THE HOPE THEATRE ANNOUNCES
DETAILS OF ITS SPRING SEASON
THE FIRST UNDER NEW ARTISTIC DIRECTOR PHIL BARTLETT, RUNNING FEBRUARY TILL JUNE 2022
TICKETS ON SALE NOW HERE
Phil Bartlett, the new Artistic Director of The Hope Theatre, is pleased to announce details of the spring 2022 season at the acclaimed 50-seat pub theatre in the heart of Islington.
The season opens with the world-premiere of Measured, Emma O’Brien’s witty and moving play about the hidden consequences of living with an eating disorder, which is accompanied by Measured Festival, a selection of electric late-evening events celebrating mental health awareness, including stand-up, improv and comedy. Other world-premieres include A Good Time Was Had By All, a dark satire about a group of friends who discover disturbing information about one of their group, and Up in Town, a new stage adaptation which marks the twentieth anniversary of the cult TV series about an older woman’s desire to be visible.
Much of the programme looks outside of London, with Emma Zadow’s new play Fridge focussed on two sisters reuniting in Norfolk, and If. Destroyed. Still. True., the debut script from Jack Condon, exploring male friendship in rural Essex. The season closes with 100 Paintings, a dystopian comedy about a young artist and his mother which comes to the Hope after a successful shorter run at the Bread and Roses Theatre last year.
There is also the return of the popular Sunday-Monday programme, which offers emerging theatre-makers the opportunity to present their work without having to commit to a full three-week run.
Ticket prices will rise from £15 (£12 concessions) to £16 (£13 concessions) for performances taking place from April 2022 onwards. This reflects the rise in national living wage and the theatre’s ongoing commitment to ensuring all performers, stage management and box office staff are paid a legal wage.
Tickets are on sale now via the Hope Theatre website.
Artistic Director Phil Bartlett said, “Despite the many challenges the theatre industry continues to face, it’s been a real pleasure putting together the spring season. With a focus on new writing and stories which look beyond London, these productions are dramatic, surprising, and have something to say about the world we live in now.”
MEASURED / MEASURED FESTIVAL
Written by Emma O’Brien, directed by Cat Robey, starring Juliette Burton
Tuesday 22 February – Saturday 11 March @ 7.00pm
“Well, it’s not a party ’til someone’s crying in the toilets.”
Sophie’s sister, Lucy, is at that age where her friends are throwing yoghurt around at school. Sophie’s boyfriend, Tom, runs a catering company for picky wedding planners. And Sophie? Sophie has an eating disorder – which she sees as a rather large inconvenience. Now that she’s in recovery, Sophie is hopeful she can reconnect with Lucy and Tom, but she knows that after hiding within her illness for so long, it’s not going to be easy to cope without it.
MEASURED is a witty and moving new play examining the hidden consequences of an eating disorder for the sufferer and those who love them. Exposing the emotional turmoil of the illness without glamorising its dangers, MEASURED questions how effective recovery can be in a society that still wants women to be as ‘little’ as possible.
Emma has worked in mental health social work for over ten years and wrote MEASURED whilst in recovery from anorexia. Award-winning director Cat was Deputy Director of Jermyn Street Theatre 2019-21. Comedian and mental health ambassador Juliette Burton has sold out Edinburgh Fringe 2015-18 and won numerous awards, most recently recommended by The Guardian for lockdown comedy in 2020.
To accompany Emma O’Brien’s moving new play comes the MEASURED FESTIVAL – a powerful range of award-winning comedy, improv, spoken word and performance art celebrating mental health awareness and bringing out the laughter within.
The festival comprises a roster of electric late-shows presented after each performance of MEASURED. Stand-up performances by award-winning comedians and actors hope to foster a lively and enthusiastic environment in which frank discussion about the difficulties of living with a mental illness can be had.
Full line-up will be announced soon.
Written by Emma Zadow, performed by Emma Zadow, Gabrielle De Saumarez, and Edward Watchman, directed by Anoushka Bonwick
Tuesday 15 March – Saturday 2 April
Alice hasn’t been home for a while. Seven years in fact. But when her little sister, Lo, attempts to take her own life, the journey from South London to Norfolk proves to be more than just a simple change of pace. Disney VHS tapes, walkmans and shared memories fill the family home where Alice must confront what she left behind and what exactly brought her back.
With the help of their friend Charlie, together, the three try to rekindle a family broken in the Norfolk wilderness.
“When it’s this silent, it’s easy to hear voices.”
FRIDGE is a play about familial ties and the importance of giving support to those we love. In the wake of mental health cuts to the NHS, over 81,000 people in the Norfolk area are experiencing mental health difficulties, with suicide rates presenting as particularly high. This is a show with magic realist writing at the heart of a story about a broken family that are brought back together in Norfolk, despite themselves and their past trauma.
Written and directed by Sam Smithson, performed by Hattie Kemish, Holly McComish, Bethany Monk Lane, and Cameron Wilson
Tuesday 5 – Saturday 23 April @ 7.45pm
A dinner party.
A dark secret.
A damn good time.
When university friends re-unite over dinner, they are forced to make an uncomfortable decision about one of their oldest friends..
“People aren’t always what they show you, do you understand? People hide things.”
A darkly satirical play exploring justice and who has access to it.
The debut production from JAWBONES Theatre, telling the epic stories in everyday lives. Written by Jack Condon, directed by Sarah Stacey
Tuesday 26 April – Saturday 2 May @ 7.45pm
“But where the fuck have you actually been though? What have you really done? It’s been… I hardly recognise you mate.”
A cliffside hangout. A friendship. A forgotten town.
Summer 2012, a warm evening by the sea. James is home from University with his new girlfriend Charlotte. John, James’ best friend, can’t wait to reunite.
Until they do.
Something is changing, something seismic.
And none of them knows how significant this day will be for the rest of their lives…
A story spanning ten years, IF. DESTROYED. STILL. TRUE. shines a stark light on life between the cracks, and asks what happens when the place you were born can no longer be called home. Identity, class and cultures clash as life pulls childhood best mates apart. We bear witness to what we stand to lose when we cannot truly communicate, and the lengths to which we must go to find peace…
A new tragic comedy by Jack Stacey (The Play That Goes Wrong, West End), directed by Zachary Hart (Julius Caesar, The Bridge).
Tuesday 17 May – Saturday 4 June @ 7.45pm
Set in a dystopian future, 100 PAINTINGS tells the story of a young artist and his mother struggling to survive in the crumbling Savoy Hotel.
“How am I supposed to be a professional artist with my mother barging in offering hot beverages and food every five minutes?”
Battling mountains of unpaid hotel bills, the young artist has three days to produce one-hundred original paintings and deliver them to the new hotel manager or he and his mother face being turned out onto the street.
With hilarious distractions coming in full force, he struggles to keep on course to meet the deadline, but help often comes from the most unexpected of places…
The Sunday/Monday shows in the season announced so far are as follows: MRS GREEN (27 & 28 February), EVERYTHING IS GRAND AND I’M COMPLETELY OK, (6 & 7 March), CARELESS
(27 & 28 March), UP IN TOWN (10, 11, 17 & 18 April),HAPPENINGS (22 & 23 May)
Opening in 2013, The Hope Theatre was originally a sister theatre of Islington’s King’s Head Theatre, renovated from a function room above the famous Hope & Anchor pub and music venue into a black box studio theatre. The Hope Theatre has transferred two productions to the West End (Ushers to the Charing Cross Theatre and the Snoo Wilson’s Lovesong Of The Electric Bear to The Arts) and has been home to many world premieres. It also housed the professional world premiere of Joe Orton’s Fred And Madge.
The Hope Theatre is a place for audiences and companies to explore BIG ideas. It nurtures and develops new producing models, working with exciting companies to present a mix of new writing, lost gems from well-known writers, re-polished classics and innovatively staged musicals.
Although The Hope Theatre has received no regular public subsidy since its 2013 opening, it was the first Off West End venue to open with a house agreement with Equity. This ensures a legal wage for all actors, stage managers and box office staff working at the theatre.
In 2020, Kennedy Bloomer became Artistic Director of the theatre and navigated the theatre through the global Covid-19 pandemic and total closure by taking The Hope Theatre online. Phil Bartlett was appointed Artistic Director in September 2021.
Artistic Director: Phil Bartlett
Associate Director: Toby Hampton
Technical Manager: Laurel Marks
Patron: Paul Clayton
Support The Hope Theatre: https://www.thehopetheatre.com/support-us/
Or visit www.thehopetheatre.com for more information.