Summer Season Treats – Pitlochry Festival Theatre

 

All you need to know...

All you need to know…

Leaving Edinburgh for an overnight stay in Pitlochry is always an activity full of excitement and joyful anticipation. The stationary traffic around Perth’s huge roundabouts throws a dash of cold water over that. We got through eventually and arrived at our B&B, the delightful Derrybeg – hosts Ryan and Bea – in time to change.

First up this time was dinner in the wonderful theatre restaurant. I love it. The food is imaginative, well cooked and nicely presented, but the real attraction is the fantastic outlook over the Tummel and the canopy where you can watch the gulls wheeling in and out. Not quite the toucans of Costa Rica, but possibly more skilled aeronautics.

TRAVESTIES by Tom Stoppard, directed by Richard Baron

Mark Elstob could also be seen from the restaurant going over some of his lines. No wonder as the play is hugely demanding of its main character, Henry Carr. I thought Elstob captured the aged Carr reminiscing and the man in his prime seduced by performance beautifully. It helps audience understanding to have some familiarity with The Importance of Being Earnest which Stoppard used as the framework, but the play exists in its own merit, too.

CHICAGO by Fred Ebb, Bob Fosse and John Kander, directed by Richard Baron

Who doesn’t think they know everything they need to know about Chicago, Roxie Hart and Velma Kelly? There might be opportunity for you to reconsider. Baron’s fast-paced production, with the musicians on-stage throughout, is a searing indictment of how sensationalism skews justice, perception and truth. The theatre was sold out for the matinée and sitting with my book in the shade, I saw coaches leave for Dundee, Laurencekirk & Forfar.

QUALITY STREET by JM BARRIE, directed by Liz Carruthers

Anything by JM Barrie is close to my heart and Quality Street in particular as it’s the last play I ever appeared in. Following our wonderful production of Arms and the Man by Shaw, we in 6th year at West Calder High School were very keen to repeat the triumph. However, the poor head of English, the late Doctor Lillian MacQueen, was a lot less keen. Eventually, she agreed to a curtain raiser of the first scene of Quality Street. I played Miss Susan. I have no idea who else was in the cast, so if you know please leave a comment.

Pitlochry did not disappoint and it was the perfect farewell after the hectic Travesties and Chicago. The clever round set was a delight and the ladies used it well, entering and leaving with just the right amount of fluttering. As always, Barrie’s understanding of the vicissitudes of life as a woman are laid bare, but with humour and a wry glance at what might have been. His mastery does not pall.

All runs continue and you can buy your tickets here

Three in February

 

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My talented fellow Capital WriterKate Blackadder – writes a piece on her blog,

Kate Writes and Reads, about the books she’s read each month and uses the title Seven in January or Nineteen in September (I jest, maybe). I thought I’d borrow it in order to round up the wonderfully dramatic February I’ve enjoyed this year.

First up was Lady Windermere’s Fan at the Vaudeville Theatre in London.

Directed by Kathy Burke this production features a song, Keep Your Hands Off Me, also written by her and performed, in front of the curtain, by the irrepressible Jennifer Saunders. Samantha Spiro gave a fabulous rendition of the equally irrepressible Mrs Erlynne and Grace Molony shone in this early starring role of her career as Lady Windermere.

Can’t recommend it too highly as an evening of poignant comic indulgence. What a lot we owe to Oscar Wilde.

Run continues till 7th April tickets

 

Then off to Perth, to see Knives in Hens by David Harrower and directed by Lu Kemp at the re-furbished theatre in Mill Street. Harrower’s play is about a long-gone society and its instinctive hatred of the miller. And yet, the woman sees beyond that in her quest to broaden her understanding of God’s world and find new ways of describing the things in that world.

Strong performances from the cast, Jessica Hardwick, Michael Moreland and Rhys Rusbatch, sent us off with much to reflect on.

Run ended, but next up is Richard III Sat 12 – Sat 31 March. Perth Theatre (the theatre is upgrading its website and you might need to visit once or twice to get in.)

The last drama in February was the rollicking The Belle’s Stratagem by Hannah Cowley, adapted and directed by Tony Cownie for the Royal Lyceum. A sparkling evening of human foibles and frailties beautifully dressed by the Lyceum costume department. In fact, there’s a quote from last month’s post about my visit to the costume workshop, see below, in the programme.

Run continues, tickets, till 10th March.

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Tangee Lenton, Copyright Theatre Broad

Tangee Lenton, Copyright Theatre Broad

Thought I’d share this atmospheric photo again as it’s of one of my own short plays, Flights of Fancy, in a production by Theatre Broad of Stirling.

Why today? Well, tonight I’m leading a wee workshop in adapting your short story for the stage and Flights of Fancy was picked up by Theatre Broad after it won an EWC drama writing competition.

7.30, Grosvenor Hilton Hotel, £5 guest fee.

Capital Stories by Anne Stenhouse, Kate Blackadder Jennifer Young Jane Riddell

The Lover – Update

THE LOVER – adapted for the Stage and co-directed by FLEUR DARKIN AND JEMIMA LEVICK is based on the novels by Marguerite Duras runs at the Royal Lyceum Edinburgh until 3rd February.

The desperation of a family set adrift in a foreign country when the head of the household dies and they are sold worthless land, underpins this dark coming of age tale. Like many ex-pat communities, they have divided loyalties. ‘We were all born here,’ Indo-China, Vietnam, the girl says several times. Born here, but not of here and therefore not an acceptable match in the eyes of her lover’s father.

The lover of the story is an only child and his wealthy father’s heir. He cannot find the strength to throw over his culture and marry his love.

The dancing from members of Scottish Dance Theatre was lyrical, sublime and frenetic as the script demanded. The voice soundtrack was occasionally inaudible in the Circle.

Leila Kalbassi’s set was a delight. Having been in a couple of eastern countries including Vietnam, as a tourist, I would have recognised the country from the set.

Tickets here

 

SCROOGE! – The Musical Pitlochry Festival Theatre

SCROOGE! the musical – Book, Music and Lyrics by Leslie Bricusse  running at Pitlochry Festival Theatre until Friday 23rd is a dramatic delight.

A large cast is headed by Philip Rham and supported by an onstage live band. The band are almost hidden by the set’s chimney pot skyline, but the music is great.

Three sets of youngsters take the juvenile roles and we saw The Red Team who were excellent. But I’m confident the two other teams are good, too. If I might be permitted a minor quibble I found the casts’s voices a little over-miked. Really minor though.

Scrooge is of course based on Charles Dickens’s A Christmas Carol, 1843. The programme notes tell us the original was a commentary on Britain’s infamous Poor Laws with their introduction of Treadmills in the Poor Houses. The piece is as much needed today as it ever was.

PITLOCHRY FESTIVAL THEATRE

Playing Catch-up Democracy and others

Democracy by Michael Frayn is an enthralling play about the late Chancellor of Germany, Willy Brandt and the East German spy, Gunter Guillaume whose presence in Brandt’s inner cabinet, the hat-stand man, proved to be his downfall.

Democracy is at Edinburgh’s King’s Theatre again tonight 0131 529 6000 and is well worth catching. The all male cast is headlined by Tom Hodgkins as Brandt and Neil Caple as Guillaume. Frayn doesn’t stint on the frailties of the human spirit that are the main architects of Brandt’s eventual fall, but he doesn’t labour them either. Both actors turn in rounded performances depicting two men caught by the exigencies of time.

And why no opinions on Hard Times, Role Play and This Happy Breed – all Pitlochry – and Dundee Rep’s energising The Cheviot, the Stag and the Black, Black Oil?

A new book launched and the timing caught me a wee bit by surprise, so online marketing has taken up the computer hours. Courting the Countess takes Beauty and the Beast and turns it on its head. She’s scarred by fire and he’s Greek God Gorgeous. Will it work? Hope you have a kindle and you can find out for yourself.

The plays were great, by the way. Still time to get to Pitlochry.

Oct 1st Edinburgh King’s Theatre, then touring. Rapture Theatre

EIF – The Toad Knew – King’s Theatre

The Toad Knew by James Thierrée and Compagnie du Hanneton opened last night at the King’s Theatre Edinburgh.

I am grateful to Mark Fisher and Dorothy Max Prior whose programme notes fill in and explain so much of the experience that is The Toad Knew. They tell one, for example, of Thiérrée’s circus and theatre forebears. Charlie Chaplin, Victoria Chaplin and Eugene O’Neil for starters are bound to have produced an intellect of depth and a body capable of the strength and grace needed for circus performance.

Supported by Valérie Doucet, Samual Duterte, Maraima, Yann Nédélec and Thi Mai Nguyen onstage, together with puppeteers, and backed up by a formidable array of stage props and costumes, the production is a delightful hour and a half.

Part dream sequences, part clowning, part musical, part acrobatic, part illusion – where did all those plates come from? The ever-moving set was a constant surprise and delight.. Not only was it interesting in that it appeared to be an electrical shop full of upside down saucer-shaped fittings, but the acrobats made full use of it for up-in-the-air performance.

Run continues till Sunday 28th August, ’16. Do go: Tickets are here

EIF 2016 – Measure For Measure

Ruling Heads, Naples

Ruling Heads, Naples

 

MEASURE FOR MEASURE  presented by Cheek by Jowl and the Pushkin Theatre is a masterly production of a seriously unpleasant play. Why choose this one?

The excellent programme notes provided in part by Cheek by Jowl, in part by James Shapiro and finally Peter Kirwan are full and informative. The play, Measure For Measure, is reckoned to be Shakespeare‘s first Jacobean one, but the text used today is also thought to have been updated by Thomas Middleton. Shakespeare’s play may well have been set in Italy, Ferrara, but the one we now see performed is in Vienna.

James 6th and 1st was obsessed with how his subjects thought and what they did. The Duke, in M for M is likewise interested in how nobly his subjects would behave without his guiding hand. So off he goes, but not far. Disguised as a friar, he lurks in the dark corners of the big city and is soon hearing people’s confessions as they await an illegitimate birth or their own execution. The play covers moral breakdown, personal and political, the over-zealous enforcement of laws and inflexible good as epitomised by the doomed man’s sister, Isabella.

It’s one of the mysteries of the play that one is unable to warm to Isabella until her final few scenes when she is left aghast by the Duke’s decision to marry her (without asking and in the face of the implacable godliness referred to above). I suppose the traditions of the time meant all available child-bearing women needed a husband and this match rounded the numbers off nicely.

Despite the handicap of the story, the production by Declan Donellan and Nick Ormerod with a cast from the Pushkin Theatre, is full of wonderful, quirky beats and an excellent staging. Short scenes and multiple exits and entrances can be an issue with Shakespearean performance, but this production answers the problem by keeping the cast on stage and revolving them as a silent chorus from which the central performers peel off. Three large red boxes provide ample cover for costume changes, although there is a moment of fleeting male nudity.

The play runs at the Lyceum Theatre until Saturday 20th when there’s also a matinée. Tickets are here

EIF 2016 SHAKE -adapted by Dan Jemmett from 12th Night by William Shakespeare

Singers, Bengal

Singers, Bengal

SHAKE is an adaptation of Shakespeare’s Twelfth Night. Dan Jemmett and the Eat a Crocodile company have crafted a delightful show full of cultural nods – music hall, end of pier theatricals, cross-dressing set-piece humour, filmic song and dance routines – in French with side-titles.

Identical twins Sebastian and Viola are ship-wrecked and each thinks the other perished. Viola dresses as a man and seeks work as page to Orsini with whom she falls in love. Sebastian is looked after by Antonio, who harbours a hopeless love for him, and eventually Sebastian is married by the beautiful Olivia – who is the object of Orsini’s desire. Okay, still with it? Into the mix, we have Feste, yesterday’s jester, who tells jokes in American English, and Malvolio, the buttoned up steward and perhaps one of Shakespeare’s most well-defined character studies. Not forgetting Sir Toby and Sir Andrew – one of them is a music/pier show dummy and one a drunk.

The Eat a Crocodile company deliver a touching, humorous and polished show from a set of seaside bathing cabins. They sashay through two wonderful hours of acting, singing, dancing, costume changes, a ventriloquist’s dummy and more……….

Tickets for the two remaining performances Sat 13th  2.30 and Sat 13th 7.30 are here

EIF The Glass Menagerie Tennessee Williams

Buy your ticket for The Glass Menagerie here

The Glass Menagerie by Tennessee Williams is a modern masterpiece.

I first encountered The Glass Menagerie when I signed up to study American Literature as part of my English Literature degree at Edinburgh University. I first met director, John Tiffany when I signed up to the Traverse Women’s writing group in the nineties. There’s a sort of quiet satisfaction when areas of one’s life come together in such an unexpected, but altogether satisfactory way.

Five star reviews of this production of The Glass Menagerie by Tennessee Williams, which began life on 2nd February 2013 at the Loeb Drama Center for The American Repertory Theater, abound. I don’t award stars but I don’t argue with those assessments.

Memory is a strange thing. Take six of us witnessing an event and ask us what happened a year later. The accounts will vary. We may not even be able to agree on the result! Add family relations with their perceived inequalities to the mix, and the result will be even further from exact.

Tennessee Williams also stirs physical disability, mental instability and the pernicious effect of the Great Depression into his pot. The results are reaching boiling point when the play opens and bubble up to engulf the stove by the end.

Cherry Jones reprises her role of Amanda Wingfield and what mother in the audience hasn’t felt the frustrations she’s experiencing? Amanda is a monster of motherhood, but the reasons are compelling. Tom Wingfield her much put-upon son and financial support comes in for almost all of the flak. He is not, however, his absent father. He is a young man with his hopes and ideals shackled by duty. Laura, the daughter with a mild visible disability, which gentleman-caller, Jim, had to be reminded of, and a much greater personality disorder, is the catalyst for all that ensues. Her mother does not, or will not, take on board the issues. She does delude herself though, that Jim, the much wanted gentleman-caller, will resolve all them all for the future of her vulnerable adult daughter.

The audience sighed with satisfaction as the house went dark. It’s by no means a happy ending, but the cast and the direction brought The Glass Menagerie to life with such care, all the over-heards while leaving were of an evening that could not have been better spent.

Buy your tickets here. There are another 11 performances till run ends 21st August.