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Read through of Honeymoon Suite 
This afternoon to the read through of Honeymoon Suite, which begins rehearsals this week. As always the reasons I wanted to do the play when I first read it a year ago hit me with full force on hearing it read aloud for the first time: its earthy humour; its clever and moving storyline; the compassion and admiration with which it approaches the characters who have gritted their teeth and dragged themselves up by their bootstraps.

It’s a clever play, too, and the way the story unfolds is both delightful and heartbreaking. Playwright Richard Bean puts the same man and woman in the same space at three different times of their lives – but the audience sees all three episodes simultaneously, with young Eddie, middle aged Eddie and elderly Eddie spending a lifetime in love with Irene, who can’t help wanting more than he has to give.



It’s been a nightmare to cast, of course. Finding three men and three women who can not only play the same person but also play them on stage at the same time as all the other actors playing them…the director and casting director really had their work cut out for them, but fortunately have acquitted themselves in style. At the read through I was struck by the fact that the actors even sound alike.

Tomorrow the company is off to Hull to visit the places where Eddie and Irene worked and grew up, so they’ll have all those sights and sounds in common too.

A quick aside…Our company includes Stephanie Turner (she played the lead in Juliet Bravo) and Colin Tarrant (formerly Inspector Andrew Munroe in The Bill) who both have a shared history with our theatre-in-the-round: Colin was a member of Peter Cheeseman’s company in the ‘70s and Stephanie was taught by Stephen Joseph, who helped to establish the New Vic.

Isn’t it strange how things come (ahem) ‘full circle’?

See also: TV’s top brass return to plod the boards!
Honeymoon Suite


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Zeitgeist 
It’s about a nine-month development period between our decision to produce a particular play and its getting on stage. So, in common with the fashion industry, we’re thinking about high summer as the leaves fall from the trees; planning the depths of winter as the spring bulbs venture out; trying to anticipate trends and stay ahead of the zeitgeist.

When we started planning our production of The Price, the US was still reeling from the subprime mortgage crisis but here in the UK we only beginning to consider the impact of a potential credit crunch. As we continued to develop The Price, credit crunch turned into economic downturn; and now we’re talking about fully-fledged recession. In such a climate seeing The Price, which opened last week, is somewhat uncanny.



It’s the story of two brothers selling off their dead father’s furniture, which is piled all around them, evoking memories that are warm, pleasant – and distressing. The brothers were forced into different life choices during the Depression, and have spent their lives paying for those choices. It’s a wonderful piece of work – Arthur Miller’s typically lucid, muscular writing, and with that huge sympathy and sensitivity he always displays towards the working man. But – and this is where watching the play at a time of economic crisis becomes an uplifting experience – Miller’s sense of what is important in life constitutes a reminder that money doesn’t buy love; that good relationships and self-fulfilment are the things that really matter. One of his most extraordinary characters, secondhand furniture dealer Solomon, a man in his nineties, counts out all the depressions he’s seen in his life, an optimistic symbol of endurance and patience.

The Price

In pictures: Perfect pairing makes for theatre gold






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New Year Gardening  
As a keen gardener January sees me venturing outside despite frost and rain, and the greenhouse becomes a haven. The craving for colour and scent that begins with the start of the new year is fulfilled by witch hazel and early bulbs, but tending to the dahlia tubers that are carefully packed under the shed staging is where the most exciting promises reside. So, way back last summer, when I was dead heading the blooms and cutting for the house, I was also planning our production of A Voyage Round My Father. Set in a garden bursting with blowsy dahlias, I felt there could be nothing more appropriate to the new year. Whilst they were flowering we had the presence of mind to photograph some of the blooms in case we needed them for a production that would be created in the depths of January.

Today our planning came to fruition. Two glass gobos arrived in the post, each bearing a striking red Bishop of Llandaff bloom. They were slotted into lanterns in the rig, and projected into the centre of the stage – a stunning image with which to open a play that promises an uplifting evening of vibrant colour.

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A Voyage Round My Father 
Just moments before we began the final rehearsal for A Voyage Round My Father we received the news that John Mortimer had died earlier that day. He and Harold Pinter’s first plays had been performed together on the same bill, so it was a sobering silence that fell upon our group as we considered the loss of two significant playwrights within weeks of each other, and the play we were about to run which opens with an eight year old Mortimer going to school and ends with the death of his own father. It was hard to remain quiet for long, though, knowing what we were about to see: an autobiography about a man with a voracious appetite for life and an incisive wit; an irrepressible good humour and 85 years of spectacular achievement not only in the arts but also in the legal world. I can’t think of a greater tribute the arts can return than welcoming audiences to a new staging of his best-known play only a week after his passing.

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A memorable week 
On Monday we moved rehearsals into the new building. It smells new, is shiny and clean, and everything about it is refreshing. A huge window looks out over the car park, leaving us feeling very exposed when rehearsing after dark, but also gives a sense of real engagement with the outside world. Audiences arriving to see the show can clearly see us preparing the next one. This feeling of connectedness is very appropriate, since the new Workspace will mostly accommodate the Education and Borderlines activities through which we reach out to our local communities.

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