Malory Towers Returns with a Summer Run at Southbank Centre

SCHOOL’S OUT FOR SUMMER AT SOUTHBANK CENTRE!

EMMA RICE’S MUSICAL ADAPTATION OF

ENID BLYTON’S

MALORY TOWERS

OPENS AT THE QUEEN ELIZABETH HALL IN LONDON

KIDS GO HALF PRICE WHEN YOU BOOK BEFORE 1 MARCH 2020

David Pugh, the Olivier and Tony Award-winning producer, is delighted to present Emma Rice’s critically acclaimed musical adaptation of Enid Blyton’s Malory Towers, originally created with Wise Children. This new production will be co-produced with Theatre by the Lake, Keswick, where the production will open on 27 March 2020, before going on a national tour, concluding at Southbank Centre’s Queen Elizabeth Hall, where it will play from 27 July to 31 August.

David Pugh, a massive advocate of theatre for all, said, “This wonderful show should be available for as many people as possible. Tickets at the Southbank Centre range from just £15 to £49.50, but for everyone who books before 1 March, all children can go for half price.”

This production will star Rosie Abraham as Sally Hope, Alison Arnopp as Gwendoline Lacey, Georgia Bruce as Bill Robinson, Mirabelle Gremaud as Irene Dupont, Bobbie Little as Alicia Johns, Naomi Morris as Mary Lou Atkinson and Alice Vilanculo as Darrell Rivers, with Katy Ellis and Stephanie Hockley.

Nostalgic, naughty and perfect for now, Malory Towers is the original ‘Girl Power’ story, filled with high jinks, high drama and high spirits, all set to sensational live music and breath-taking animation.

Darrell Rivers is starting school with an eager mind and fierce heart. Unfortunately she also has a quick temper! Can she learn to tolerate the infuriating Gwendoline Lacey, or value the kind-hearted Sally Hope? Can she save the school play and rescue terrified Mary Lou from the grip of a raging storm? If she can do these things anywhere, she will do them at Malory Towers!

Adapted and directed by Emma Rice, this is a show for girls, boys, and all us grown up children who still dream of midnight feasts, Cornish clifftops and headmistresses like Miss Grayling. Set and costume design are by Lez Brotherston, lighting by Malcolm Rippeth, sound and video by Simon Baker and original music by Ian Ross.

The show is officially licensed by Enid Blyton Entertainment, a division of Hachette Children’s Group (HCG). Karen Lawler, Head of Licensed Content at HCG, said, “Enid Blyton created incredible female characters at Malory Towers: strong, capable and always, always kind. ‘Women the world can lean on,’ in Enid’s own words. We share Emma’s passion for these characters and we love the way Emma has brought her vision of Malory Towers to life.”

Emma Rice on Malory Towers

I’ve always been drawn to the years that followed the Second World War. It’s a time that feels close enough to touch, as I vividly remember my grandparents and how the war affected their lives. My Mum’s parents – poor and largely uneducated – decided that their children would have access to all the things that they hadn’t. I don’t know how they managed it on a railway worker’s pay, but my mother was sent to a remote grammar school in Dorset: Lord Digby’s School for Girls.

Whilst not a boarding school, Lord Digby’s was an extraordinary place of learning that changed my mother’s, and by extension my own, life. The tendrils of passion and education that Lord Digby’s stood for reach out across 60 years and more. They reached out over my inner city comprehensive education and have shaped my own beliefs and choices to this day.

My adaptation of Malory Towers is dedicated to the generation of women who taught in schools in that period. With lives shaped by the savagery of two wars, these teachers devoted themselves to the education and nurture of other women. It is also for the two generations of men that died in those same wars, leaving us with the freedom to lead meaningful, safe and empowered lives. And it is for Clement Attlee and his Labour government of 1945 who looked into the face of evil and chose to do what was right. These people changed the political landscape in their focus on care, compassion and the common good.

Malory Towers was written at the heart of this political revolution, and embodies a kindness, hope and love of life that knocks my socks off. ‘Long live our appetites and may our shadows never grow less!’ the girls cry.

My mother wrote to her teachers at Lord Digby’s until they died and is still friends with many of the girls she met there. And when I see my Mum, born into the poorest of rural backgrounds, enjoying Dickens and Almodovar and speaking French to her childhood pen-friend, I am stopped in my tracks. She went on to dedicate her life to the NHS and the helping of others whilst never losing her appetite for life, culture and hope. I salute her, and I cheer the education that threw this mind and soul into the air and said, “be a woman that the world can lean on”.

So that’s why I have made Malory Towers, with gratitude, hope and sheer pleasure! I call it my ‘Happy Lord of the Flies’ and it is joyfully radical to its bones. Imagine a world where (left to their own devices), people choose kindness. Imagine a world where difference is respected and arguments resolved with thought and care. Imagine a world that chooses community, friendship and fun. Now that’s a world I want to live in and, at Malory Towers, you can!

Tour Schedule

27 March – 18 April             Theatre by the Lake, Keswick                              017687 74411

                                             www.theatrebythelake.com

                                             *‘Kids go half price’ offer not applicable; other substantial child discounts apply.

21 – 25 April                         The Lowry, Salford                                               0343 2098 6000

                                             www.thelowry.com

28 April – 2 May                   Nottingham Theatre Royal                                   0115 989 5555

                                             www.trch.co.uk

5 – 9 May                             Theatre Royal Bath                                              01225 448844

                                             www.theatreroyal.org.uk

12 – 16 May                         Everyman Theatre, Cheltenham                          01242 572573

                                             www.everymantheatre.org.uk

19 – 23 May                         Devonshire Park Theatre, Eastbourne                 0132 341 2000

                                             www.eastbournetheatres.co.uk

26 – 30 May                         Festival Theatre, Malvern                                     01684 892277

                                             www.malvern-theatres.co.uk

23 – 27 June                        Norwich Theatre Royal                                        01603 63000          

                                             www.theatre.org

30 June – 4 July                  Chester Storyhouse                                              01244 409113         

                                             www.storyhouse.com

7 – 11 July                           Birmingham Repertory Theatre                           0121 236 4455.

                                             www.birmingham-rep.co.uk

14 – 18 July                         Marlowe Theatre, Canterbury                              01227 787787

                                             marlowetheatre.com

21 – 25 July                         Sheffield Lyceum Theatre                                    0114 249 6000

                                             www.sheffieldtheatres.co.uk                                on sale soon

27 July – 31 August             Queen Elizabeth Hall, London                              020 3879 9555

                                             www.southbankcentre.co.uk                                on sale 4 February

Further dates to be added.