Wednesday, 9 September 2020

Theatre Preview - CLASSIC CINEMA SCREENINGS AT DARLINGTON HIPPODROME



Darlington Hippodrome is screening a series of classic movies in its beautifully-restored auditorium during September.

 

As part of a season of socially-distanced activities Darlington Hippodrome will be screening a series of classic films throughout September. There is something for everyone in an eclectic mix of films that will be shown in the theatre auditorium.

 

You can sit back, relax and enjoy films ranging from the cult musical Grease starring John Travolta and Olivia Newton John to the Audrey Hepburn classic romance Breakfast at Tiffany’s.

 

Grease kicks off the season on Thursday 10 September. The film needs no introduction and is consistently ranked as the best-loved movie musical of all time. On Friday 11 September join Gordie, Chris, Teddy and Vern on their journey of discovery in Stand By Me. Disney fans can enjoy another trip down Cherry Tree lane with Mary Poppins on Saturday 12 September.

 

On Thursday 17 September Audrey Hepburn stars in Breakfast at Tiffany’s alongside George Peppard in the romantic comedy. Family favourite Matilda features on the afternoon of Friday 18 September followed by the outrageously funny This Is Spinal Tap in the evening. The September season of films comes to a close with Dustin Hoffman and Anne Bancroft in The Graduate on Thursday 24 September and another Disney classic The Jungle Book on Friday 25 September.

 

Councillor Andy Keir said “After six months of closure it is fabulous news that the Hippodrome is open to the public once more and, whilst we would all like to see the return of live entertainment on the stage, this series of classic films will breathe life back into the theatre’s auditorium.”

 

It is advised to book early for these film screenings as audience numbers are limited with social distancing in place throughout the auditorium.

 

Groups of seats are two+ metres apart following government guidelines. Groups of seats should only be occupied by members of the same household.

 

For full details of the classic film screenings and all the events taking place in September please visit www.darlingtonhippodrome.co.uk or call the box office on 01325 405405

Wednesday, 11 March 2020

Theatre Review - BEDROOM FARCE, PEOPLE'S THEATRE, NEWCASTLE




Alan Ayckbourn’s well-loved bedroom hopping comedy, centres around the disruption caused by tempestuous couple Trevor and Susannah. They begin by ruining the party of loves young dream Kate and Malcolm. The audience quickly realise it’s going to be a long and hilarious night.

The Stage was set (Designed by Megan Smith) with three different bedrooms, each impressing the character of its owner. Coupled with simple but effective lighting (Designed by Matthew Todhunter) creating the perfect environment to showcase it’s larger than life characters. The devil is in the detail and simple but important touches such as party music (Sound design Kate Scott) only furthered my enjoyment of this skilled production. I must applaud Director Steve Hewitt for finding every joyous moment in the production that was possible to find and then some. It is very clear a lot of work has gone into this riotously fun production.

The erratic Susannah (Emily Smith), coupled with the saucy but ultimately useless Trevor (Adam Owers) set the drama in motion with a perfectly placed slap. Adam Owers had me in fits of laughter at his portrayal of this shameless character, even remembering to do the ‘walking to the dance floor’ walk as he exists to join the party. Kate (Ellie Pullen) had the ideal balance, exasperation and awkwardness as she has to deal with the many complications created by having Trevor and then Susannah in her room. While husband Malcolm (Ian Wills) becomes steadily more frustrated as he argues with flat pack. Jan (Kate Lundy) is master of the understated look, as her bed bound husband Nick (Adam Thompson) is definitely king of comic timing. Nick is in a lot of pain and after watching Adam Thompson as he attempts to retrieve his book, so was I, as my sides nearly split! All the coupling in this show was well done but none more so than Ernest (Roger Liddle) and Delia (Maggie Childs), as they brought out shared excitement at the prospect of Sardines on toast. Never before has the cleaning of pilchards, made me gasp as Ernest eyes said it all.  As Delia snuggles in, only to be abruptly offered a reading of ‘Tom Browns school days’ you can’t help but love these characters and the talented actors who play them.

A joyful treat not to be missed.

Bed Room Farce is on at the People’s Theatre from 10th-14th March 


Tuesday, 3 March 2020

Theatre Preview - SPRING / SUMMER SEASON, PEOPLE'S THEATRE, NEWCASTLE


BEDROOM FARCE by Alan Ayckbourn
Tuesday 10 – Saturday 14 March 2020
7.30pm
£14 (Conc. £11.50)

Three bedrooms. Four couples. One endless Saturday night of co-dependence and dysfunction, bad tempers and misunderstandings.

Snowballing sexual mishaps collide with mundane domestic questions: does the ceiling need painting? Is it okay to stash porn in the sock drawer? This lively romp will put a spring in your step this March!


CAT ON A HOT TIN ROOF by Tennessee Williams
Tuesday 31 March – Saturday 4 April 2020
7.30pm
£14 (Conc. £11.50)
 
Big Daddy is dying of cancer. But his family want him to enjoy one last birthday. Meanwhile, failed football-star Brick stifles his impotency with booze and self-hatred, shunning his beautiful wife Maggie in the process.

This 20th century classic seethes with sexual tension in the sultry, oppressive heat of the American south. The unsettling chaos threatens to tear this dysfunctional family apart in the grandiose tomb that is their home.



NORTHERN ODYSSEY by Shelagh Stephenson
Tuesday 12 – Saturday 16 May 2020
7.30pm
£14 (Conc. £11.50)


Some of the masterpieces that secured Winslow Homer's reputation as the greatest American figurative artist of the 19th century were painted in Cullercoats. Stephenson's play imagines how this quiet genius settled in a remote enclave of the North East in 1881 and stayed for the best part of two years.

No mere biography, the playwright creates a living, breathing portrait of the artist. This is in part a tale of seduction, not only of individual hearts, but of a whole community.


PRIVATE LIVES by Noël Coward

Tuesday 2 – Saturday 6 June 2020
7.30pm
£14 (Conc. £11.50)

Divorced couple Elyot and Amanda are reunited while honeymooning with new spouses at the same hotel.

In his classic comedy of manners, Coward presents a cocktail of wit as dry as the martinis that lubricate this high-spirited romp. Fizzing with sexual chemistry, his masterly wordplay serves up a refreshing draught of chilled whimsicality in a long-stemmed glass.


APPOINTMENT WITH DEATH by Agatha Christie
Tuesday 16 – Saturday 20 June 2020
7.30pm
£14 (Conc. £11.50)

A well-to-do group of British travellers find themselves thrown together on an expedition to the city of Petra. At the centre of the group are Mrs Boynton and her four stepchildren – but their apparent devotion is a façade for something far more sinister.

In this chilling psychological drama, Christie - aka The Queen of Crime - explores the murky depths of a sadistic mind and its capacity for cruelty.


THE WIZARD OF OZ by L. Frank Baum
Tuesday 14 – Friday 17 July 2020, 7.30pm
Saturday 18 July, 2pm & 7pm
£14 (Conc. £11.50)

Oh, Toto – I don’t think we’re in Kansas anymore!”

Come along with young Dorothy Gale and her dog Toto to be whisked off from Kansas to the merry old land of Oz.

This colourful, heart-warming romp is packed with fun, drama, and frolics. So, young or old, we hope you’ll join us on the Yellow Brick Road to the other side of the rainbow!


Theatre Preview - BEDROOM FARCE, PEOPLE'S THEATRE, NEWCASTLE




Three bedrooms. Four couples. One endless Saturday night of co-dependence and dysfunction, bad tempers and misunderstandings.

This is the third time the People's Theatre has produced Alan Ayckbourn favourite BEDROOM FARCE. It was first staged here in 1991 and then again in 2009. 

Actors Maggie Childs and Roger Liddle who appeared in that first production thirty years ago, return – this time as older couple Delia and Ernest whose comfortable routine is disrupted by a leaky roof and their son's disintegrating marriage. Maggie (who played Kate in the 1991 production) comments “30 years ago I tried to recall those feelings I had as a young wife in her first home, now I just think of my mother! It’s a great play and still hugely enjoyable to be involved in.” 

Set in the late 1970s this is a world of autumn colours and electric blankets, of landlines, eiderdowns and cruet sets.

We meet the four couples over the course of one night. As well as Delia and Ernest, there’s Malcolm and Kate aka ‘love’s young dream’ who are looking forward to their housewarming party. Nick’s laid up with a bad back and wife Jan’s just heard her ex’s relationship on the rocks, while Trevor and Susannah … well, they’re that exhausting couple whose imploding relationship could well take a few others down with it.

The action takes place across three of these couples most private and telling of spaces - the bedroom.

As Delia comments "you can tell a great deal about a person from their bedroom" and she’s right.  Each of the rooms is as distinct and unique as the marriages that formed them - but will the decor outlive the relationships?

Snowballing sexual mishaps collide with mundane domestic questions: does the ceiling need painting? Is it okay to stash porn in the sock drawer? This lively romp is as enduringly popular as it is hilariously funny, but beware: this is no light comedy. Director Steve Hewitt comments “there’s a dark and cynical edge to this play that might make you question a few things that you always believed were true.”

BEDROOM FARCE is the first main stage production of our Spring/Summer Season. Also coming up we’ve got 20th century classic CAT ON A HOT TIN ROOF by Tennessee Williams, Shelagh Stephenson’s portrait of artist Winslow Homer’s time in Cullercoats A NORTHERN ODYSSEY, sparkling Noël Coward comedy PRIVATE LIVES; murder mystery APPOINTMENT WITH DEATH by Agatha Christie and magical, musical family favourite THE WIZARD OF OZ!


DATE:             Tuesday 10 – Saturday 14 March 2020
TIME:              7.30pm
VENUE:          People’s Theatre, Stephenson Road, Newcastle upon Tyne, NE6 5QF

TICKETS:       £14 (Concessions £11.50)
TELE:              0191 265 5020
WEBSITE:      www.peoplestheatre.co.uk

Friday, 21 February 2020

Theatre Review - THE CHANGING ROOM - PEOPLE'S THEATRE, NEWCASTLE




THE CHANGING Room by Chris Bush is the latest production from the talented Young People’s Theatre. This is one of the ten plays which has been commissioned especially for young people as part of the National Theatre Connections Festival.

Set in a swimming pool, we follow 10 teenagers as we share their worries, excitement and desires as they discover the changes occurring in their lives. The cast made up of Silvie Boyle, Beth Crinnion, Alice Cullen, Phoebe De’Ath, Imogen Henderson, Anna Sabin, Madeline Secker, Jorja Smith, Isabella Warburton and Alistair Wilson, begin all dressed in black and take us on their journey of change as one. They unite as a body warming into their roles, at the same time as we, as an audience, change our mindset back into those teenage years. Through monologues, small scenes, physical theatre and song their stories are told. Much is used of numerous metaphors during their journey until they break out with different coloured tops highlighting their individuality.


This is a well-directed, Pamela Birieson, production with a hard-working cast. Set design by Ian Willis allows swift movement of the cast and creates the feeling of the swimming pool.

Finally, yes, that is the most annoying song I have ever heard! Are we nearly there yet? These teenagers are just that little bit closer, and wiser, on their journey!

Running until Saturday 22nd February 2020 @19:30 - running time 45 minutes



Thursday, 13 February 2020

Theatre Preview - THE CHANGING ROOM - PEOPLE'S THEATRE, NEWCASTLE


Each year the National Theatre commissions ten new plays for young people to perform, bringing together some of the UK's most exciting writers with the theatre-makers of tomorrow. 

300 youth theatre companies and over 6000 young people from every corner of the UK are producing a Connections play this year, including our very own Young People’s Theatre with Chris Bush’s lyrical drama THE CHANGING ROOM.

Set in and around a swimming pool, the play follows a group of teens full of excitement, impatience and uncertainty, each with their own secret worries and desires for what comes next. It's about bodies in flux and perspectives shifting; knowing change is coming but not what that change will look like.

This will be the Young People’s Theatre’s fourth time taking part in the National Theatre Connections Festival. The cast of ten are made up of young performers aged 14-16.

Director Pam comments "It has been fabulous working with our talented young people. I am amazed every rehearsal with how much hard work and commitment they put in to making their performances a success. The play has been a challenge for all involved, a lot of dedication has gone into making this show."

Recent Young People’s Theatre productions include last year’s The Witches, 2016’s Eclipse and the 2017 collaboration with the adult theatre More Light. THE CHANGING ROOM is the first time they have taken on a play with songs and three of the performers will be providing live music on the guitar, piano and violin!

Our Young People’s Theatre is for 11 to 17 year olds. The group meets weekly to improvise, rehearse, play theatre games and discover more about all aspects of theatre. Thousands of young people have taken part in the YPT since its foundation more than 50 years ago and some have gone on to find success in the arts and entertainment worlds including comedian Ross Noble, actors Andrea Riseborough and Tom Goodman-Hill and Pet Shop Boy Neil Tennant. 

THE CHANGING ROOM by Chris Bush runs from Thursday 20th to Saturday 22nd February at 7.30pm in our Studio Theatre. Tickets are £10 (£7 conc), available from the People’s Theatre Box Office on 0191 265 5020 and online at peoplestheatre.co.uk

Theatre Review - THE CROFT - DARLINGTON HIPPODROME


SET in a former crofter’s hut on The Applecross Peninsula in the remote Scottish Highlands ‘The Croft’ is billed as a thriller, but is much more than that. 

The play covers three different times and begins in the present day with Laura, in her 20’s, returning to the family croft on her first visit since her mother’s death from cancer. It is not long before it’s clear that she is there with issues to resolve. Joining Laura is her new lover Suzanne, Caroline Harker, an older woman with two teenage sons and a failing marriage. Initially there is the sense of the new relationship developing, but the remoteness soon becomes an issue for Suzanne with the lack of mobile signal and the nearest shop a 45-minute round trip. The appearance of David, Drew Cain, who is keeping an eye on the croft for Laura’s father, certainly unsettles Laura.

Scenes move to the time when Laura’s mum, Ruth, also played by Caroline Harker, was suffering from cancer and spends her time with David, rather than her husband, Tom, Simon Roberts. The final period we enter is much earlier taking us back to 1870 and the time of the Highland Clearances, where Enid, Gwen Taylor, lives in the croft and has taken in a young girl, Eilene, also played by Lucy Doyle. With themes that seamlessly flow between the time periods, naturally creating a darker sense as the 1870s merge with the present day through the half face at the window, door slamming and lights flickering creating a ghostly presence throughout.

The cast swiftly move between the time periods until they finally collide with each other. This tightly directed production will draw you in from the initial feeling of fresh family life to surprising conclusions.   

Wednesday, 12 February 2020

Theatre Review - THE SEVEN ACTS OF MERCY - PEOPLE'S THEATRE, NEWCASTLE




A moving story about compassion in a bleak existence, set first in Naples 1606, as painter Caravaggio creates his first painting since killing a man in Rome. Then we are returned to present day where grandfather Leon tries to impart his self-taught knowledge of art to his grandson as the only legacy he can afford. The painting ‘The Seven Acts of Mercy’ has particular resonance to Leon and his Grandson Micky and demonstrates how great art whispers its meaning across time.  Written by Anders Lustgarten, it pulls no punches and is full of strong language and contains a small amount of partial nudity.

The sparse staging was by Tim Swinton (with the exception of a large LCD screen that projected the painting at different stages), which seemed to emphasise the importance of the acts of compassion in an otherwise dark world.  Directors Tony Childs and Mark Burden have created a production that was electric, compelling and something that will stay with you long after the last bow. 

The characters are powerful, even some of the smaller roles call for a great deal of emotional depth and demand high levels of skill from the actors. Each character on the stage was masterfully executed. To say the cast was strong is an understatement.  Leon Carragher (Keith Wigham), the disheartened grandfather and his more positive grandson, Micky Carragher (Joe Robson) created many strong moments of family understanding, misunderstanding and loving each other as the story fell to a sombre, but uplifting conclusion. I defy anyone to not be moved by their last moments on stage. Most of the characters had their own moments of dark comedy which helped to lighten the mood a little but Prime (Callum Mawston) and Razor (JimSimpson) brought an odd liveliness as the petty criminals who revel in the sinister world they reside in. Who could not love Dennis (Gordon Mounsey), retaining his dignity as best he can in difficult circumstances, or the passionate but realistic Sandra (Frances Holland).  Funded by the subtle Marchese (Steve Robertson) and befriended by Lavinia (Sara Jo Harrison), Caravaggio (Steve Noone), through great pains, creates ‘The Seven  Acts of Mercy’.  Lavinia and Caravaggio had such effective on-stage chemistry, as kindred spirits, it was hard to believe I was not watching RSC members performing.


The Seven Acts of Mercy is on at the People’s Theatre from 10th to 15th of February.

Theatre Review - THE OLD CURIOSITY SHOP - THE CASTLE PLAYERS, BARNARD CASTLE

The Castle Players - photo credit - Helen Brown


THE CASTLE Players are renowned for their lavish outdoor productions in the grounds of The Bowes Museum, where they enjoy the large outdoor space. During the winter, they move indoors and take to the stages of the local Village Halls, which are certainly different and varied in size.

With Gordon Duffy-McGhie at the helm as director, his choice of Stewart Howson’s performance adaptation of Dicken’s The Old Curiosity Shop is inspired. It is one of the most perfect productions for this talented company from the physical theatre, comedy and characterisation. The cast of eight work tirelessly for two hours taking us on a journey through Victorian England, they tell the story of Nell Trent, Janie Caldbeck, and her grandfather, Andy Moorhouse, whose gambling has led to their financial ruin. It is from here that the eight actors present an array of Di
ckensian characters to perfection.

Sarah Fells as Dick Swiveller. photo credit Helen Brown
Janie Caldbeck slips with ease between Little Nell and the evil Quilp. Andy Moorhouse switches between the Grandfather and the Single Gentleman with some delightful characterisation.  Sarah Fells as Dick Swiveller commands the stage with one of the best performances I have seen her produce, full of energy, drawing the audience in with every movement. Lois Falshaw excels playing the contrasting Kit Nubbles and The Marchioness. Charlotte Perkins plays Sally Brass and Mrs Jarley showing an excellent use of accents and as part of the Chorus was one of the best trees you will see. Harry French, Peter Firby and Amanda Falshaw complete this talented cast with superb timing, filling the stage with action ensuring swift pace throughout.


The set comprises of a central revolving wardrobe, which ingeniously creates all manner of scenes from doorways, to a bed and best of all, the Punch and Judy scene, perfectly executed.

I feel as if I should say you won’t see a better production from The Castle Players, but they are about to start on The Comedy of Errors for their summer production, so I better wait and see!  

Sunday, 19 January 2020

Theatre Preview - MAMMA MIA - NEWCASTLE THEATRE ROYAL - Wed 22 Jan – Sat 8 Feb 2020


MAMMA MIA RETURNS TO NEWCASTLE THEATRE ROYAL – FULL CAST ANNOUNCED FOR UK TOUR


As the winter continues, balmy summer days might seem a long way off. But that’s all about to change when the sunniest musical of them all Mamma Mia! bursts onto the Newcastle Theatre Royal stage to well and truly banish away the January blues.

Following a spectacular run in 2017, the sensational feel-good musical Mamma Mia! makes a triumphant return (Wed 22 Jan – Sat 8 Feb 2020) as part of its UK tour celebrating 20 years since its London premier in April 1999.

From West End to global phenomenon, Judy Craymer’s ingenious vision of staging the story-telling magic of ABBA’s timeless songs with a sunny, funny tale of a mother, a daughter and three possible dads unfolding on a Greek island idyll and  proved a huge hit with North East audiences playing to packed out houses throughout its previous three week run.

Full casting has been announced with Sharon Sexton (Donna Sheridan), Sarah Harlington (Alternate Donna), Nicky Swift (Rosie), Helen Anker (Tanya), Rob Fowler (Sam Carmichael), Daniel Crowder (Harry Bright), Jamie Kenna (Bill Austin), Emma Mullen (Sophie Sheridan), Toby Miles (Sky), Marie Finlayson (Ali), Mariella Mazzilli (Lisa), James Willoughby Moore (Pepper), Eamonn Cox (Eddie) and Matthew Ronchetti (Father Alexander) set to star in the production.

Completing the cast are Taylor Bridges, Ambra Caserotti, Martin Dickinson, Billy Downes, Katie Dunsden, Matt Kennedy, Lewis Kidd, Emma Odell, Blair Robertson, Kaine Ruddach, Ellie Rutherford, Chiara Sparkes, Amy Thiroff, Cameron Vear, Sarah Wilkie and Robert Knight.

To date, Mamma Mia! has been seen by over 65 million people in 50 productions in 16 different languages.  In 2011 it became the first Western musical ever to be staged in Mandarin in the People’s Republic of China.  Mamma Mia! became the 8th longest running show in Broadway history where it played a record-breaking run for 14 years. Mamma Mia! continues to thrill audiences in London’s West End at the Novello Theatre where it celebrated its 20th Anniversary on 6 April 2019.

Produced by Judy Craymer Mamma Mia! The Movie became the highest grossing live action musical film of all time upon its release in 2008.  A second film, Mamma Mia! Here We Go Again, opened in July 2018 and is the most successful live musical movie sequel of all time.
 
Mamma Mia! is at Newcastle Theatre Royal for a three-week run between Wed 22 Jan and Sat 8 Feb 2020 playing evenings at 7.30pm and matinees Tue 2pm (28 Jan only), Thu 2pm, and Sat 2.30pm.Tickets from £26.00 can be purchased from the Theatre Royal Box Office on 08448 11 21 21 (Calls cost 7ppm plus your phone company’s access charge) or book online at www.theatreroyal.co.uk