringe.

In 2004, Paul Morrissey and producing partner James Milton were awarded The Stage One Bursary for New Producers. Together, they produced a number of UK and International theatre productions including CatsChess the MusicalJoseph and the Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat and The West End Men, which toured China, Europe and the UK before playing a six-week season at the Vaudeville Theatre, London.  As a solo producer, Paul’s shows have included Saturday Night FeverSouth PacificLes Misérables in ConcertThe Phantom of the Opera in Concert and the European premiere of the Broadway musical Brooklyn.  WHEN DARKNESS FALLS is James Milton’s first full-length play.  Paul Morrissey’s other writing includes the play Bingo! and the new musical Toys.

The show’s illusions will be designed by John Bulleid, an Associate of the Inner Magic Circle with Silver Star, whose other theatre credits include Harry Potter and The Cursed Child (Palace Theatre, London – current Magic & Illusion assistant), The Ocean At The End Of The Lane (The National Theatre – Associate to Jamie Harrison) and The Prince of Egypt (Dominion Theatre, London – Associate to Chris Fisher).

Lighting design is by Ben Bull and sound design by Tom Marshall.

WHEN DARKNESS FALLS is produced at the Union Theatre by Paul Morrissey Ltd, Christopher Wheeler and Molly Morris.

Website: whendarknessfalls.com

LISTINGS INFORMTION

WHEN DARKNESS FALLS

23 November – 12 December 2020

Union Theatre

229 Union Street

London SE1 0LR

Box Office:  020 7261 9876

Tickets:  All seats £25 (+ £1 booking fee)*

*Seat Out to Help Out offer: 20 seats at £15 on 23, 24 & 25 November

Performances:  Mondays to Saturdays at 7.30pm

Approximate Running Time: 80 minutes (no interval)

This production may not be suitable for those under the age of 15

Website: uniontheatre.biz

Twitter & Facebook: @TheUnionTheatre

Instagram: @theuniontheatre

Pleasance Islington embrace the new normal with redesigned auditorium and exciting Winter season | 11 Nov – 17 Dec 2020

Pleasance Islington embraces the new normal
with redesigned auditorium and exciting season
of cabaret and theatre
Pleasance Theatre, Carpenters Mews, London N7 9EF
Wednesday 11th November – Thursday 17th December 2020

The Pleasance is reopening their London venue to bring some theatrical joy back for a 7-week winter season! Embracing the new normal, the venue has transformed its main house into London’s most exciting, socially distanced comedy, theatre and cabaret space. The new three-tier auditorium will welcome 100 people a night, bringing the spirit of the Fringe back to London.

The venue will follow up-to-date safety regulations with e-ticketing, enhanced cleaning and table service using the app Butlr to provide drinks as well as new pizzas from neighbours The Depot. The auditorium will open one hour before each performance to give audiences time to settle in and enjoy some pre-show drinks ensuring you can spend your whole evening at the venue in style. A trip to the Pleasance promises to be a fun and safe night out.

The reopening season will kick off with Godot is a Woman, the show that was in tech in the
Downstairs studio when the venue was forced to close in March. The Pleasance’s commitment to their artists means this fantastic show from Associate Artists Silent Faces will now grace their Main House stage. Next Charles Court Opera, ‘The masters of Gilbert & Sullivan in small places’, are returning with Express G&S and will be making up for lost time by staging the complete works of Gilbert & Sullivan in just over an hour!

Following on from two acclaimed residencies with Sink The Pink, this year the Pleasance is
welcoming the crème de la crème of London’s most acclaimed queer cabaret groups for a festive celebration of London’s drag, cabaret and performance scene. December gets off to a bang with acclaimed pan-Asian collective The Bitten Peach who are guaranteed to enchant with their Bedtime Stories, before all-female and non-binary theatre and cabaret company Pecs Drag Kings visit Pleasance for the first time with Pecs: Christmas Queer. Finally, the one and only Cocoa Butter Club close out the season and promise to decolonise and remoisturise in a brand-new Christmas revue, Gifted.

Anthony Alderson, Director of Pleasance Theatre Trust, comments, I’m thrilled that we are reopening the London space and managing to bring theatre back to London audiences. We have put strict hygiene and cleanliness protocols in place and are making sure that your visit to the Pleasance is as safe as possible. The artists we work with are at the heart of what we do and so it feels particularly important that the season will commence with Silent Faces who were deep in rehearsals when Covid-19 hit. This re-opening season is all about bringing back that undefinable Fringe spirit that embodies all of us.

The programme is as follows (with exciting comedy to be announced soon):

Silent Faces and Pleasance Theatre present
Godot is a Woman

By Silent Faces
11th – 15th November 2020

In 1953 a man wrote a play about waiting
In 1988 he sued five women for trying to perform it
In 2001 Madonna released ‘What it feels like for a girl’

It’s 2020; we all know what it’s like to wait. Waiting for banana bread, waiting for Boris Johnson’s announcements, waiting for permission from male playwrights to perform plays about the human condition. Today Ariana Grande tells us ‘God is a Woman’ and we decide we are done waiting. Samuel Beckett? Thank u, next.

Back with their trademark style of playful and political physical theatre following the critically acclaimed A Clown Show About Rain (‘Delightful’, The Scotsman) and Follow Suit (‘Marvellously comic and compelling’, The Stage), Pleasance London Associates Silent Faces make ensemble-led devised theatre and are proud to be an integrated company of disabled and non-disabled artists.

Charles Court Opera presents
Express G&S: The Complete Works of Gilbert & Sullivan – in 75 minutes!

Devised by John Savournin and David Eaton
17th – 22nd November 2020
All aboard the G&S express for the very model of a modern major mash up!
“The masters of G&S in small spaces” are coming out of lockdown with this brand new, inventive production that is sure to put a huge smile on your face. Get ready to be swept away from Penzance to Titipu, from Venice to the Tower of London, from Portsmouth to Fairyland, as Charles Court Opera takes on the ill advisable challenge of performing the complete works of Gilbert & Sullivan – in one night!
‘An irresistible staging’ (★★★★★ The Stage).

Bitten Peach presents
Bedtime Stories

as part of the Pleasance Queer Christmas Cabaret Season
1st – 2nd December 2020

2020 might be a total nightmare, but this December you’ll be having some sweet dreams as you dive into The Bitten Peach Bedtime Stories!

London’s Premiere Pan-Asian Cabaret Collective comes together to present a special winter season showcase, featuring some of your favourite fairytales with a queer twist and the Bitten Peach’s signature Asian flavours.

Pecs Drag Kings present
Pecs: Queer Christmas

as part of the Pleasance Queer Christmas Cabaret Season
10th – 12th December 2020

The Kings of Pecs have been queerantined up in our castle but now it’s time to Pec the halls because we’re back in town and we want to spread the Christmas Queer.

Join us in our cosy cabaret grotto while we bring you some of our greatest festive hits, queermas tales and sexy socially distanced dances.

Put some Christmas Queer in your stocking filler!

The Cocoa Butter Club presents
Gifted

as part of the Pleasance Queer Christmas Cabaret Season
15th – 17th December 2020

Ooo-wee, what did you wish for?

The Cocoa Butter Club presents Gifted – an exquisite cabaret evening of excellence; delivering dreams, desires and demands to the most deserving – that’s you!

Wrapped in your favourite RnB, Neo Soul and Old Skool jams, expect a homecoming feeling, as our family reunites to ‘decolonise and re-moisturise’! Issa generous serving of multi-skilled and highly melanated talent, boasting burlesque, drag, music, spoken word, circus arts and more!

The Very Hungry Caterpillar Show wiggles back to the stage this Autumn/Winter

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THE VERY HUNGRY CATERPILLAR SHOW

Four stories from the wonderful world of Eric Carle

Wiggling back to the stage this Autumn/Winter

For socially distanced runs in London and Hertford

One of the most iconic characters in children’s literature will wiggle back to the stage this Autumn/Winter! Following multiple seasons in London and New York, The Very Hungry Caterpillar Show will return for two socially distanced runs, at London’s artsdepot from 24-27 October 2020, and at Hertford Theatre from 12 December 2020 – 3 January 2021.

A theatrical recreation of Eric Carle’s beautifully imaginative stories, The Very Hungry Caterpillar Show has become a global sensation.Four master puppeteers weave their way through Eric Carle’s stories, bringing to life a menagerie of 75 enchanting puppets in a magical show that faithfully recreates the wonderfully colourful world of Carle’s illustrations.

Audiences will be socially distanced, and all the latest government advice will be followed to make The Very Hungry Caterpillar Show as safe and enjoyable as ever. 

The artsdepot run will feature the classic line-up of Brown Bear, Brown Bear, 10 Little Rubber Ducks, The Very Lonely Firefly and, of course, The Very Hungry Caterpillar. The Hertford Theatre run is a never-before-seen Christmas Show which replaces The Very Lonely Firefly with the festive tale Dream Snow.

Eric Carle’s books have captivated generations of readers with their iconic hand-painted illustrations and distinctively simple stories, introducing millions of children to a bigger, brighter world, and to their first experience of reading itself. Carle has illustrated more than seventy books, most of which he also wrote, and more than 132 million copies of his books have sold around the world.

His best-known work, The Very Hungry Caterpillar, has nibbled its way into the hearts of millions of children all over the world, and in 2019 celebrated its 50th Anniversary. Since it was first published in 1969 it has been translated into 62 languages and sold over 43 million copies, remaining one of the top ten bestselling children’s books of all time.

The Very Hungry Caterpillar Show firstpremiered in Australia in 2015 before opening in New York at the Acorn Theatre in January 2016. The New York production broke box office records and attracted celebrities with families including Chelsea Clinton, Emily Blunt, Neil Patrick Harris and Diane Sawyer. The show had its West End premiere at the Ambassadors Theatre in December 2016 and has since played multiple seasons in London and across the UK.

www.HungryCaterpillarShow.com

Facebook.com/HungryCaterpillarShow

Tall Stories to produce live-streamed tour of The Snail and the Whale in October half-term


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TALL STORIES TO PRODUCE LIVE-STREAMED TOUR OF

IN OCTOBER HALF-TERM

Tall Stories will present its acclaimed stage reimagining of ‘The Snail and the Whale’ in a series of livestreamed performances this October. The production, inspired by the much-loved book by Julia Donaldson and Axel Scheffler, will be available to audiences around the world to watch from home.

Join an adventurous young girl and her seafaring father as they reimagine the story of a tiny snail’s incredible trip around the world on the tail of a great big, grey-blue humpback whale. Live music, storytelling and audience participation via chat and other functions will bring the story vividly to life in this heart-warming adventure for everyone aged four and up.

The ‘virtual tour’ will run from 24 October to 1 November, with each performance linked to and marketed by a regional UK venue. Audiences can purchase tickets for any performance but are encouraged to support the performance linked to their local theatre, which will receive a share of the ticket revenue. Partner theatres include The Lowry, Salford; Derby Theatre; Hertford Theatre; New Theatre, Cardiff; The Belgrade, Coventry; Theatre Royal, Nottingham; Birmingham Town Hall; Eden Court, Inverness; Brighton Dome; Dundee Rep and Plymouth Theatre RoyalThe Pleasance, London; Curve, Leicester and the Town House, Hamilton and Lanark Memorial Hall.

The production will be broadcast live from Tall Stories’ own brand new studio and performance space in Islington Central Library, London.

Tall Stories are partnering with TicketCo who will be providing the booking system and streaming platform. Families will be encouraged to join in with the action at home through games and songs and can interact with the performers through the platform’s chat function.

‘The Snail and the Whale’, written by Julia Donaldson and illustrated by Axel Scheffler, was first published by Macmillan Children’s Books in 2003. Sales across all editions are now over 5.5 million copies worldwide and the story is translated into 32 languages. Winner of the 2005 Blue Peter Award for ‘The Best Illustrated Book to Read Aloud’ and the 2007 Giverny Award in the USA, Author Julia Donaldson has called it “Probably my favourite of all the books I have written for Axel Scheffler to illustrate.” It was adapted into an animated feature by Magic Light Pictures which premiered on BBC One on Christmas Day 2019.

Tall Stories’ stage production was created in 2012 and has since regularly toured the UK and the world, including Canada, the USA, Australia, Hong Kong, Singapore and the UAE. Most recently it ran at the Apollo Theatre in London’s West End over Christmas 2019.

The cast includes Hannah Miller (Daughter), Tim Hibberd (Dad), Charlotte Mafham (Narrator/Viola Player – certain performances) and Rachel Benson (Narrator/Viola Player – certain performances).

Director: Toby Mitchell
Creative Producer: Olivia Jacobs
Designer: Isla Shaw
Composer: Richard Heacock
Lighting Designer: James Whiteside

World’s Oldest Surviving Grand Music Hall, Wilton’s, To Open With Social Distancing

Wilton’s Music Hall to Open with Social Distancing

From 19 January 2021

The much-loved and world’s oldest surviving grand music hall, Wilton’s Music Hall will reopen on 19th January 2021 for a season of socially distanced theatre, music and spoken word from a number of prestigious production companies.  The reduced audience numbers, in line with current COVID-19 government regulations, will allow these shows to be fabulously intimate.

The line-up offers an expedient, entertaining and exciting selection of shows until the Hall can open to full capacity and allows London’s theatre lovers to return to live shows. The diverse programme includes everything from the Olivier Award-winning, cult cabaret band The Tiger Lillies as they rediscover the music of Cole Porter to a brand-new show from acclaimed comic actor Brendan Murphy; FRIEND (The One with Gunther), the entirety of adored sitcom Friends – all 236 episodes – in just one hour. Wilton’s also welcomes back internationally acclaimed singer Camille O’Sullivan – Live at Wilton’s, in her first live show since lockdown began, and Horse Country, “a profound yet hilarious interchange between two of the most brilliant idiots one has the pleasure of being forced to watch”  (New York Herald) from CJ Hopkins and ​directed by Mark Bell of Mischief Theatre (‘The Play that Goes Wrong’‘Peter Pan Goes Wrong’‘The Comedy About A Bank Robbery’). 

All shows will run straight through without an interval and with a seating capacity of just over 100, each audience member will effectively get their own exclusive performance. The comfort of brand-new customised seats installed during the lockdown period, along with improved acoustics will significantly enhance the audience’s experience and make the return to live performance at Wilton’s an even more special one.

Wilton’s CEO Holly Kendrick said: “We cannot wait to welcome you back to our magical East End building. Reopening at a reduced capacity means we will do so at a financial loss but we want to protect jobs and support performers and creativity and to do that we need, and want to bring people back into the building: our audiences, our artists and our staff. For over 160 years Wilton’s has inspired performers and public alike and we can only continue to do this by opening our doors for all of London and for everyone with a curious imagination. So please book at ticket or donate to Wilton’s to support us.”

Listings Information

Dates: 19 – 23 Jan

Christine Bovill presents

Christine Bovill’s Tonight You Belong To Me

Running time: 75 minutes, no interval

Times: 7.30pm, Sat matinee 2.30pm

Prices: £18 – £22 full price, £15.50 – £19.50 concessions

Following on from her success of “PIAF” and “PARIS” at Wilton’s, the award-winning, five-star Glaswegian chanteuse, Christine Bovill returns with a brand-new show. With her heart-melting, smoky, evocative voice, Christine selects some of the most celebrated songs and engrossing stories from the Jazz Age – the era of Prohibition, women’s suffrage, radio, flappers, vamps, F Scott Fitzgerald, Dorothy Parker, Charlie Chaplin, Charles Lindbergh and Bessie Smith. A decade of heroes and villains; of sex scandals; literary giants and criminal low lives – all beautifully bound in the seductive rhythms of jazz.

Nominated for best female vocalist Scottish Jazz Awards 2020

“She is becoming the stuff of Fringe legend” – BroadwayBaby.com

“Something that will stay with you for the rest of your life” – The Sunday Times

***** (Scotsman) ***** (Herald) ***** (Edinburghfest.Org) ***** (Belfast Telegraph)

Date: 26 – 27 Jan

Tom Carradine’s London Songbook

Running time: 75 minutes, no interval

Times: 7.45pm

Prices: £12 – £15 full price, £9.50 – £12.50 concessions

Join Tom Carradine for the socially-distanced launch of his brand new album ’Tom Carradine’s London Songbook’ and a celebration of his sixth year of sell-out shows since he launched      himself at Wilton’s in 2014. Taking a break from his usual singalong format, Tom will entertain you in concert with songs and stories exploring the history and culture of London from the music hall to the modern day. As seen on The Apprentice (BBC One) and The Hairy Builder (BBC Two).

Dates: 28 January, 12 February, 30 March

VERYFINE presents

OneTrackMinds

Running time: 90 minutes, no interval

Times:7.30pm
Prices: £12 – 15 full prices, £10 – £13 concessions

Step into a live storytelling event celebrating the power of music: think Desert Island Discs meets The Moth Radio and TED talks. OneTrackMinds returns in 2021 with another vibrant selection of writers, thinkers, and musicians, each presenting a thought-provoking story about that one song that changed their life and is about to leave a lasting impact on yours. Previous guests have included Peter Tatchell, Dame Evelyn Glennie, Cariad Lloyd, Tulip Siddiq and Mark Thomas.

Date: 30 January

Martin and Bisi: it’s SHOWTIME!

Running time: 90 minutes, no interval

Time: 7.30pm

Prices: £15 – £18 full price, £12.50 – £15.50 concessions

A raucous evening of music, wine, and song, with Martin Prendergast and Bisi Alimi, featuring the incredible London Gay Men’s Chorus, vocalists Anne-Marie Cullum and Izzy Smith, singer-songwriter Lánre, students from RADA, with more artists to be announced. This show, a slight variation of the now-legendary cabarets, returns to Wilton’s for their fifth run bringing with them their eclectic and charming blend of jazz, classical, pop, comedy and showtunes. There may be audience participation, there will be music, and there will be singing. And did we mention the wine? Martin, Izzy, and Friends are a mix of professional and amateur musicians; please note that the line-up of performers may change, with more announcements to follow. All profits go to the Bisi Alimi Foundation, who advocate for the rights and dignity of LGBT people in Nigeria.

www.bisialimifoundation.org  

Dates: 1 – 6 February

Seabright Productions Ltd presents

FRIEND (The One with Gunther)

Running time: 70 minutes, no interval

Times: 7.45pm (Mon – Wed), 6.30pm & 8.30pm (Thu – Fri), 3pm & 7.45pm (Sat)

Prices: £20.50 – £25 full price, £18.50 – £23 concessions

Written and performed by Brendan Murphy and directed by Hamish MacDougall  

One man, 10 seasons, one hour.   The entirety of cult sitcom Friends – all 236 episodes – in just one hour!   This new show from acclaimed comic actor Brendan Murphy reimagines the TV classic through the eyes of barista Gunther, who will welcome audiences to the premiere London dates of FRIEND (The One with Gunther) following its hit Edinburgh Fringe debut.  

Settle down in Gunther’s café to hear the true insider story of what happened to Ross, Rachel, Phoebe, Chandler, Monica and Joey, from the Friends character who kept them caffeinated through all of the highs, lows, love affairs and failed auditions along the way. 

Brendan Murphy’s recent credits include the Las Vegas season of Olivier Award-nominated global hit Potted Potter, Best of Edinburgh award-winning comedy parody The Crown Dual and improv comedy classic Battleacts.

Dates: 8 February

Poet in the City Presents

Forugh Farrokhzad

The Rebel Poet of Iran

Running times: 90 minutes, no interval

Times: 7.30pm

Prices: £13 – £16 full price, £11 – £14 concessions

An evening of poetry and discussion celebrating rebel poet Forugh Farrokhzad and her legacy on contemporary feminist movements. Hear from contemporary poets, activists, community organisers and cultural commentators who have been influenced by a poet that has come to represent the spirit of revolt against patriarchal and cultural norms in 1960s Iran. What is it like to be the first woman to write about women’s experiences in your country? During the 1960s, a time when literature and the arts, and most of the daily life in Iran, was dominated by men, poet Forugh Farrokhzad did exactly that. Now considered an iconic figure, Farrokhzad radically defied convention through her unapologetic storytelling of the reality of being a woman and has since captured the imaginations of generations of Iranians.

Dates: 29 March

Poet in the City Presents

Virgil’s Aeneid: Lessons on Fleeing, Hope and Resilience

Running times: 90 minutes, no interval

Times: 7.30pm

Prices: £13 – £16 full price, £11 – £14 concessions

Hear from contemporary poets, activists and community organisers who will share stories about refugees’ experiences throughout the ages, shine a light on current grassroots support initiatives, and consider lessons for the future. The plight of refugees is not a new phenomenon, yet global crises persist. Join us for an evening of poetry and discussion considering the lessons of Virgil’s Aeneid in the context of contemporary refugee emergencies. Virgil’s legendary Aeneid is an epic Latin poem written between 29 and 19 BC. It charts the story of Aeneas who fled from Troy, a city under siege in the East, and forged his way across the Mediterranean in search of safety. On arrival, Aeneas, and all those escaping the war are faced with a hostile rejection that breeds bitterness, resentment, and conflict towards the refugees. Over two centuries later, similar narratives can be found today. What lessons can Virgil’s Aeneid teach us about fleeing, hope and resilience?

Dates: 9 – 11 February

Jimmy Jewell presents Dietrich: Natural Duty

Running time: 60 minutes, no interval

Times: 19.45

Prices: £18 – £23.50 full price, £16 – £21.50 concessions

An intoxicating one (wo)man show revealing the life of a legend. 

It is 1942.  On the battlefields of North Africa in a gold sequin gown, Marlene Dietrich takes to the stage to fight the war her way; with an irresistible mix of songs, sex and sympathy. 

This spectacular mixture of theatre, cabaret and drag returns to Wilton’s Music Hall following its international tour which commenced here in 2018, followed by the SoHo Playhouse in New York, the storytelling festival in Amsterdam, the Theatre de la Toison d’Or in Brussels and venues across the UK.  Dietrich: Natural Duty enjoyed critically acclaimed runs at the 2018 Edinburgh Festival, the 2019 Brighton and Homotopia Festivals, the 2019 and 2020 Adelaide Festivals, a complete sell out run at the VAULT Festival London, and last year won pick of the World’s Fringe at the Soho Playhouse, the Amsterdam International Storytelling Festival, the Sunday Mail Best Cabaret Award and the Adelaide Critics’ Circle Weekly Award two years in a row. 

Fall in love again with this Hollywood icon and her extraordinary commitment to duty. 

Created and performed by Peter Groom 

Dates: 16 – 20 February

Flying Bridge Theatre and Rive Productions presents

Horse Country Featuring Daniel Llewelyn-Williams and Michael Edwards.

Directed by Mark Bell (The Play that Goes Wrong, Peter Pan Goes Wrong, The Comedy About A Bank Robbery). 

Running time: 100 minutes, no interval

Times: 7.30pm, 2.30pm Saturday matinee

Prices: £20 – £25 full price, £17.50 – £22.50 concessions

Two clowns shoot the breeze, drinking bourbon and playing cards. While hunting the elusive nine of diamonds, they casually dissect capitalism, sea-lions, western culture, fishing, genocide, you know… stuff like that.  Sam and Bob are not so much waiting for Godot, nor are they waiting for the audience to keep up. Their window on the world is one of menace, hilarity, disappointment, and improbability, all delivered with a magnificent high-octane comic brio.  Anarchic and surreal, this delightful and confusing satire surprises and provokes in spades… or the nine of diamonds…

Dates: 23 February – 6 March

Tiger Lillies – Love for Sale

Originally produced by Opera North projects

Running time: 60 minutes, no interval

Times: 6.45pm & 8.30pm each night

Prices: £20.50 – £25 full price, £18.50 – £23 concessions

Rediscover the music of Cole Porter with Olivier award winning, cult cabaret band The Tiger Lillies. The Grammy nominees uncover the dark, despair and delirium that lies beneath the surface of Porter’s more romantic and mysterious works in Love For Sale. Martyn Jacques and Adrian Stout return with a twisted, grimy cabaret that re-imagines some of Porter’s best loved classics including ‘My Heart Belongs to Daddy, Love For Sale and Miss Otis Regrets as well as hits from his most famous musicals. Jacques describes the project as “dragging Cole Porter down to our level”. But he also acknowledges that his own writing has more in common with Porter’s than might be expected. “The classic song as far as this collaboration goes is Miss Otis Regrets. As I’ve been recording the songs the engineer said to me that it is a Tiger Lillies song… it is very much in that dark gothic type world which is part of what we do.”

The world The Tiger Lillies creates on-stage is dark, peculiar, and varied, with moments of deep sadness, cruel black humour, and immense beauty. The Tiger Lillies music is a mixture of pre-war Berlin cabaret, anarchic opera, and gypsy music, echoing the voices of Bertolt Brecht and Jacques Brel, never ceasing to shock, surprise and entertain.

“Serious, humorous and blasphemous, leading one, unsuspecting, to an emotional climax that just reaches in and tears out your heart – a remarkable performance.” ***** The Independent “Fun, scintillating, impudent, heartless and achingly beautiful.” **** The Guardian

Dates: 9 – 13 March

Camille O’Sullivan – Live at Wilton’s

Running time: 60 minutes, no interval

Times: 6.45pm & 8.30pm each night

Prices: £20.50 – £25 full price, £18.50 – £23 concessions

These are Camille’s first live performances since lockdown began. The internationally acclaimed singer presents a stripped back evening with just piano, bringing her home to Wiltons stage and creating an intimate evening of songs with her long-time friend, musician Feargal Murray.  Chameleon-like on stage, Camille will perform songs and stories of loss, love, joy light and darkness – some are hymnal and at other moments she will rock out, choosing music from her favourite writers Cave, Cohen, Bowie, Radiohead, Brel and Arcade Fire, along with some new originals. Queen of the Edinburgh Festival’ (BBC) and original star of Olivier Award-winning LaClique, Camille O’Sullivan enjoys a formidable reputation for her intensely dramatic interpretations of the songs of Brel, Cave, Waits, Bowie and more. The multi-award-winning singer has stunned audiences around the world with her 5-star sell-out performances, including Sydney Opera House, Royal Festival Hall, La Clique, Royal Albert Hall, Later with Jools Holland (BBC) and won the coveted Herald Angel award for her RSC solo performance ‘The Rape of Lucrece’. Dark, sexy, fierce, amusing and mesmerizing, Camille transforms each song she performs into an intense, emotional, and theatrical experience. Expect joy and pure passion. “She treats every song as an intense emotional journey…hypnotic… such an outpouring of passion you can’t resist being drawn into her web” ***** Independent “Ravishing, a superb performer and great singer… the star is her singing voice, a deep sultry instrument that might have been created to express desolate love” ***** Guardian “One of the top 25 performances ever on Later with Jools Holland, BBC”  Daily Telegraph

Dates: 16 – 20 March

Opera della Luna presents

Curtain Raisers / Cox and Box Sullivan & Les Deux Aveugles Offenbach

Running Time: 90 minutes, no interval.

Times: Tues 5pm and 7.45, Weds – Sat 7.30pm, 2.30pm Thursday and Saturday matinees

Prices: £30 – £22 full price, no concessions

Special price of £27.50 – £19.50 for under 30s and job seekers

Opera della Luna return to Wilton’s with a brand new production: a double bill of two short operettas by Sullivan and Offenbach. Cox and Box was Sullivan’s first success, and predates his collaboration with Gilbert.  It tells the farcical tale of an unscrupulous landlord who rents out the same room to two tenants – Cox, who works by day, and Box who works by night.  The ruse works until one day, Cox is given the day off and they meet much to the horror of the landlord, Sergeant Bouncer. This little short operetta was a huge hit and its title has now passed into common parlance.

Les Deux Aveugles, the story of two separate con-men who are both pretending to be blind beggars and arrive one day at the same pitch on a Parisian bridge, was similarly Offenbach’s first major success.  Although it only lasts 25 minutes, it made the composer enough money to build his first theatre, the Bouffes Parisiens.

Dates: 23 – 27 March

The Faction presents

Medea / My Ex-Duchess / Duende

Running Time: 90mins

Times: 7.30pm, Thursday and Saturday matinees 2.30pm
Prices: £18 – £23.50 full price, concessions £16 – £21.50

Award-winning theatre ensemble The Faction returns to Wilton’s Music Hall following successful runs of The Talented Mr. Ripley and A Midsummer Night’s Dream with a series of thrilling solo shows. MEDEA / MY EX-DUCHESS / DUENDE brings together the most daring names from world literature with exciting emerging writers.  Emily Juniper’s Off West End nominated take on Euripides’ MEDEA tells the classic tale whilst giving voice to Medea’s wedding dress, while South African playwright Jessica Sian combines Browning’s poem MY LAST DUCHESS with the contemporary resonances of the Oscar Pistorius-Reeva Steenkamp murder trial.  The cast includes Anna-Maria Nabirye (Macbeth, National Theatre; They Drink It In The Congo, Almeida) and Amelia Donkor (The Taming of the Shrew, Royal Shakespeare Company; What Shadows, Birmingham Rep) directed by The Faction’s Artistic Director Rachel Valentine Smith.


Date: 31 March

Latin Rediscovery presents

Marlene in Havana

Running time: 75mins, no interval

Time: 7.30pm

Prices: £20 – £24 full price, £17.50 – £21.50 concessions

The year is 1957 and Marlene Dietrich performs in Havana, Cuba, The nightclub capital of the world. Marlene’s film career is almost over, and she is beginning a new career, in cabaret, back where she started. In the club ‘Sans Soucis’, 1920’s Berlin meets 1950’s Cuba, on the cusp of a revolution which will have political repercussions right up to the present day with a bitter US embargo.   The show highlights Latin music elements which were so important in films of the day, Cuban hits, and tangos along with classic Dietrich songs from the Weimar Republic and the Piaf songs Marlene also sang. Award-winning jazz tango violin virtuoso Omar Puente leads the band and opera singer Ann Liebeck plays Marlene, already in her late 50’s, with a script by multi award-winning author and broadcaster Brian Sibley, direction by James Norris and lighting design by Nigel Edwards.  From the producers of Violetta’s Last Tango performed at Wilton’s in 2017 and sponsored by ACE England and La Linea London Latin Music Festival.   Marlene in Havana premiered in Havana, Cuba at Habana Clásica festival. The show has also been performed at the Edinburgh Fringe in 2019, Pizza Express Jazz Club and the Purcell Room, Southbank Centre in September 2019.

Date: 1 April

The Marilyn Monroe Story

Running time: 60mins, no interval

Age recommendation: 10+

Twitter:@marilynbyjojo

Facebook: @marilynmonroebyjojo

Web:www.jojodesmond.com

Time: 6.45pm & 8.30pm

Prices: £16 – £20 full price, £13.50 – £17.50 concessions

Marilyn’s fascinating story – from beginning to her untimely end. A tragic death which is still clouded in mystery. Funny and sad, this show considers Marilyn’s childhood, career, influences, husbands, friends, and lovers. A real ‘rags to riches’ tale. Jojo Desmond relates her life through dialogue, dance and singing Marilyn’s iconic songs to illustrate keynote events and numerous fabulous costume changes – all accompanied by her band. Jojo is a professional singer, actress and dancer. She trained at Central School of Ballet, was a principal dancer in Matthew Bourne’s Swan Lake and lead singer in BBC’s Dr Who Live (Arena) shows. She supported The Three Degrees on their 2015-16 UK Tours, with her debut album Studio 54. She performs regularly with her jazz musicians and is currently playing ‘Frieda’ with the Abba Mania UK show.

HAMPSTEAD THEATRE REOPENS FOR A LIMITED PERIOD WITH ALICE HAMILTON’S 60TH ANNIVERSARY PRODUCTION OF THE DUMB WAITER, HAROLD PINTER’S ICONIC PLAY

hampsteadtheatre.com | YouTube | Facebook | Twitter | Instagram

#HTDumbWaiter #BackOnStage

HAMPSTEAD THEATRE REOPENS

FOR A LIMITED PERIOD WITH ALICE HAMILTON’S 60TH ANNIVERSARY PRODUCTION OF THE DUMB WAITER, HAROLD PINTER’S ICONIC PLAY​

·       HAROLD PINTER’S ICONIC PLAY, THE DUMB WAITER, WILL OPEN AT HAMPSTEAD THEATRE FROM 18 NOVEMBER TO 19 DECEMBER 2020

·       ALICE HAMILTON’S PRODUCTION WILL CELEBRATE THE PLAY’S 60th ANNIVERSARY FOR A LIMITED PERIOD

·       HAMPSTEAD THEATRE WILL OPEN WITH SOCIALLY DISTANCED AUDIENCES, AND IN COLLABORATION WITH EXPERT CONSULTANTS, ARE IMPLEMENTING STRINGENT COVID-SECURE MEASURES

·       SAFETY MEASURES WILL BE SUPPORTED BY THE THEATRE’S STATE-OF-THE-ART VENTILATION SYSTEM, WHICH CHANGES AIR IN THE AUDITORIUM AND FOYER WITH 100% FRESH AIR INTRODUCED FROM OUTDOORS EVERY 4 MINUTES AND 45 SECONDS

·       TICKETS WILL GO ON SALE ON WEDNESDAY 14 OCTOBER AT 10AM

·       SHOULD THE DUMB WAITER NEED TO BE POSTPONED, FULL REFUNDS OR CREDIT VOUCHERS WILL BE OFFERED

Hampstead Theatre is delighted to announce that it will be reopening this November with Nobel Prize-winning writer Harold Pinter’s iconic early play The Dumb Waiterfrom 18 November to 19 December 2020.  Tickets will go on sale on Wednesday 14 October at 10am at hampsteadtheatre.com.

Roxana Silbert, Artistic Director of Hampstead Theatre said:

“I am so delighted to be able to share this news today.  As Hampstead Theatre, along with our colleagues in live performance, start to find our feet in this ‘new normal’, we are very excited to be able to present Alice Hamilton’s 60th anniversary production of The Dumb Waiter.  

When we closed the building on 16 March the set was on the stage and the show was about to open. At that point, we could not have envisaged how Pinter’s brilliant play of two men stuck in a room – their sharp humour, ennui, tensions, – would come to feel so extraordinarily fresh and resonant. 

We are thrilled at the prospect of welcoming our artists and audiences back into the building and galvanised by the prospect of sharing the communal experience which is unique to live theatre”

Originally programmed for spring, Alice Hamilton directs the 60th anniversary production of The Dumb Waiter.The play first premiered as part of Hampstead Theatre’s inaugural season in 1960 directed by Hampstead’s founder James Roose-Evans.

Harold Pinterwrote twenty-nine plays including The Birthday Party, The CaretakerThe Homecoming and Betrayal. He was awarded the Nobel Prize for Literature in 2005. 

Alice is co-Artistic Director of Up in Arms and and credits with the theatre include the Olivier-nominated Every Day I Make Greatness Happen (2018) and Paradise(2019). 

She is joined by designer, James Perkins, with lighting design by James Whiteside and composition & sound design by Giles Thomas

The theatre will reopen with 193 socially distanced seats.  Seating will be arranged to ensure there is at least 1 metre plus between seats.  Hampstead Theatre’s spacious modern building also has the added benefit of state-of-the-art ventilation.  The air in the auditorium and foyer is 100% fresh air introduced from the outdoors meaning none of it is ‘recycled’ air.  The ventilation system draws stale air out and introduces entirely fresh air into the main house auditorium at 5,300 litres per second.  The air in the main house auditorium is changedcompletely every 4 minutes and 45 seconds.

In the event of The Dumb Waiter needing to be postponed, full refunds or credit vouchers will be offered.

OPERA NORTH AND NORTHERN BALLET SET TO RETURN TO HOME VENUE, LEEDS GRAND THEATRE

OPERA NORTH AND NORTHERN BALLET SET TO RETURN TO HOME VENUE, LEEDS GRAND THEATRE

Leeds Heritage Theatres is thrilled to announce that resident, Leeds-based companies, Opera North and Northern Ballet, will make a welcome return to Leeds Grand Theatre in 2021, almost a year after the theatre was forced to close due to the pandemic.

The only venue outside of London to house both an opera and ballet company, The Grand will play host to Opera North from January to February 2021 (season of work yet to be announced), followed by Northern Ballet from Thursday 4 to Saturday 13 March 2021, who will be revisiting the classic, Swan Lake, beautifully reimagined by David Nixon OBE (The Nutcracker, Little Mermaid), with Tchaikovsky’s electrifying score played live by Northern Ballet Sinfonia.

Richard Mantle, General Director, Opera North, says: “We are looking forward immensely to once again creating and sharing great music and opera with our audiences at Leeds Grand Theatre, our home venue of more than 40 years.

“We are working closely with our colleagues at the Grand to ensure that we are able to give our audiences a safe and warm welcome back to live events, with all the anticipation, thrill and joy that live performance delivers and plan to return to the theatre in January 2021; we will be announcing productions for this new season as soon as we can.”

Mark Skipper, Chief Executive of Northern Ballet, adds: “After an absence of almost a year, we are delighted to be returning to Leeds Grand Theatre with Swan Lake. The Grand Theatre is hugely important to us as one of our home venues where, in normal times, we enjoy performing to our loyal Yorkshire audience twice a year. We are also saddened that COVID-19 has led to the postponement of Merlin this winter; other than during the refurbishment in 2005, this will be the first time in more than 25 years that we have not held our festive season in Leeds. However, we are looking forward to performing Swan Lake in March, a beautiful traditional title presented with a twist.

“We are incredibly grateful for the support our audiences have given us over the last few difficult months and are looking ahead with great anticipation to getting back onto the Leeds Grand Theatre stage once more.”

The news comes only a week after it was announced that City Varieties Music Hall will also reopen its doors on Friday 9 October with an exciting programme of film presented in collaboration with sister venue Hyde Park Picture House. Opera North will also stage the first live performance at The Varieties since reopening when they present Whistle Stop Opera: Cinderella (directed by John Savournin), on Sunday 29 November; “a charming pop-up style introduction to some of the many musical interpretations of the classic fairy tale” says Mantle.

Chris Blythe, CEO of Leeds Heritage Theatres, comments: “This year has, and continues, to be extremely difficult for our three venues – it is well documented that the arts and culture sector is suffering nation-wide – but having Opera North and Northern Ballet, two regional companies recognised for their innovative and risk-taking approach to their individual art forms, commit to return in early 2021 gives us so much hope for the future and something for Leeds-audiences to look forward to. Arts and culture are needed now more than ever to help boost people’s mental health and build community through shared experience as we all try to find some escapism from our day-to-day and ongoing concerns regarding COVID-19.”

MAX PORTER READS HIS ACCLAIMED NOVEL GRIEF IS THE THING WITH FEATHERS LIVE FROM UNION CHAPEL

MAX PORTER READS HIS ACCLAIMED NOVEL

GRIEF IS THE THING WITH FEATHERS LIVE FROM UNION CHAPEL

Wayward Productions today announces that Max Porter will read his bestselling first novel, Grief is the Thing with Feathers, at Islington’s Union Chapel on Sunday 25 October at 7.45pm. The one-off live streamed event has been organised as a fundraiser for the iconic London venue, with ticket proceeds also going to The Margins Project, the Chapel’s homelessness charity.

Max Porter’s multi-award-winning novel, which has been translated into thirty languages, has never been read in public, in its entirety, by the author. This project renews Porter’s collaboration with Wayward Productions, who produced the stage play adaptation of the novel by Enda Walsh, starring Cillian Murphy.

‘Amazing and Unforgettable’ The Times

‘Sad and Strange and Splendid’ The Guardian

‘Unlike anything I’ve read before….shifts between humour and sadness with a deft beat of its wing’ Guardian Books of the Year

‘A beguiling literary hybrid’ The Observer

Grief is the Thing with Feathers is a bed-time story for grownups about the universal experience of loss. It is about childhood, parenting, poetry and pain. It is about the infinite wisdom of crows. It is a dark, weird and beautiful book, the perfect book to hear in these times. It is an impassioned blast of literature and love, a celebration of language, and a raging heartbroken song for all of us. 

Published in 2015, the book won the Sunday Times PFD Young Writer of the Year, the Books Are My Bag Readers Award for Fiction and the International Dylan Thomas Prize, and was shortlisted for the Guardian First Book Award and the Goldsmiths Prize.

Max Porter said, “In September 2020 the Union Chapel were going to host a project I’d devised called The English Soundwood, a multidisciplinary portrait of the UK today with poets, singers, musicians and novelists. Like so many live events, it was postponed, and like so many venues around the world, the Union Chapel needs support. So we are doing a one-off gig, where I’ll read the whole of Grief is the Thing with Feathers, and proceeds will go to the Union Chapel and their extraordinary charity The Margins Project, which supports people facing homelessness. I’ve never read the whole book before, and I’m honoured to be doing so in this iconic and beautiful venue, for such a good cause. I hope people will join us, virtually, and enjoy being read a story.”  

Wayward Productions Judith Dimant added, “We’re thrilled to renew our collaboration with Max Porter for this very special one-off event streamed live from Union Chapel in aid of the chapel and its Margins Project for the homeless. We’re living in a time of great uncertainty and it is vital we do all we can to support vulnerable people at this as well as secure the future of such a well-loved venue.”

Max Porter is the author of the bestselling Grief is the Thing with Feathers (Faber & Faber, 2015), which won the International Dylan Thomas Prize, the Sunday Times PFD Young Writer of the Year Award, the Europeese Literatuurprijs and the Books Are My Bag Reader’s Award, and was shortlisted for the Guardian First Book Award and The Goldsmiths Prize. It has been sold to 27 territories. His second novel Lanny was published in 2019, and recently released in paperback. It was longlisted for the Booker Prize and is currently being adapted into a feature film.

Wayward Productions‘ first production was Grief is the Thing with Feathers by Max Porter, directed by Enda Walsh and starring Cillian Murphy. It was seen in London and New York in 2019.

The company is currently developing Christie Watson’s best-selling nursing memoir The Language of Kindness.  This was scheduled for Autumn 2020 but will now hopefully be produced in Spring 2021.

In Summer 2020 the company produced Shifts for BBC Radio 3’s Between the Ears strand as part of the BBC Culture in Quarantine season and the company is also working with the Schaubühne Theatre, Berlin on Michael Kohlhaas by Heinrich von Kleist, directed by Annabel Arden and Simon McBurney. 

Wayward is also developing Babette Cole’s iconic children’s book Princess Smartypants with the Wardrobe Ensemble and will be continuing its collaboration with Max Porter in 2021

Wayward was founded by producer Judith Dimant following her 25 years as producer at Complicité, producing all of Simon McBurney’s work

waywardproductions.co.uk 

Twitter: @waywardprods

Facebook: /waywardprods

GRIEF IS THE THING WITH FEATHERS 

LISTINGS

Max Porter reads Grief is the Thing with Feathers

Live from Union Chapel, 19b Compton Terrace, London N1 2UN

Sunday 25 October at 7:45pm

Tickets £10, available from https://wayward.ticketco.events/uk/en/e/grief_is_the_thing_with_feathers

Proceeds to the Union Chapel and Margins homelessness charity www.unionchapel.org.uk

Produced by Wayward Productions www.waywardproductions.co.uk

Sky Studios & theatre company Box of Tricks launch inaugural Screen/Play Award to uncover new writing talent from the North of England

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Box of Tricks and Sky Studios launch inaugural Screen/Play Award

New award to uncover new writing talent from the North of England

Acclaimed theatre company Box of Tricks and Sky Studios’ Innovation Hub, based in Leeds, have teamed up to announce the launch of the inaugural  Screen/Play Award, a ground-breaking initiative to unearth exceptional writers from the North of England.

Focussed on talent from communities currently underrepresented on stage and screen, the Screen/Play Award will offer two writers, with no TV writing experience, a bursary to not only write a new play for Box of Tricks but to open doors to the world of screenwriting by forging a development partnership with Sky Studios throughout 2021.

With an aim to increase representation and opportunity, both now and in the future, the Screen/Play Award is open to Northern writers, aged over 18, with no professional TV experience from the following communities: D/deaf, disabled and neurodivergent writers, LGBTQ+ writers, writers of colour, first generation migrant writers and writers from a low socioeconomic background. 

At a time when the creative industry faces unprecedented challenges and stands to lose a wealth of talent due to the impact of COVID-19, the Screen/Play Award shines a light on voices that need to be heard and stories that need to be told. 

Box of Tricks and Sky Studios are seeking stories with the scope and ambition to be realised on both stage and screen, stories that embrace the infinite imaginative possibilities of each medium and reflect the world in which we live.

Applicants for this new award will be asked to submit a sample of their writing along with a 500-word pitch about how they envisage developing their story into a both a play and a short screenplay. Each submission will be read by a diverse pool of readers representative of the breadth of stories the Award aims to recognise.

Shortlisted writers will be announced in December and five finalists will meet an industry panel to pitch their ideas in January 2021. Following these interviews, the panel will select two writers to develop their ideas and write their scripts with support from Box of Tricks and Sky Studios throughout 2021.

The Screen/Play Award industry panel includes actor Mina Anwar (Everybody’s Talking About Jamie, Crucible Theatre and West End), Chris Bush (UK Theatre Award-winning playwright), actor and advocate for disability on screen/stage Melissa Johns (Life, I Hate Suzie, Coronation Street), David Judge (actor and writer – Box of Tricks’ SparkPlug, finalist for Alfred Fagon Award for Best New Play of the Year 2017), Donna Metcalfe (Script Executive, Sky Studios), Hannah Tyrrell-Pinder (Joint Artistic Director, Box of Tricks) and Temi Wilkey (actor and writer – 2020 Stage Debut Award, The High Table).

Hannah Tyrrell-Pinder and Adam Quayle, Joint Artistic Directors, Box of Tricks, said: “Box of Tricks is hugely excited to partner with Sky Studios to launch our inaugural Screen/Play Award for exceptional Northern talent. Following the launch of our PlayMakers Network at the height of lockdown – for Northern playwrights to connect, collaborate and create – we are delighted to share this game-changing opportunity for two writers. With so much uncertainty still ahead, we face the very real prospect of losing a generation of talent, so it is vital that we seize every opportunity to support, nurture and promote new voices in the North – especially those whose stories are too seldom heard on our stages or seen on our screens. It’s time to make a change for the better.”

Vicky Wharton and Donna Metcalfe of Sky Studios’ Innovation Hub said: “The aim of Sky Studios Innovation Hub is to support creative risk from ambitious, diverse and emerging talent, an ethos Box of Tricks shares.  It is no coincidence that several of their alumni are now working on Sky Studios productions.  Therefore, we are thrilled to be forming a creative partnership, to unearth, nurture and develop new writing voices of the future.”

David Judge, Writer, actor and Screen/Play panellist said: “Box of Tricks have well and truly opened the door for me as a playwright, not in a ‘welcome to the industry’ way, but in a ‘welcome to yourself’ way. They were able to identify and nurture my ‘voice’ in a non-intimidating and collaborative environment. The work we have created has directly led to me working with Sky Studios, and again I cannot rave enough about the freedom and support I have received on this journey so far. I am SO gutted not to be able to apply for this award, as it is going to be such an exciting, creative and rewarding opportunity for those involved.”

The submission window opens on Monday 19 October and the deadline for all applications is 5pm on Friday 6 November 2020. Submissions made outside this window will not be considered.

Further details about the Screen/Play Award are available at: www.boxoftrickstheatre.co.uk/screenplay. Interested writers are advised to join Box of Tricks’ PlayMakers Network via the website or on Facebook for up-to-date information and additional content.

JAMES QUAIFE PRODUCTIONS ANNOUNCES THE WORLD PREMIÈRE OF PAUL HARVARD’S GHBoy AT CHARING CROSS THEATRE

JAMES QUAIFE PRODUCTIONS ANNOUNCES THE WORLD PREMIÈRE OF

PAUL HARVARD’S GHBoy AT CHARING CROSS THEATRE

James Quaife Productions today announces the world première of Paul Harvard’s debut play GHBoy – opening at the Charing Cross Theatre on 10 November 2020, with previews from 4 November, and runs until 28 November. Jon Pashley directs Sylvester Akinrolabu (Devon/Calvin/Chima/Josh/Delroy /William), Geoff Aymer (Benjamin), Marc Bosch (Sergi Castell), Buffy Davis (Debbie Finch), Jimmy Essex (Robert Finch), Devesh Kishore (Simon Waring), and Aryana Ramkhalawon (Jasminder Panghal).

Social distancing measures will be in operation at the Charing Cross Theatre, with a maximum capacity of 105 seats for each performance, with tickets available in single tickets up to groups of 4. All patrons, unless they have a known medical condition, will be required to wear a face covering at the venue. For full details on the measures implemented to ensure audience safety and wellbeing, please see: https://ghboy.co.uk/covid19-safety.

The burgeoning party scene of East London hides a dark secret: a swathe of young men dying unexpectedly, with whispers of an unnamed killer.

In the midst of all this, Robert is grieving the death of his father. He desperately wants to be a better person, but trapped in a pattern of substance abuse and infidelity, he has a lingering fear that he will never find love and acceptance. Unexpectedly, his boyfriend Sergio proposes, compelling Robert to turn his back on addiction and self-sabotage – before he destroys this final chance at happiness.

But first, he must confront a truth buried deep within his subconscious, something he himself doesn’t yet fully understand.

This brand-new piece of theatre tackles the misconceptions around gay culture and promiscuity. Something far more ominous is driving men like Robert to the point of self-destruction…

GHBoy is Paul Harvard’s first play. It was originally conceived during a writers’ course at the National Theatre led by Ola Animashuwan, and developed following a R&D grant from the Arts Council.

Originally from Coventry, Harvard began his career as actor-musician – his credits include the original production of The History Boys (National Theatre), Gondoliers (Apollo Theatre), Piaf, Fiddler on the Roof, Love in a Maze, Dreams from a Summerhouse and The Firebird (The Watermill Theatre), Nicked (HighTide Festival), The Fantasticks (Harrogate Theatre), Rwanda (YMT:UK), Trashchrist (Soho Theatre) and Me, Myself and I (Orange Tree Theatre). he also trains actors, and is currently Course Leader for the BA Acting at the London College of Music, University of West London. He has also lectured at many of the other leading drama schools in the UK, and is the author of three books published by Nick Hern Books and his approaches to the teaching of acting through song are now internationally recognised. 

Sylvester Akinrolabu plays Devon/Calvin/Chima/Josh/Delroy/ William). He recently graduated with BA in Acting from London College of Music, after training at Identity School of Acting (IDSA). This marks his professional stage debut.

Geoff Aymer plays Benjamin. His previous theatre credits include Two Trains Running (English Touring Theatre/Royal and Derngate), The Color Purple (Leicester Curve), Robin Hood and the Arrow of Destiny (Theatre Peckham), The Plague (After La Peste by Albert Camus) (Arcola Theatre), The Importance of Being Earnest (UK tour), A Midsummer Night’s Dream (Young Vic), and To Kill a Mockingbird (Barbican Theatre/ UK tour). For television, his work includes Mr Winner, Guerrilla, The A Force, The Real McCoy and Club Class; and for film, Sket and Rag Tag. Also a writer, his credits include Anansi and the Magic Mirror (Talawa Theatre), The Oddest Couple (Theatre Royal Stratford East), What A Wonderful World (Blue Elephant Theatre); television pilot, Chatsworth.

Marc Bosch plays Sergi. Original from Barcelona, he made his professional stage debut earlier this year in Justícia at the National Theatre of Barcelona. His television credits include The Split and Sky Rojo

Buffy Davis plays Debbie. Her theatre credits include Ravens: Spassky vs Fischer (Hampstead Theatre), 49 Donkeys Hanged (Theatre Royal Plymouth), The Divide, The Hairy Ape, Hedda Gabler (The Old Vic), Ugly Lies the Bone (National Theatre), Once in a Lifetime, Uncle Vanya, The Government Inspector, Annie Get Your Gun (Young Vic), The School for Scandal (Park Theatre), and The Silver Lake and The Beggar’s Opera (Wilton’s Music Hall). For television, her work includes Life, Doc Martin, The Trial of Christine Keeler, Berlin Station, Foreign Skies, The Night Manager, What Remains, Silk, Upstairs Downstairs, and Mutual Friends; and for film, Angel Has Fallen, Abduct, Anna Karenina, Hyde Park on Hudson and The Machinist

Jimmy Essex makes his professional stage debut playing Robert. For television, his credits include as series regular Adam Donovan in Hollyoaks, Bamboo, Sean in Short Change, and Cosmo in Grange Hill. For film, his work includes A Dark Path.

Devesh Kishore plays Simon. His theatre credits include The Ladykillers, Guards at the Taj (Theatre by the Lake), Gauhar Jaan (Ominbus Theatre), Child of the Divide (Polka Theatre and UK tour), Gangsta Granny (West End and UK tour), Piece of Silk (Hope Theatre), and Stowaway (Shoreditch Town Hall and UK tour). 

Aryana Ramkhalawon plays Jasminder. Her theatre credits include When the Crows Visit (Kiln Theatre), The Funeral Director (Southwark Playhouse and UK tour), The Tempest, Swallows and Amazons, Much Ado About Nothing (Storyhouse/Grosvenor Park Rep Company), The Secret Seven (Storyhouse), Hijabi Monologues (Bush theatre), Devika, Ode to Leeds (West Yorkshire Playhouse) and Glasgow Girls (National Theatre of Scotland UK tour). Her television work includes Waterloo Road, Drama Matters: Lawless, Crime Stories, Bollywood Carmen and Jamillah and Aladdin.

Jon Pashley directs. His credits include Boudica (Central School of Speech and Drama/Leicester Curve), Much Ado About Nothing (Belgrade Theatre), Comedy on a Station Platform (Warwick Arts Centre) and Aspies (Theatre503). Credits as Associate Director include The Butterfly Lion, The Witches (Chichester Festival Theatre), In Praise of Love (Theatre Royal Bath), Peter Pan (Regent’s Park Open Air Theatre), Venus and Adonis (RSC Swan/Dublin Theatre Festival), Running Wild, The Boy in the Striped Pyjamas (Chichester Festival Theatre/UK tour), Goodnight Mister Tom (Duke of York’s Thetare /UK tour), and Bad Jews (St. James’s Theatre/ Haymarket/Theatre Royal Bath/UK tour).

Set and costume designs are by Bettina John, with lighting design by Tony Simpson, sound design by Rona Castrioti, and movement direction by Gerrard Martin.

www.ghboy.co.uk

Twitter: @ghboyplay

Instagram: @ghboyplay