Stage stars join Thespie for talks and concerts celebrating Black and LGBT+ theatre artists

STAGE STARS JOIN ARTS PLATFORM THESPIE FOR TALKS AND CONCERTS CELEBRATING BLACK AND LGBT+ THEATRE ARTISTS

Leading theatre artists feature in live-streamed artist talks and streamed concert premieres, coinciding with Black History Month (US) and LGBT+ History Month (UK) and raising funds for charity

  • Thespie is spending the month of February celebrating Black and LGBT+ theatre artists on its discovery platform including free artist talks and new concerts supporting Stonewall and Black Lives Matter.
  • The programming includes two filmed concert premieres: The Road to Prominence which celebrates Black musical theatre creators, and Break Free, which features LGBTQ artists sharing stories and performances about their personal journeys
  • Two series of free artist talks will run throughout the month: In the Room, conversations with performers and creators about writing, rehearsal, and collaboration, and Thespie Thursdays, informal artist chats designed to show artists in a more personal light.

Theatre discovery platform Thespie today announces eight new online theatre and arts events during the month of February, highlighting the work of Black and LGBT+ theatre artists. The initiative is inspired by LGBT+ History Month (UK) and Black History Month (US) celebrations, but instead looks at theatre artists working today

The programming is headlined by two marquee concert premieres:

  • Break Free is an empowering musical celebration with LGBT+ theatre artists, sharing their personal journeys and performances of musical theatre and pop songs that have inspired them. The cast includes Natasha Agnew, Paul Baker, Allie Daniel, Eloise Davis, Andrew Derbyshire, Nick Hayes, Mark Inscoe, Eleanor Kane, Millie O’Connell, Alex Thomas-Smith, Courtney Stapleton, La Voix, Andrew Patrick-Walker, Shona White, Layton Williams and Charlotte York. Proceeds will go to LGBT+ charity Stonewall UK.
  • The Road to Prominence celebrates Black musical theatre writers and composers, from the early twentieth century to today, including performances and interviews with leading UK theatre performers. The filmed concert is directed by Dominic Powell whose musical Cases is featured in the concert, alongside works such as The Wiz, The Color Purple, Ain’t Misbehavin’, and Shuffle Along. The cast includes Zoe Birkett, Adrian Hansel, Waylon Jacobs, Aisha Jawando, Bobby Little, Maiya Quansah-Breed, Alex Thomas-Smith and Andrew Patrick-Walker. Proceeds will go to Black Lives Matter UK.

Break Free premieres on Friday, 19 February at 8PM GMT (3PM EST / 12PM PST) and
The Road to Prominence premieres on Friday, 26 February at 8PM GMT (3PM EST / 12PM PST).


Both concerts will be available to stream on-demand following their premieres, and purchasers will have 72 hours to view.
Tickets for each are £8/$10 per household with all proceeds going to Stonewall UK and Black Lives Matter UK.
£15/$25 and £25/$30 tickets also available which include an extra donation.

The In the Room series of free artist talks comprise conversations with performers and creators and about writing, rehearsal, and collaboration. It will feature Max Harwood (3 Feb), star of the forthcoming film of Everybody’s Talking About Jamie, with cast members from the Leicester Curve production of The Color Purple in conversation with Dominic Powell (10 Feb), and more to be announced later.

The informal chat series Thespie Thursdays will feature artists Eloise Davis and Courtney Stapleton (4 Feb), Millie O’Connell (11 Feb), Genesis Lynea (18 Feb) and Melanie La Barrie (25 Feb) and is also free to view on Thespie.

Thespie offers listings for theatre streaming, theatre music & audio, theatre eBooks, educational resources, live London theatre, theatre news, and more. Audiences can use Thespie to stream its original programming of concerts and artist talks, as well as more than 400 other shows; and to discover over 1000 theatre resources available on other popular platforms and services, such as Disney+, Amazon Prime, Spotify and Audible.

Artists, producers and arts organisations interested in adding their show listings and theatre streaming to Thespie can learn more at https://thespie.com/submissions.

BOOKING LINKS

Break Freehttps://thespie.com/digital/break-free-thespie/2728

The Road to Prominencehttps://thespie.com/digital/the-road-to-prominence-thespie/2727

SOCIAL MEDIA

Website: https://thespie.com Twitter: @thespie_ (https://twitter.com/Thespie_) Facebook: @thespie (https://www.facebook.com/thespie) Instagram: @thespie_ (https://www.instagram.com/thespie_)

Sisters to livestream spoken word/folk gig theatre from the Space

Sisters to livestream spoken word/folk gig theatre from the Space 

“Your face is like a map. I can see all of the wheres you have ever been in that line between the corner of your mouth and your nose.” 

Isobel Hughes trained as an actor, her sister Anna, as a musician. They have come together during lockdown to create a unique piece of musical storytelling: a merging of folk music and tales, spoken word, original composition and text, in an attempt to bring back the magic they used to be certain of.  

You are on an island. And it is sinking. It is not a metaphor, nor is it a dream. It is the end. But how can you drown, when you haven’t a place to lay your bones? And when you don’t know where it is, how can anyone bring you home? A Place to Fall to Pieces is a search for roots, a lyrical journey, a love letter to the places we have been but never been from. 

Inspired by current folk revival and conservation movements, their own form of rewilding comes from digging up forgotten stories and using them to spin adjacent worlds where music and language are interchangeable. The sisters have explored magic, memory and earth, with the result being a musical quest for the meaning of Home. 

Artistic Director of the Space, Adam Hemming, says, Isobel and Anna closed our season launch night with a beautiful, mesmerising piece from the show and their trailer is equally hypnotic. Their work is certainly a tonic to the horrors of the world we’re in right now and it will resonate strongly with anyone who has wondered where they belong. 

View the trailer for A Place to Fall to Pieces at https://space.org.uk/event/a-place-to-fall-to-pieces-livestream/  

The performance details are:- 

 
A Place to Fall to Pieces 

12th and 13th February, 7:30pm 
On a sinking island a musician searches for a place to put her bones. 
A story (and a song) about magic, memory and earth. A musical quest for the meaning of Home. 
 

Written and performed by Isobel and Anna Hughes 

The performances will be livestreamed from the Space.  
For more information, contact Adam Hemming at [email protected] 

Ben Brown’s New Political Drama on the meeting of Graham Greene & Kim Philby

OLIVER FORD DAVIES, STEPHEN BOXER

& SARA CROWE STAR IN

ORIGINAL THEATRE COMPANY’S PRODUCTION OF

A SPLINTER OF ICE

A NEW PLAY BY BEN BROWN

ONLINE FROM 15 APRIL TO 31 JULY 2021

FOLLOWED BY A UK TOUR EARLY SUMMER

Following a highly productive and successful season of online productions, Original Theatre Company is delighted to announce its first live stage production since March 2020, which will be filmed on stage at the Cheltenham Everyman Theatre and released online, before touring UK theatres early summer.  Ben Brown’s new political drama, A SPLINTER OF ICE, will be filmed as a high quality, three-camera recording for online release on the company’s streaming platform, Original Theatre Online, from 15 April until 31 July 2021.  Tour dates will be announced in due course.  Directed by Alan Strachan with Alastair Whatley, the production will star Oliver Ford Davies as Graham Greene, Stephen Boxer as Kim Philby and Sara Crowe as Rufa Philby.

Moscow 1987 and the cold war begins to thaw.  After declining his offer for more than 30 years, novelist Graham Greene travels into the heart of the Soviet Union to meet with his old MI6 boss, Kim Philby.  Under the watchful eye of Kim’s Russian wife, Rufa, the two men set about catching up on old times.  With a new world order breaking out around them, how much did the writer of The Third Man know about Philby’s secret life as a spy and did Philby betray his friend as well as his country?

From the writer and director of the award-winning West End play Three Days in May, which inspired the Oscar-winning film Darkest Hour, Ben Brown’s new political drama explores an unlikely friendship; a friendship interwoven with deceit and loyalty.  Ben said of this production of A SPLINTER OF ICE, “I’m thrilled to be working again with Alan Strachan and Oliver Ford Davies and to be joining forces with Stephen Boxer, Sara Crowe and Alastair Whatley for the premiere, at last, of my new play, online prior to a national tour.

Alastair Whatley, Artistic Director of Original Theatre Company, said, “I am thrilled that we are producing Ben’s fantastic new play with such a wonderful cast and creative team. The plan was to open this in front of audiences at the end of March, but alas, once again, plans have changed. Instead of cancelling, we will now film the production at the beautiful Everyman Theatre in Cheltenham, releasing the play to our audiences around the world, before then returning to stages across the UK as soon as theatres re-open.

Oliver Ford Davies is an Olivier Award-winning actor whose recent theatre includes Peter Gynt (National Theatre & Edinburgh International Festival), Troilus and Cressida (Royal Shakespeare Company), The Chalk Garden (Chichester Festival Theatre), Richard II (RSC, Barbican & BAM, New York), Henry IV Part II (RSC, Barbican, China Tour & BAM, New York), Henry V (RSC, Barbican, China Tour & BAM, New York) and Goodnight Mister Tom (Phoenix West End & Tour – Olivier Award ‘Best Entertainment and Family’ 2013).  He won Best Actor at the 1990 Olivier Awards for his performance in David Hare’s Racing Demon (National Theatre).  Recent film and television credits include Christopher RobinThe Last WitnessFather BrownMarple and Game of Thrones.

Stephen Boxer’s theatre credits include The Remains of the Day (UK Tour), Titus AndronicusThe Heresy of LoveThe Taming Of The ShrewBartholomew FairMeasure for MeasureTwelfth NightThe Herbal BedThe White DevilThe Duchess Of MalfiRichard III (all for the RSC), MacbethKing LearAristocratsVolpone (all for the National Theatre), The Hypochondriac and A Chaste Maid In Cheapside (for Almeida Theatre). Stephen’s most recent television credits include Denis Thatcher in The CrownSmall Axe, David Elster in Humans and Poldark.  He also played Rene Azaire in Original Theatre’s highly acclaimed online production of Birdsong earlier this year.

Sara Crowe’s theatre credits include Tonight at 8:30 (Jermyn Street Theatre), Bedroom Farce (Duke of York’s), Acorn Antiques the Musical (UK Tour), The Real Inspector Hound and Black Comedy (Comedy Theatre), Calendar Girls (Noel Coward), Calendar Girls the Musical (UK Tour), Hay Fever (Albery Theatre, for which she received an Olivier nomination for Best Comedy Performance) and Private Lives (Aldwych Theatre, for which she won the Olivier Award for Best Supporting Actress, Critics Circle  Most Promising Newcomer Award and Variety Club Best Actress Award).  Her film and television credits include Four Weddings & A FuneralCarry on Columbus, the ghost story Martin’s Close written and directed by Mark Gatiss, EastEndersSkins, Big Meg in Big Meg/Little Meg and various roles in The Harry Enfield ShowThe Rory Bremner Show and Alas Smith and Jones.  Sara has also written two novels, Campari For Breakfast and Martini Henry, published by Transworld. 

A SPLINTER OF ICE is directed by Alan Strachan with Alastair Whatley and designed by Michael Pavelka, with original music composed and sound designed by Max Pappenheim, lighting designed by Jason Taylor and casting by Ellie Collyer-Bristow CDG.

A SPLINTER OF ICE is produced by Original Theatre Company.

So far, in the last 10 months, Original has streamed to over 30,000 households with its productions of Sebastian Faulks’s Birdsong Online, Louise Coulthard’s Watching Rosie, Torben Betts’s Apollo 13: The Dark Side of The Moon and Philip Franks’s The Haunting of Alice Bowles, as well as the filmed productions of Alan Bennett’s The Habit of Art and Ali Milles’s The Croft.  Original’s next online production will be the first revival of the Peter Barnes monologues, Barnes’ People, which will be available from 18 February.

Website: www.originaltheatre.com

Facebook: Original Theatre

Twitter: @OriginalTheatre

#ASplinterOfIce

LISTINGS INFORMATION

A SPLINTER OF ICE

By Ben Brown

Available online from 15 April to 31 July 2021 via originaltheatreonline.com

Tickets for online production:

Standard Early Bird (when booked by 28 February) – £15

Supporter Package – £40 (includes digital programme and supporter credit on the film)

Premium Package – £100 (includes signed script by a creative team member of your choice, digital programme and supporter credit on the film)

Available worldwide

English subtitles available

Age guidance: 12+

Running time: approx. 90 minutesFor group bookings, please contact [email protected]

Mama G’s Half-Term Tour: Telling Tales on Telly – Family fun touring (without going anywhere)

Petite Pantos Presents

MAMA G: Telling Tales on Telly

Touring without touring – Live, online on February 20th 2021 

“A feast of hard-working show-biz glamour is here to enchant children and deliver grown-ups some much-needed reassurance and escapism for themselves.” LondonTheatre1

“Everybody’s favourite pantomime dame,” (Metro) might be experiencing Lockdown the Threequel, but that’s not going to stop her livestreaming stories to your living room (direct from Stanley Arts in London)February half-term would usually see Mama G visiting venues across the UK to brings some joy and sparkle (literally, there are always sparkles with a Mama G show) to the last of the dark days before spring arrives. In 2021, not being allowed to travel isn’t going to stop her engaging, enlightening and joy filled entertainment reaching her fans, old and new (and some very much in the grown-up category) Telling Tales on Telly will be packed with Mama G’s very own stories about being who you want and loving who you are, as well as original songs, plenty of sequins and a guest appearance from award winning comedian Katie Pritchard!

Tune in to meet some of Mama G’s most wonderful creations such as the feuding fairies Fran and Vera and Odie, a cat that just wants to be in showbiz! It’s going to be the perfect half-term treat to get the whole family smiling, laughing, joining in and feeling uplifted!

“Mama G’s stories are sprinkled with tales of inclusivity and acceptance.”The Guardian

Touring without touring

Joining forces with several of the theatres the show would have been heading to were travel able to happen, tickets will be sold via participating local theatre box offices and audiences across the UK can choose to buy from their nearest venue to watch the show live via Zoom. Mama G may be performing in London but audiences can watch from anywhere, while supporting local venues. 

About Mama G and Petite Pantos

Mama G’s shows are produced by Petite Pantos. It is performed and written by Robert Pearce (The Glenn Miller Story with Tommy Steele, Honk!Rainbow Live!) and is Directed by Amée Smith.

Panto Dame Mama G first came to life, at the Cowley Café, during the 2018’s Brighton Fringe. Since then she has been all over the UK (and visited Canada and Texas) telling stories to children and their families, about being who you are and loving who you want. She has been proving very popular and has told stories for the South Bank Centre, HSBC, Disney, ZSL London Zoo, Pride in London and Camp Bestival, as well as theatres, schools, libraries, museums, bookshops, nurseries and pretty much anywhere else that will have her. In 2020 she had been booked to perform at Glastonbury and the Edinburgh International Book Festival, as well as presenting a show in the West End… but, well, we all know what’s got in the way of that!

During the pandemic, Mama G has been keeping up appearances with twice weekly Facebook lives, virtual pride appearances, bespoke online story times for libraries and schools and hosting and organising her very own digital family pride!

Petite Pantos was founded in 2016 and produces theatre for young audiences and their families with a focus on inclusiveness and embracing & celebrating differences with the motto “Be who you are and love who you want”

Creating and performing “traditional pantos with a twist” they ensure all the joy of panto also includes a message of social and political importance. The company has focused on bringing panto to new audiences in venues not regularly used as performance spaces and in communities without regular access to arts or representation in arts.

“The show is perfectly suited for all audiences and we as a family adored it. Now – Everybody Say Love!”The Spy in the Stalls

LISTINGS Show:             

Mama G: Telling Tales on Telly

Venue:            Live Streamed to your home

Date & Time:  20th February, 2pm

Tickets:           £10 per household

Booking links: · 

Stanley Arts (London)

https://stanleyarts.org/event/telling-tales-on-telly/· 

Key Theatre (Peterborough)

https://vivacity.org/theatre-events/spring-2021/petite-panto-telling-tales-on-telly/· 

The Woodville (Gravesend)

https://www.woodville.co.uk/events/telling-tales-on-telly· 

Pride in London (in partnership with Coming Out)

http://ticketsource.co.uk/tellingtalesontelly 

SOCIAL MEDIA

@MamaGStories

www.facebook.com/mamagstories

www.instagram.com/mamagstories

And search for ‘MamaGStories to find her on YouTube.

BIRMINGHAM HIPPODROME SELECT 16 YOUNG PEOPLE TO BECOME YOUNG ADVOCATES

BIRMINGHAM HIPPODROME SELECT 16 YOUNG PEOPLE TO BECOME YOUNG ADVOCATES

Image

Birmingham Hippodrome have selected 16 young people for their new Young Advocates pilot programme, officially launching on Wednesday 3 February.

The new group, all aged 14 -22 and from the West Midlands, comprises of; Aadil (aged 18), Amal (aged 15), Annabel (aged 21), Beth (aged 22), Bolu (aged 17), Deborah (age 17), Ellie (aged 18), Harley (aged 16), Harvey (aged 14), Hiba (aged 17), Liam (aged 18), Niamh (aged 17), Noor, (aged 15), Radhika (aged 14), Sanskar (aged 17) and Shreya (aged 14)

Over 300 young people expressed interest and 150 applied to be part of the pilot programme which will initially run until the end of March. The Young Advocates will receive mentoring, training and skills development to build the group into future leaders as they help shape the future of Birmingham Hippodrome’s work with and for young people.

The new group will meet for the first time on  Wednesday 3 February for a special digital live launch event, hosted by Worcestershire based Creative Communications agency DRPG who are supporting the programme. Over the course of the evening they will learn more about the Hippodrome’s work through an exclusive Q&A session with Fiona Allan (Artistic Director and Chief Executive of Birmingham Hippodrome) and Chris Sudworth (Director of Artistic Programme of Birmingham Hippodrome). They will also hear more about DRPG’s work from Ruan Sarris (Junior Creative Director  at DRPG).

Zaylie-Dawn Wilson, Head of Learning and Participation at Birmingham Hippodrome commented: “We can’t wait to start working with this exceptional group of young people. This is about the Young Advocates driving meaningful change for young people of the city. As well as looking at how this group can shape our future programme, we are excited to develop their skills as future leaders in the arts and cultural sector”.

Zaylie added: “We are hugely grateful to DRPG for supporting this important programme including hosting the digital launch in their covid-safe studios, training for our Young Advocates and digital expertise to realise the ambitious plans for the programme as we develop these talented young people”

With this partnership with the team at DRPG they will host and play a part in mentoring the Young Advocates in digital communications and giving an insight into careers in the creative industries.

Richard Hingley, Chief Creative Officer of DRPG added: “At DRPG we are committed to supporting young people in our community and I’m delighted we will be working with Birmingham Hippodrome once again.  As a creative communications agency it made perfect sense to partner with the Hippodrome, providing them with access to our experienced creative team members, our wider creative services and studio facilities.”

He added “Since DRPGbegan back in 1980 we have consistently nurtured young talent, helping them harness their energy and passion for creating amazing work.  Our 350 strong team are passionate about giving back and this local initiative will shine a light on the exciting opportunities for those wishing to start a career and help shape the future of the creative industries.  

The Young Advocates Programme also promises to leave a lasting impression not only on all those involved, but in the wider creative community and who knows, some may find themselves using their talents to help DRPG continue its trajectory of growth well into the future.”

To find out more, visit www.birminghamhippodrome.com/youngadvocates

This half term, Pavilion Dance South West invites audiences on a living room woodland adventure

PDSW invites audiences on a living room
woodland adventure with Night Tree
Friday 19th – Sunday 21st February 2021

Creating new adventures for families to enjoy this half term, Pavilion Dance South West (PDSW) have co-commissioned Second Hand Dance’s Night Tree. This magical film is about one very special tree and a family’s gift to all the creatures in the wintry woods. Based on Eve Bunting’s book of the same name, this wonderfully endearing story encourages generosity in caring for nature and each other in a gentle sensory journey to explore from home.

The film will be available for stream on a pay-what-you-can basis on PDSW’s website from Friday 19th February and is accompanied by a free print-at-home activity pack that includes details on how to create your own forest floor, bird feeder, and drawings and how to make a delicious hot chocolate. On Saturday and Sunday, there will also be a chance to learn to Ceilidh with the team from Second Hand Dance in a Zoom workshop inspired by the Night Tree. Night Tree will have both audio described and captioned versions available; the activity pack is also available in an audio format; the Zoom workshop will have BSL and closed captions available.

A special vegan, gluten and nut free woodland picnic can be ordered from PDSW’s local independent Green Label Kitchen to accompany the films for those based in the Bournemouth area. Their special hot chocolate mix and gooey brownies for five people can be delivered to your door for only £13 with £1 from every order supporting the Trussell Trust network of foodbanks.

As one of the nations’ leading dance venues outside London, PDSW have pushed the boundaries of what’s possible in the digital sphere. They have explored new ways to give audiences an opportunity to engage with dance at home, to connect to new communities and to beat online fatigue.

In less than a year, PDSW have quickly adapted and provided over 45 live Zoom dance classes; 15 different styles of dance classes free to view on YouTube; 10 online workshops; a five-part podcast series; a month-long dance and technology forum; and 39 streamable performances, being among the first to offer free to view dance premieres in the initial lockdown. They have invested heavily in creating a broad digital programme that provides their audiences with tailored content and are utilising the latest digital technology with the integration of Google Maps into their fundraising campaign. Despite, having not been able to generate an income since March 2020, PDSW remain committed to making their performances pay-what-you-can to ensure their work can be accessed by the widest audience possible in these difficult times.

Artistic Director and CEO of Pavilion Dance South West, Zannah Chisholm comments, Despite the building being closed since March, we have been working on developing and refining our digital output. We have responded to our audience’s online needs during lockdown by creating a digital programme that can reach all ages and interests, and included closed captions and audio descriptions to make our online presence accessible to everyone. We intend to continue our digital programming alongside our live programming and aim for it to become a sustainable income stream for us and professional artists.

Leigh Local Exchange Ambassadors Celebrate the Return of Their LocalTALE Playwriting Competition

LEIGH LOCAL EXCHANGE AMBASSADORS CELEBRATE THE RETURN OF THEIR LOCAL TALE PLAYWRITING COMPETITION

The Royal Exchange Theatre and its LOCAL EXCHANGE AMBASSADOR GROUP in Leigh are delighted to announce that the LocalTALE Playwriting Competition is back and now open for entries. Launched last year, the competition is open to those who live in or have a connection to Leigh, Atherton or Tyldesley. Applicants are invited to submit an original 10 – 30-minute play inspired by the question ‘How was 2020 for you?’ (see attached word cloud) to be in with the chance of having their work produced and performed in the Exchange’s mobile theatre (THE DEN) at Spinners Mill in the summer of 2021. The deadline for submissions is Monday 12th April 2021.

Those with a passion to tell stories are encouraged to enter the competition regardless of their writing experience. And for anyone who thinks they do need some guidance or support with playwrighting, a free resource pack has been developed by the Royal Exchange and is available online. In addition to this, the Royal Exchange theatre’s award-winning Dramaturg Suzanne Bell will be running two free workshops over Zoom on Monday 22 February 6pm – 8pm and Saturday 27 February 2pm – 4pm to support entrants in making their play as good as it can be.

The winning plays will be staged in the Den alongside those by last year’s winners their work unfortunately could not be premiered due to the pandemic. However, extracts of their plays have been featured on the Leigh LOCAL EXCHANGE Ambassadors’ podcast Connecting Tales: A Podcast which was created and produced by the Ambassadors during lockdown to celebrate and showcase the people, cultural life, and creative opportunities available in Leigh, Tyldesley and Atherton; the extracts were performed by members of the Royal Exchange Theatre’s Young CompanyElders Company and Leigh Ambassadors and were directed by Maria Zemlinskaya, Birkbeck Assistant Director for the Royal Exchange Theatre.  

Alison Ormrod, a winner of the 2020 LocalTALE competition was interviewed on the podcast said of the importance of the prize…

There’s no doubt in small towns like Leigh that they are full of talented and creative people who maybe wouldn’t get the opportunity or don’t have the confidence or don’t know where to go – you write something, where do you take it? How do you apply it? And its most important that local people are given more opportunity to experience and to see theatre because it’s not always that accessible – it’s not always affordable. And especially in the current climate where creative industries are struggling because of lockdown, it’s possibly more important than ever to develop these small local pockets of theatre for people to enjoy and be able to support and be part of that bigger industry.’

LOCAL EXCHANGE is a long-term, integrated programme that sees the Royal Exchange Theatre create work with, for and in Greater Manchester communities during a series of residencies. This continually evolving project has been developed to form and build upon long-lasting relationships with communities and artists across the region.

Each bespoke residency lasts for at least three years and starts by developing relationships with the local partners such as Councils, Housing Associations and Arts Organisations. It is tailored to support the cultural ambitions of each community with the help of local ambassador groups that work closely with the Exchange throughout the residency.

A key part of the Local Exchange programme is the Den, the Royal Exchange’s new pop-up theatre. The Den will be assembled and run by theatre staff and community members in an existing building within the borough and serves as a dynamic space for residents to make, participate in and see work that they want.

THE SUSAN SMITH BLACKBURN PRIZE ANNOUNCES 2021 FINALISTS

THE SUSAN SMITH BLACKBURN PRIZE ANNOUNCES 2021 FINALISTS

LARGEST INTERNATIONAL AWARD FOR WOMEN+ PLAYWRIGHTS CELEBRATES FORTY-THIRD YEAR

The Susan Smith Blackburn Prize today announces 10 Finalists for 2021 for its prestigious playwriting award, the oldest and largest prize awarded to women+ playwrights. Chosen from an international group of over 160 nominated plays, the Finalists are:

Glace Chase (Aus/US)Triple X

Erika Dickerson-Despenza (US) cullud wattah

Miranda Rose Hall (US) A Play for the Living in the Time of Extinction

Dawn King (UK) The Trials

Kimber Lee (US) The Water Palace

Janice Okoh (UK) The Gift

Ife Olujobi (US) Jordans

Frances Poet (UK) Maggie May

Jiehae Park (US) The Aves

Beth Steel (UK) The House of Shades

The Winner, to be announced at the beginning of April, will be awarded a cash prize of $25,000 USD, and will receive a signed print by renowned artist Willem de Kooning, created especially for the Susan Smith Blackburn Prize. Each of the additional Finalists will receive an award of $5,000. At the discretion of the Judges, a play can also be honored with a Special Commendation of $10,000.

The Susan Smith Blackburn Prize is awarded annually to celebrate women+ who have written works of outstanding quality for the English-speaking theatre. Women+ includes women, transgender and non-binary playwrights. Each year, artistic directors and prominent professionals in the theatre are invited to submit plays. Each script receives multiple readings by members of an international reading committee that selects the finalists. An international panel of six judges then selects the winning play. 

Judges for the 2021 Susan Smith Blackburn Prize are: Theatre, opera and film director Natalie Abrahami (UK); award-winning star of stage and screen, Paapa Essiedu (UK); winner of multiple Olivier Awards for production design, Bunny Christie (UK); Lincoln Center Resident Director Lileana Blain-Cruz (US); Broadway and television star Jason Butler Harner (US); and Theatre and Arts leader and director, Seema Sueko (US).

Leslie Swackhamer, the Executive Director of the Susan Smith Blackburn Prize, said, “In this time of crisis when our theatres are dark, our readers and judges have found great solace and inspiration in connecting with the vibrancy of this work. These plays are fierce, brave and compelling. Bold in their narrative strategies, the plays are inventive and provocative. These are strong and utterly unique voices which celebrate theatricality and our common humanity. Many of these playwrights had their plays postponed, cancelled and interrupted by the COVID-19 pandemic. It is now more important than ever to celebrate their work. Theatres may be dark at this moment, but when they come back to glorious life, these incredible plays will light up the darkness.”

Lucy Prebble won the 2020 Susan Smith Blackburn Prize with A Very Expensive Poisonwhich also won the Critics Circle Award for Best New Play.  The 2019 Winner of the Prize, Fairviewby Jackie Sibblies Drury, subsequently won the Pulitzer Prize in Drama and a 2019 Steinberg Playwright Award and enjoyed sold-out runs in New York and London.

Since the Prize’s founding in 1978, over 470 plays have been honored as Finalists. Many have gone on to receive other top honors, including Olivier, Lilly, Evening Standard and Tony Awards for Best Play. Ten Susan Smith Blackburn Finalist plays have subsequently won the Pulitzer Prize in Drama. The Prize has also fostered an interchange of plays between the United States, the United Kingdom, Ireland, Australia, New Zealand and other English-speaking countries.

Past winners of the Susan Smith Blackburn Prize include Lynn Nottage‘s SweatAnnie Baker‘s The Flick, Caryl Churchill’s FenMarsha Norman’s ‘night,Mother, Paula Vogel‘s How I Learned to DriveNell Dunn‘s Steaming, Wendy Wasserstein‘s The Heidi ChroniclesJackie Sibblies Drury’s Fairview, Chloe Moss’s This Wide NightSarah Ruhl‘s The Clean House, Judith Thompson’s Palace of the End, Gurpreet Kaur Bhatti‘s Behzti (Dishonour), Julia Cho’s The Language ArchiveJennifer Haley’s The NetherCharlotte Jones‘ Humble BoyNaomi Wallace’s One Flea Spare, and Moira Buffini‘s Silence.

Former Judges of The Susan Smith Blackburn Prize over the past forty-three years are a “Who’s Who” of the English-speaking theatre and include Edward AlbeeEileen AtkinsZoe CaldwellGlenn CloseHarold ClurmanMarianne ElliottPeter EyreRalph FiennesGreta GerwigJohn GuareMel GussowDavid HareJeremy HerrinJudith IveyBranden Jacobs-JenkinsTony KushnerPhyllida LloydMarsha NormanFrancis McDormandJanet McTeerTanya MoodieCynthia NixonRobert O’HaraJoan PlowrightBen PowerDiana RiggIndhu RubasinghamFiona ShawTom StoppardMeryl StreepDaniel SullivanJessica TandyLiesl TommySigourney WeaverAugust WilsonRuth Wilson, and George C. Wolfe among more than 200 artists and theatre professionals from the United States, the United Kingdom and Ireland.

www.blackburnprize.org

Twitter @blackburn_prize

ABOUT THE FINALIST PLAYS

A Play for the Living in a Time of Extinction by Miranda Rose Hall (US)

Submitted by Seattle Rep

What has happened to the little brown bat? To eelgrass? What will happen to Homo sapiens? An unprepared dramaturg attempts to tell a story about life on earth in an era of man-made extinction.

A Play for the Living in a Time of Extinction was commissioned by LubDub Theatre Company and is slated for a 2021 digital production at Baltimore Center Stage.

cullud wattahby Erika Dickerson-Despenza (US)

Submitted by The Public Theater

It’s been 936 days since Flint has had clean water. Marion, a third generation General Motors employee, is consumed by layoffs at the engine plant. When her sister, Ainee, seeks justice & restitution for lead poisoning, her plan reveals the toxic entanglements between the city & its most powerful industry, forcing their family to confront the past-present-future cost of survival. As lead seeps into their home & their bodies, corrosive memories & secrets rise among them. Will this family ever be able to filter out the truth?

cullud wattah was scheduled to have its world premiere in July 2020 at The Public Theater but is indefinitely postponed due to the pandemic.

Jordansby Ife Olujobi (US)

Submitted by Sundance Institute Theatre Program

In a workplace where appearance is everything, a long-suffering receptionist finds herself in personal, professional, and psychic jeopardy when her ruthless boss hires a hip new employee in order to improve the company’s image and “culture.” Suddenly, the two young, black, ambitious social climbers are forced together and torn apart by their race, racism, and otherworldly circumstance. Jordans is a story of identity mistaken, power subverted, and rage unleashed.

Jordans was initially developed through the 2018-19 Emerging Writers Group at The Public Theater, with further development through the 2020 Sundance Theatre Lab.

Maggie Mayby Frances Poet (UK)

Submitted by Curve Theatre

Maggie May tells the story of a feisty and funny Leeds woman who is trying to keep her Alzheimer’s diagnosis secret from the world. Developed with people living with dementia, the play was conceived and structured to be accessible for people sharing Maggie’s condition. It’s an ordinary tale of extraordinary resilience, full of humour and songs sung to each out of love.

Maggie May was commissioned and developed by Leeds Playhouse. Its premiere was staged in a three-way co-production with Leeds, Leicester Curve and Queens Theatre, Hornchurch but was closed due to COVID-19 the day before its Press Night after just three previews.

The Avesby Jiehae Park (US)

Submitted by American Conservatory Theater, San Francisco

In the summer, an old man and old woman sit on a park bench, talk about birds, and bet on the rain. A funny-sad play about getting older in a future that’s closer than we think.

The Aves is a Virginia Toulmin Commission from the McCarter Theatre.

The Giftby Janice Okoh (UK)

Submitted by Belgrade Theatre

Act 1. Brighton 1862.  Sarah, an African girl, adopted by Queen Victoria and raised in the Queen’s circles is about to return to Africa. Will she go? Act 2. The present day. Cheshire. Sarah, her husband and small child are paid a visit by well-meaning neighbours who have something to confess.  Act 3. The two Sarahs meet Queen Victoria for tea, what will they discuss?

The Gift premiered in 2020 as a co-production between Eclipse Theatre and Coventry Belgrade Theatre, and enjoyed a UK tour.

The House of Shadesby Beth Steel (UK)

Submitted by Almeida Theatre

The House of Shades tells the story of the Webster family across five decades. It is a haunted and bloody saga of a family at war with themselves and the times they live in. A working-class epic, it captures the evolution of the labour movement in the U.K.

The House of Shades was scheduled to premiere at the Almeida Theatre in Spring, 2020. The play’s production was postponed one week before it was due to go into rehearsal due to the pandemic.

The Trials by Dawn King (UK)

Submitted by Boundless Theatre Company

“You have stolen my childhood… with your empty words.” Greta Thunberg.

A radical green government is in power, trying to stop runaway climate change and manage scarce resources in this near future world. The older generation are judged for crimes against the climate in a series of public trials. A young jury of 12 – 17-year-olds struggle with their responsibility; the fates of three adult defendants are in their hands. Can they deliver justice, or are they serving revenge?

The Trials will premiere in 2021 German translation at the Dusseldorfer Shauspielhaus.

The Water Palaceby Kimber Lee (US)

Submitted by The Lark

A twisty exploration of the uses of narrative and the difficulty of holding complexity and contradictory truths, based on the 7-month interrogation of Saddam Hussein in 2004.

The Water Palace is a commission for Center Theatre Group and is currently in development with them.

Triple X by Glace Chase (AUS / US)

Submitted by Queensland Theatre


Scotty is living the dream: a successful Wall Street banker, he has just bought a Tribeca loft for a cool three million and is about to marry his beautiful and loaded girlfriend Kymberley. But Scotty has a secret that will outrage both his conservative mother Deb and progressive sister Claire: his ongoing affair with charismatic trans drag performer Dexie. Triple X is a hilarious, honest and an emotionally affecting look at entitlement, self-deception and the realities of love (and it features one of the most eye-popping sex scenes in recent theatre history).

Triple X had its world premiere at Queensland Theatre and Sydney Theatre Company. It was initially commissioned by Queensland Theatre and co-developed by Queensland Theatre and Sydney Theatre Company (including the Rough Draft program). Its scheduled run with the Sydney Theatre Company at the Sydney Opera House was cancelled due to the pandemic.

ABOUT THE JUDGES

Natalie Abrahamiis a theatre, opera and film director. She was Artistic Director of the Gate Theatre, Notting Hill from 2007-2012 and Associate Director at the Young Vic 2013-2016. Recent theatre and opera include: Swive [Elizabeth] (Sam Wanamaker Playhouse), ANNA (National Theatre), The Meeting (Chichester Festival Theatre), Machinal (Almeida), WingsHappy DaysAfter Miss Julie and Ah, Wilderness! (Young Vic); Queen Anne (Royal Shakespeare Company and Theatre Royal Haymarket); How the Whale Became and Other Tales (Linbury Studio, Royal Opera House). Her film credits include MaydayThe Roof and Life’s a Pitch.

Lileana Blain-Cruz is a director from New York City and Miami. Recent projects include: Anatomy of a Suicide (Atlantic Theater Company), Fefu and Her Friends (TFANA); Girls (Yale Repertory Theater); Marys Seacole (LCT3, Obie Award); Faust (Opera Omaha); Fabulation, Or the Reeducation of Undine (Signature Theatre); Thunderbodies, Revolt. She Said. Revolt Again (Soho Rep.); The House That Will Not Stand and Red Speedo (New York Theatre Workshop); Water by the Spoonful (Mark Taper Forum/CTG); Pipeline (Lincoln Center); The Death of the Last Black Man in the Whole Entire World (Signature Theatre, Obie Award); Henry IV, Part One and Much Ado About Nothing (Oregon Shakespeare Festival); The Bluest Eye (The Guthrie); War (LCT3/Lincoln Center Theater and Yale Rep.); Salome (JACK); Hollow Roots (the Under the Radar Festival at The Public Theater). She was recently named a 2018 United States Artists Fellow and a 2020 Lincoln Center Emerging Artist. She is currently the resident director of Lincoln Center Theater.

Bunny Christie is an International Production Designer, based in London. She recently won her fourth Olivier Award for the musical Company, in London and New York. She designed the multi award-winning production of The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time, which has been seen all over the world, and for which she won a Tony Award. She devised a UK schools’ version of the show, giving many students their first experience of live theatre in their own school, for free. At the National Theatre she initiated the NT Design Bursary, employing and supporting two young designers each year. She was awarded an OBE for services to the UK Theatre Industry. She is a founding member of Scene Change, a UK Collective of Theatre Designers.

Paapa Essiedu is one of the UK’s leading young actors. At 25, Paapa played Hamletfor the Royal Shakespeare Company, a performance that garnered critical acclaim and was invited to take the production to London and the USA. His performance subsequently earned him the prestigious Ian Charleson Award which recognises the Best Classical Stage Performance given by a British actor under 30 and also Best Actor Award at the UK Theatre Awards. Other stage work includes work at the National, Royal Court and West End. In 2016, Paapa was named as the Most Influential Theatre Actor by the Evening Standard. Paapa’s screen credits include leading roles in BAFTA-winning drama Kiri;Gangs of London; and I May Destroy You, and has worked with writers such as Dennis Kelly, Jack Thorne, Mike Bartlett, and directors Kenneth Branagh, Hugo Blick, Gareth Evans and Euros Lynn. In 2018, Paapa was named as one of BAFTA’s Breakthrough Brits. Film credits include: Murder on the Orient Express and Women at the Well. (Screen International Star of Tomorrow 2017)


Jason Butler Harner is an actor, writer, producer, and longtime Blackburn reader. He last appeared on Broadway in the premiere of Theresa Rebeck’s Bernhardt/Hamlet and recorded Stacy Osei-Kuffour’s Animals this summer. An OBIE winner and multiple Drama Desk Nominee, selected NYC credits include The Coast Of UtopiaCockVillage BikeHedda Gabler and The Crucible, both with Ivo van Hove. Notable roles on screen include the award-winning “Ozark,” recent event series “Next,” “Scandal,” “Homeland” and “Ray Donovan,” as well as Oscar-nominated ChangelingNon-StopFamily Fang, and the forthcoming The Big Bend and Mia.

Seema Sueko directs stage, film, consensus organizing and R&D projects and productions for theaters, think tanks, and the greater good. She is a consultant to Arena Stage, the Theater Artists Marketplace and the Artistic Director Intensive, two programs she created when she served as Deputy Artistic Director of Arena. She recently directed the film Veterans Day 2020 for the Atlantic Council think tank and Arena. Past leadership positions include Associate Artistic Director of Pasadena Playhouse and Co-Founder & Executive Artistic Director of Mo`olelo Performing Arts Company in San Diego. Recognition and awards include: SDCF Zelda Fichandler Finalist, Chicago Jeff Awards, NAACP San Diego Lorraine Hansberry Award, American Arab Anti-Discrimination Committee Artistic and Cultural Achievement Award, Asian Pacific American Friends of the Theater Artist of the Year, San Diego Craig Noel Awards, and the California State Assembly Shirley N. Weber Award. She serves on the Board of the Stage Directors and Choreographers Society. 

www.blackburnprize.org

Twitter @blackburn_prize

Northern Ballet Announces New Digital Season

Northern Ballet Announces New Digital Season

Including an original dance film by Mthuthuzeli November

Spring Digital Season: Feb – Mar 2021

This week Northern Ballet is launching a new digital season of dance including What Used To, No Longer Is, an original dance film by Olivier Award-winning Mthuthuzeli November. In addition, the Company will première two more original films; Northern Lights and Have Your Cake, by Northern Ballet’s Artistic Director of Digital and Choreographer in Residence, Kenneth Tindall. The season also includes Cathy Marston’s Victoria which will be released on-demand, whilst an excerpt of Kenneth Tindall’s States of Mind, part of the BBC and Sadler’s Wells’ Dancing Nation, will be available to watch online.

The films will be released on digitaldance.org every two weeks from 5 Feb – 19 Mar 2021.

All films will be available to stream for free, but viewers are encouraged to pay what they can to help the Company on its mission to bring world-class dance to everyone, everywhere. Contributions can be made at northernballet.com/PAYC

5 February 2021 | Northern Lights (Première)

The second collaboration of Kenneth Tindall and filmmaker Dan Lowenstein, Northern Lights injects the beauty and art of ballet into the streets of Leeds. Converting the city’s walls and landscapes into an imaginative playground painted by movement and creativity, the artists’ longing to perform and connect resiliently shines through.

19 February | Victoria

Winner of the South Bank Sky Arts Award for Dance, Cathy Marston’s Victoria is a glimpse into the life of Queen Victoria whose diaries revealed a story so fascinating that her daughter Beatrice tried to rewrite history. Previously released in cinemas and on BBC Four, this full-length award-winning ballet is captured splendidly for the screen in partnership with The Space and is available for free on-demand.

5 March | Have Your Cake (Première)

Partly inspired by the nation’s enthusiasm for baking banana bread during lockdown, Kenneth Tindall’s Have Your Cake is a light-hearted, tongue-in-cheek short film exploring the playfulness of a group of friends making the best of it. Friendship, love and togetherness shines bright on the darkest days.

19 March 2021 | What Used To, No Longer Is (Première)

Olivier award-winning Ballet Black artist Mthuthuzeli November makes his choreographic debut with Northern Ballet with What Used To, No Longer Is. Choreographed and created entirely remotely in a Northern Ballet first, this new work explores the evolution of life, the passing of time and the human response to the beauty of an ever-growing life, even in the most difficult of circumstances.

Until 26 February 2021 | States of Mind (excerpt)

Inspired by a collection of thoughts, feelings and news headlines from lockdown, Kenneth Tindall’s States of Mind is an abstract response to a selection of experiences from the events of 2020. Available as part of the BBC and Sadler’s Wells’ Dancing Nation, the film of this striking stage work was captured during its première as part of Northern Ballet’s first and only post-lockdown live performances at Leeds Playhouse in October 2020.

For details of all Northern Ballet’s available and upcoming digital works see digitaldance.org

Kenneth Tindall, Northern Ballet’s Artistic Director of Digital, said: “Northern Ballet has turned a challenging situation into an incredibly creative and inspired time. While we have not been to hold live performances due to Covid-19 restrictions, we have been able to establish a safe way to continue working to create new digital dance and experiment with filming away from the stage. I am especially excited that we commissioned the hugely talented Mthuthuzeli November to work with us for the first time.

Developing and innovating with our digital offering is integral to the evolution of our artform and I am proud of what the Company has delivered.”

RSC’S ACCLAIMED PRODUCTION OF ROMEO AND JULIET RETURNS TO BBC TWO AS PART OF BBC LOCKDOWN LEARNING

RSC’S ACCLAIMED PRODUCTION OF ROMEO AND JULIET RETURNS TO BBC TWO AS PART OF BBC LOCKDOWN LEARNING

“A fresh, fleet, blade-sharp revival.” 
Daily Telegraph,★★★★ 

The Royal Shakespeare Company’s (RSC) 2018 production of Romeo and Juliet will be broadcast on BBC Two at 2pm on Tuesday 9 February as part of the BBC’s Lockdown Learning’s Shakespeare Week.  The production will then be available on BBC iPlayer for 60 days.  

The BBC will also run two episodes of Shakespeare Unlocked, a much-loved collaboration between the RSC and BBC Teach where actors from previous RSC productions explore language and characters in key scenes from Macbeth (Monday 8 February, 2pm, BBC Two) and A Midsummer Night’s Dream (Thursday 11 February, 2.15pm, BBC Two). There will also be Shakespeare focussed episodes of Bitesize Daily featuring readings from RSC alumni such as Niamh Cusack, Natalie Simpson and Jamie Wilkes. 

The Romeo and Juliet broadcast adds to a vast range of other free Shakespeare-related resources that the RSC is offering to students currently learning at home, and to teachers looking to create lesson plans to deliver online.  Full details here 

Directed by RSC Deputy Artistic Director, Erica Whyman, the production of Romeo and Juliet being screened on BBC Two features Bally Gill as Romeo, a role for which he won the Ian Charleson Award in 2019, and Karen Fishwick as Juliet.   

Originally staged at the Royal Shakespeare Theatre in Stratford-upon-Avon in Spring 2018, the show transferred to the Barbican in November of the same year. The Company then embarked on an extended national tour of the UK in the Spring of 2019, which included visits to Norwich Theatre Royal, Newcastle Theatre Royal, Alhambra Theatre, Bradford, Nottingham Theatre Royal, Blackpol Grand Theatre, New Theatre, Cardiff and Glasgow Theatre Royal. 

This production of Romeo and Juliet first aired on the BBC in 2020 as part of the BBC’s Culture in Quarantine programme running across television, radio and online.  

Erica Whyman, Deputy Artistic Director of the RSC, said: “I’m delighted that our production of Romeo and Juliet is getting another showing on BBC Two as part of the BBC’s Lockdown Learning Shakespeare Week.  Here at the RSC we know that seeing Shakespeare brought to life on stage is crucial for anyone studying his plays.  Sadly, our theatres are currently closed, but I hope that this broadcast (which will also be on BBC iPlayer for 60 days) will inspire students and offer them a deeper understanding of Shakespeare’s revolutionary love story. We were so struck by Shakespeare’s timeless understanding of all the ways adults can let their young people down, and that seems even more urgent now. The broadcast adds to the vast range of resources the RSC is offering to students currently learning at home, and to teachers looking to create lesson plans to deliver online.” 

Bally Gill – who plays Romeo – made his RSC debut as part of The Other Place Mischief Festival in 2016. In 2017, he appeared in Vice Versa, Salome and Coriolanus. His other credits include The Island Nation (Arcola Theatre), A Local Boy (The Arts Theatre), Dinner with Saddam (Menier Chocolate Factory), The Bureau of Lost Things (Theatre 503) and NW (BBC/Mammoth Screen). 

Karen Fishwick made her RSC debut playing Juliet in 2018. Previous credits include Our Ladies of Perpetual Succour (National Theatre of Scotland/Live Theatre), Glasgow Girls (NTS/Citizens), Hansel and Gretel (Citizens Theatre), The Caucasian Chalk Circle, A Christmas Carol (Royal Lyceum, Edinburgh), Badults (BBC Three), James Kirk’s Comedy BlapsThe Illuminati (The Comedy Unit) and Tides and Telegrams (for The Winter Tradition). 

The professional cast also includes: Afolabi Alli (Paris); Donna Banya (Gregory); Stevie Basaula (Sampson); Ishia Bennison (Nurse); Katy Brittain (Friar John/Apothecary); Raif Clarke (Peter); Beth Cordingly (Escalus); Paul Dodds (Montague); Josh Finan (Benvolio); Karen Fishwick (Juliet); Andrew French (Friar Laurence); Bally Gill (Romeo); Mariam Haque (Lady Capulet); Michael Hodgson (Capulet); Charlotte Josephine (Mercutio); John Macaulay (Cousin Capulet); Tom Padley (Balthasar); Sakuntala Ramanee (Lady Montague); Raphael Sowole (Tybalt) and Nima Taleghani (Abraham). 

During the run of Romeo and Juliet the professional cast were joined by young people from across the UK aged 12 – 18 who shared the role of the Chorus. All 140 young people who participated in Romeo and Juliet are students in the RSC’s existing network of Associate Schools across the UK.  The broadcast of Romeo and Juliet features young chorus members from Hall Green Secondary School, Birmingham. 

Romeo and Juliet is directed by Erica Whyman and designed by Tom Piper, with lighting by Charles Balfour. Music is by Sophie Cotton and movement by Ayse Tashkiran.  

BBC Lockdown Learning is the BBC’s largest ever education offer, bringing the best of their factual, drama and science output to TV alongside the specially curated Bitesize Daily TV shows, and supported by a host of home learning content from BBC Bitesize.