WATFORD PALACE THEATRE ANNOUNCES 2019-2020 SEASON

WATFORD PALACE THEATRE ANNOUNCES

2019-2020 SEASON

Season highlights include a fresh look at Patrick Hamilton’s classic Gaslight, Jan Ravens in Brigid Larmour’s production of Talking Heads, and this year’s pantomime, Sleeping Beauty.

Artistic Director Brigid Larmour today announces programming to complete Watford Palace Theatre’s season for September 2019 – June 2020, following the world première of Mushy: Lyrically Speaking earlier this month. The co-production with Rifco Theatre Company is now on tour across the UK until 5 October.

In addition to the previously announced contemporary all-female reimagining of Patrick Hamilton’s classic Gaslight, the new season includes collaborations with resident Rifco Theatre Company, reflecting and celebrating British Asian experiences and culture; Mike Leigh’s classic comedy Abigail’s Party, in a new production directed by Rifco’s Artistic Director, and the four-day British Asian Festival.

This production of Abigail’s Party, directed by Pravesh Kumaris setagainst the backdrop of an evolving multicultural Britain of the 1970s. The British Asian Festival presents four days of British Asian arts and culture, curated by Pravesh Kumar and Ameet Chana.

Brigid Larmour directs Alan Bennett’s critically acclaimed Talking Heads, starring Radio 4 comedian Jan Ravens, and Julia Watson. This year’s pantomime is the classic tale of Sleeping Beauty, directed by Associate Director James Williams, written by Andrew Pollard and designed by Cleo Pettitt, with live musicians onstage.

Sister Act is presented by resident local company Cassio Productions; Abbots Langley Gilbert & Sullivan School bring Ruddigore to life.  The Palace hosts part of the Watford Fringe Festival, and the return of Pint-Sized Poetry gives a platform to talented emerging spoken word artists.  The Theatre’s Take Part team enable the community to Celebrate Black History MonthCelebrate DiwaliCelebrate Chinese Culture Show and Celebrate Vaisakhi, as well as facilitating the Palace Community Choir’s Annual Christmas Concert.

In a first for Watford Palace Theatre, audiences are invited into the rehearsal room, to hear rehearsed readings of Moira Buffini’s Handbagged and Barry Hines’ KES, and give their feedback. 

Dinner on our Stage returns following the success of last year, offering audiences the opportunity to enjoy a delicious three course meal on the Watford Palace stage.

The season includes the return of tiata fahodzi and Watford Palace Theatre’s tiata delights, a day of networking and development opportunities for artists, and the 10th annual Imagine Watford, filling the streets with giant puppets, street dancers, jugglers and more, one of the highlights of Hertfordshire Year of Culture 2020.

Brigid Larmour today said, “Everyone’s welcome at the Palace.  This season’s rich mix of new and established artists and shows aims to bring our community together, to be entertained, provoked and inspired, on our stage and in our streets.”

Watford Palace Theatre Company presents

Gaslight

By Patrick Hamilton

Director: Richard Beecham;Designer: Naomi Dawson; Lighting Designer: Anna Watson

Sound Designer: Sarah Weltman

2 – 26 October 2019

The classic thriller with a modern twist.

Richard Beecham directs Patrick Hamilton’s Gaslight, in which a husband attempts to convince his wife that she is going mad.

This bold new production transplants the action from Victorian London to a 21st century Safe House in which a group of women, fleeing domestic abuse, re-enact Hamilton’s play. As the drama unfolds, the women’s own experiences and emotions surface to cathartic effect. Together they discover the strength to begin building a brighter future.

The 1938 West End smash-hit gave rise to the term ‘gaslighting’ – a form of psychological abuse where one person attempts to manipulate another into questioning their own sanity.

Patrick Hamilton, in full Anthony Walter Patrick Hamilton (March 1904 – September 1962), was an English playwright and novelist. His playwrighting credits include Rope – adapted into the 1948 film by Alfred Hitchcock – and Gaslight, which opened in the West End and transferred to New York under the title of Angel StreetGaslight was twice adapted for film, most famously in the 1944 version starring Ingrid Bergman. Hamilton’s other credits include the novels Hangover Square and Twenty Thousand Streets Under the Sky.

Richard Beecham directs. He has directed a number of productions at Watford Palace Theatre, most recently his acclaimed revival of Arthur Miller’s Broken Glass. Other credits include Playing for Time, starring Dame Sian Phillips (Sheffield Theatres), Rose, starring Dame Janet Suzman (HOME, Manchester), 84 Charing Cross Road, starring Stefanie Powers and Clive Francis (Cambridge Arts Theatre/UK tour), Driving Miss Daisy, starring Dame Sian Phillips and Derek Griffiths (Theatre Royal Bath/UK tour), the UK premieres of Red Light Winter and In A Garden (Ustinov Studio Bath), Henry IV Part 1 (Peter Hall Company at Theatre Royal Bath), Just Before the WarThe Human Cost (Young Vic), Rutherford and Son (Northern Stage, Newcastle), Humble BoyDancing at LughnasaIn Praise of Love (Royal & Derngate Northampton), The Invention of LoveThe School for ScandalThe Miser, Side by Side by Sondheim (Salisbury Playhouse), A Taste of HoneyNeville’s IslandHow the Other Half Loves (Watford Palace Theatre), The Two Gentlemen of VeronaPrivate LivesCharley’s AuntBlack Comedy/The Real Inspector Hound (Exeter Northcott Theatre), Early One Morning, Entertaining Mr Sloane (Octagon Theatre Bolton), The Bench (Battersea Arts Centre), Twelve Tales of Tyneside (Live Theatre, Newcastle), Romeo and Juliet (Creation Theatre Company, Oxford), A Midsummer Night’s Dream (USF Florida),Much Ado About Nothing (Marlowe Society Cambridge), and the National Commemorative Event for Holocaust Memorial Day.  Beecham’s short film, The Guitar, won the Pears Short Film award at the London Jewish Film Festival. 

Watford Palace Theatre Company presents

Sleeping Beauty

By Andrew Pollard

Director James Williams; Designer Cleo Pettitt

29 November – 31 December 2019

The Watford Palace team bring you the classic tale of Sleeping Beauty, with fabulous costumes, stunning sets, a live band and non-stop laughs.

It’s the eve of Princess Aurora’s 18th birthday party and her father, King Lenny the VIII of Watford, is worried sick about the Bad Fairy’s curse. Just one prick of her finger on a spinning wheel, and Aurora’s dream of escaping the Palace to travel the world will remain just that – a dream. A guitar-playing Prince is the only hope, to wake Aurora from her long, long sleep…

Join Good Fairy Fender and Dame Nanny Fanny on this unforgettable, time-travelling magical adventure. The Palace has been the home of family panto in Watford for over a century.

Andrew Pollard writesHe regularly writes pantomimes for Greenwich Theatre, Salisbury Playhouse, Queen’s Theatre Hornchurch and Mercury Theatre Colchester.Other credits include adaptations of The Water BabiesTreasure Island, and Heidi – A Goat’s Tail (nominated for the 2008 T.M.A. Award for Best Children’s Play, and the Adrienne Benham Award for Children’s Theatre Writing), and The Hunt for the Scroobious PipThe Mad Hatter’s Christmas PartyA Night at the BijouThe Silent ComedianCross Purposes, and Laughing Gravy. His sitcom, Spinnin’ It was one of the winners of the HTV ‘Search for a Sitcom’ competition and subsequently broadcast.

James Williams directs. As Associate Director at Watford Palace Theatre, James’ directing credits include Jack & The Beanstalk, The Canterbury Tales (WPT and tour), and The Good Soul of Szechuan (WPT and tour)He has also directed numerous youth and community theatre productions, including James and the Giant PeachFantastic Mr FoxPeter PanFrankensteinThere Is A WarA Vampire Story (also National Theatre Connections), Hello Mr Capello,and Return.  As a playwright, his credits include an adaptation of Treasure IslandTrolls, and #Houseparty.  In 2017, following the development of several successful film projects with the Palace’s community youth theatres, James established the Watford Young Filmmakers Festival in partnership with Warner Bros. Studios Leavesden, and is currently developing a Hertfordshire wide festival for Autumn 2020.

Watford Palace Theatre Company presents

Talking Heads

By Alan Bennett

Director: Brigid Larmour

4 – 29 March 2020

Brigid Larmour directs Jan Ravens (Muriel, Miss Ruddock) and Julia Watson (Susan)

An evening of three entertaining monologues by one of Britain’s most brilliant and best-loved writers.

Each piece gives an intimate and hilarious insight into the heart and mind of a peculiarly English character – Muriel in her tweed skirt and pearls in Soldiering On, the public-spirited Miss Ruddock in A Lady of Letters, and Susan, the long-suffering Vicar’s wife in Bed Among The Lentils.

Alan Bennett writes. His writing credits for the stage include Allelujah!Cocktail SticksHymnPeopleThe Habit of ArtThe History Boys (for which he won the 2005 Olivier Award for Best New Play, and the 2006 Tony Award for Best Play), The Lady in the VanTalking Heads (for which he won the 1992 Olivier Awards for Best Actor in a Musical and Best Entertainment), and The Madness of George III. For film, his writing credits include The Lady in the VanThe History Boys, and The Madness of King George (for which he won the 1995 British Academy Film Award for Best British Film).

Brigid Larmour directs. As Artistic Director of Watford Palace Theatre, her previous credits include Much Ado About NothingI Capture the CastleArms and the ManComing UpJefferson’s GardenLove Me DoVon Ribbentrop’s WatchFourteenPerfect MatchWe That are LeftMrs Reynolds and the RuffianOur FatherMy Mother Said I Never ShouldEqually DividedAbsent FriendsTime of My LifeAbsurd Person Singular, and five pantomimes by Andrew Pollard; AladdinDick WhittingtonSleeping BeautyRobin Hood, and Mother Goose. Other notable directing credits include Playboy of the West Indies (Contact Theatre) and the world premiere of My Mother Said I Never Should (Contact Theatre).

Watford Palace Theatre in association with Rifco Theatre Company presents

Abigail’s Party

By Mike Leigh

Director Pravesh Kumar

29 April – 23 May 2020

Welcome to 1970s suburbia and its heady mix of free-flowing drinks, classic disco and cheese & pineapple sticks.

Aspirational Beverly and her estate agent husband Laurence are hosting drinks for their newlywed neighbours. They are joined by a very anxious Susan, who has been banished from her daughter Abigail’s party. As the evening goes on, marital tensions rise and tempers flare as the characters’ true natures are hilariously but ruthlessly exposed.

Mike Leigh’s classic comedy, which became an iconic TV film starring Alison Steadman, is one of the most popular plays of modern times.

This new production is set against the back drop of an evolving multicultural Britain of the 70s.

Mike Leigh writes. His writing credits for the stage include GriefTwo Thousand YearsIt’s a Great Big Shame!Smelling a RatEcstasyToo Much of a Good ThingAbigail’s PartyThe Silent MajorityBabies Grow Old, and Dick Whittington and His Cat. For film, his credits include PeterlooMr TurnerAnother Year (for which he was nominated for the 2011 Academy Award for Best Original Screenplay), Happy-Go-Lucky (for which he was nominated for the 2009 Academy Award for Best Original Screenplay), Vera Drake (for which he was nominated for the 2004 Academy Awards for Best Original Screenplay and Best Director), All or NothingTopsy-TurvyCareer Girls, and Secrets & Lies (for which he was nominated for the 1997 Academy Awards for Best Writing and Best Director).

Pravesh Kumar directs. His previous credits includeBollywood – Yet Another Love StoryAirport 2000Meri ChristmasWhere’s My Desi Soulmate?Britain’s Got BhangraBreak The FloorboardsHappy Birthday SunitaLaila Majnu and Miss Meena & the Masala Queens. He was Associate Director on the new musical Wah! Wah! Girls, which opened in the West End as part of World Stages London for the Olympics 2012.

Watford Palace Theatre                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                             Listings

20 Clarendon Rd, Watford WD17 1JZ

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Watford Palace Theatre aims to inspire and entertain through inventive, ambitious and inclusive drama, new plays, musicals, dance and family shows; free outdoor festivals; diverse stand-up; and a much-loved traditional pantomime. It aims to reflect its diverse communities, and fully represent women, both onstage and behind the scenes celebrating and developing creativity and skill in the community and its young people. The theatre’s locally produced shows and home-grown talent have toured nationally and internationally, been seen on BBC iPlayer, won awards and transferred to the West End. Watford Palace Theatre – inspiration on your doorstep.

Great stories that entertain, provoke and inspire, on stage and in the streets.

Recent productions include The Glass MenagerieAbsurd Person SingularMuch Ado About NothingBroken GlassElton John’s GlassesMiss Meena & the Masala QueensI Capture the Castlegood dogFolk, WipersPoppy + GeorgeComing Up, Jefferson’s GardenLove Me DoAn InterventionShiverVirgin, OverrideJumpers for GoalpostsOur Brother DavidOur Father and Family Business. Creative Associates are central to Watford Palace Theatre’s vision these include Resident Partner Company Rifco Arts; Creative Associate Companies tiata fahodzi; Scamp Theatre and Up In Arms; and Creative Associates Kate Flatt; Shona Morris; Gurpreet Kaur Bhatti; Charlotte Keatley; Gary Owen, Ruari Murchinson and Timberlake Wertenbaker.