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Stage by Stage South Bank: 1988 – 1996
Stage by Stage South Bank: 1988 – 1996 Stage by Stage The Development of the National Theatre from 1848 Designed by Michael Mayhew Compiled by Lyn Haill & Stephen Wood With thanks to Richard Mangan and The Mander & Mitchenson Theatre Collection, Monica Sollash and The Theatre Museum The majority of the photographs in the exhibition were commissioned by the National Theatre and are part of its archive The exhibition was funded by The Royal National Theatre Foundation Richard Eyre. Photograph by John Haynes. 1988 To mark the company’s 25th birthday in Peter Hall’s last year as Director of the National October, The Queen approves the title ‘Royal’ Theatre. He stages three late Shakespeare for the National Theatre, and attends an plays (The Tempest, The Winter’s Tale, and anniversary gala in the Olivier. Cymbeline) in the Cottesloe then in the Olivier, and leaves to start his own company in the The funds raised are to set up a National West End. Theatre Endowment Fund. Lord Rayne retires as Chairman of the Board and is succeeded ‘This building in solid concrete will be here by the Lady Soames, daughter of Winston for ever and ever, whatever successive Churchill. governments can do to muck it up. The place exists as a necessary part of the cultural scene Prince Charles, in a TV documentary on of this country.’ Peter Hall architecture, describes the National as ‘a way of building a nuclear power station in the September: Richard Eyre takes over as Director middle of London without anyone objecting’. of the National. 1989 Alan Bennett’s Single Spies, consisting of two A series of co-productions with regional short plays, contains the first representation on companies begins with Tony Harrison’s version the British stage of a living monarch, in a scene of Molière’s The Misanthrope, presented with in which Sir Anthony Blunt has a discussion Bristol Old Vic and directed by its artistic with ‘HMQ’. -
Headlong Announces Jeremy Herrin's
PRESS RELEASE – 27 NOVEMBER, 2019 IMAGES CAN BE DOWNLOADED HERE HEADLONG ANNOUNCES JEREMY HERRIN’S LAST SEASON AS ARTISTIC DIRECTOR– 2020/21 • WORLD PREMIERE OF AFTER LIFE AT THE NATIONAL THEATRE – CREATED BY JACK THORNE, JEREMY HERRIN AND BUNNY CHRISTIE, BASED ON THE FILM BY HIROKAZU KORE-EDA (SHOPLIFTERS) • A NEW PRODUCTION OF AUGUST WILSON’S JITNEY DIRECTED BY TINUKE CRAIG (VASSA) WHICH WILL PREMIERE AT LEEDS PLAYHOUSE • A SERIES OF SHORT FILMS IN PARTNERSHIP WITH THE GUARDIAN EXPLORING EUROPEAN COUNTRIES’ RELATIONSHIPS WITH THE EU • APRIL DE ANGELIS’ RESPONSE TO THE CLIMATE CRISIS, MRS NOAH, TO BE STAGED AS A MUSIC AND THEATRE VIDEO • FURTHER CASTING ANNOUNCED FOR CHRIS BUSH’S FAUSTUS: THAT DAMNED WOMAN • HEADLONG ORIGINS DIRECTORS APPOINTED FOR 2020 • FUTURE COMMISSIONS FROM JOSH AZOUZ, INUA ELLAMS, JAMES GRAHAM, JASMINE LEE-JONES, NATHANIEL MARTELLO-WHITE, CHLOE MOSS AND NAOMI WALLACE ANNOUNCED Today, Headlong have announced their programme for 2020/21, the final season under current Artistic Director, Jeremy Herrin. Jeremy Herrin, Artistic Director, Headlong said: “Running Headlong has been the privilege of a lifetime and I’m immensely grateful to the colleagues, artists, stakeholders and audiences who have been part of the journey. It seems appropriate to draw my time as Artistic Director to a close with a range of projects and collaborators that are close to my heart. Bunny Christie, Jack Thorne and I have been incubating After Life for a while and I hope it will be a soulful and satisfying show that showcases what Headlong and the National Theatre can do at their best. I’m a big fan of August Wilson’s peerless writing, and Tinuke Craig’s production of one of his greatest plays Jitney will be a meaningful expansion of the canon on the UK’s touring scene. -
Rosena Hill Jackson Resume
ROSENA M. HILL JACKSON 941-350-8566 [email protected] www.RosenaHill.com BROADWAY/New York Carousel Nettie Jack O’Brien/Justin Peck Prince of Broadway swing Harold Prince/ Susan Stroman After Midnight Rosena Warren Carlyle/Daryl Waters/Wynton Marsalis Carousel Ensemble Avery Fisher Hall/PBS “Live at Lincoln Center” Cotton Club Parade Rosena Encores City Center Lost in the Stars Mrs. Mckenzie Encores Z City Center Come Fly Away Featured Vocalist Marriott Marqui Theatre/Twyla Tharp The Tin Pan Alley Rag Monisha/Miss Lee Roundabout Theatre Co./Stafford arima,dir Oscar Hammerstein II: The Song is You Soloist Carnegie Hall/New York Pops Color Purple Church Lady Broadway Theatre Spamalot Lady of the Lake/Standby Mike Nichols dir. Imaginary Friends Mrs. Stillman & others Jack O'Brien dir. Oklahoma Ellen Trevor Nunn mus dir./Susan Stroman chor. Riverdance on Broadway Amanzi Soloist Gershwin Theater Marie Christine Ozelia Graciela Daniele dir. Ragtime Sarah’s Friend u/s Frank Galati, Graciela Daniele/Ford’s Center REGIONAL The Toymaker Sarah NYMF/Lawrence Edelson,dir The World Goes Round Woman #1 Pittsburgh Public Theater/Marcia Milgrom Dodge,dir Ragtime Sarah White Plains Performing Arts Center Man of Lamancha Aldonza White Plains Performning Arts Center Baby Pam/s Papermill Playhouse Dreamgirls Michelle North Carolina Theater Ain’t Misbehavin’ Armelia Playhouse on the Green Imaginary Friends Smart women soloist Globe Theater 1001 Nights Sophie George Street Playhouse Mandela (with Avery Brooks) Winnie Steven Fisher dir./Crossroads Brief History -
The Old Vic Season 4: Part 2
PRESS RELEASE FRIDAY 14 SEPTEMBER THE OLD VIC SEASON 4: PART 2 Matthew Warchus’ fourth season as Artistic Director of The Old Vic completes with an Arthur Miller double-bill, a World Premiere by Lucy Prebble and a special One Voice performance. These productions form Part 2 of the season, and follow the previously announced Part 1 consisting of ZooNation: The Kate Prince Company’s production of SYLVIA; Annie-B Parson’s 17c; Emma Rice’s Wise Children; and A Christmas Carol – for which today we also announce further casting. • Visionary director Rachel Chavkin makes her Old Vic debut directing Arthur Miller’s The American Clock from 4 February • Jeremy Herrin directs Sally Field, Bill Pullman, Jenna Coleman and Colin Morgan in Arthur Miller’s American classic All My Sons in a co-production with Headlong from 15 April • Closing the season is A Very Expensive Poison – a new play by Lucy Prebble based on the book by Luke Harding • A special One Voice performance to mark 100 years since the Armistice, Remembrance curated by Arinzé Kene and directed by Annabel Bolton • Further casting is announced for Jack Thorne’s version of A Christmas Carol directed by Matthew Warchus and starring Stephen Tompkinson as Ebenezer Scrooge. Coming soon: • A musical adaptation of the hit 1983 film, Local Hero, adapted by David Greig and Bill Forsyth, directed by John Crowley and with music and lyrics by Mark Knopfler, will come to The Old Vic in June 2020 following its world premiere at the Royal Lyceum Theatre Edinburgh in 2019. From The Old Vic: • Girl from the North Country opens on 1 October at the Public Theater, New York, and performances have been extended until 9 December. -
PETER PAN Or the Boy Who Would Not Grow Up
PRESS RELEASE NORTH HIGH SCHOOL to present PETER PAN or The Boy Who Would Not Grow Up The Appleton North High School Theatre Department will present the play PETER PAN or The Boy Who Would Not Grow Up on May 16th through the 19th in the North High School Auditorium, 5000 North Ballard Road. This new version adapted from the original J.M. Barrie play and novel by Trevor Nunn and John Caird for the Royal Shakespeare Company and the National Theatre of London enjoyed phenomenal success when first produced. The famous team known for their productions of THE LIFE AND ADVENTURES OF NICHOLAS NICKLEBY and the musical LES MISERABLES have painstakingly researched and restored Barrie’s original play. “. .a national masterpiece.”—London Times. This is the beloved story of Peter, Wendy, Michael, John, Capt. Hook, Smee, the lost boys, pirates, and the Indians, and of course, Tinker Bell, in their adventures in Never Land. However, for the first time, the play is here restored to Barrie’s original intentions. In the words of adaptor, John Caird: “ We were fascinated to discover that there was no one single document called PETER PAN. What we found was a tantalizing number of different versions, all of them containing some very agreeable surprises….We have made some significant alterations, the greatest of which is the introduction of a new character, the Storyteller, who is in fact the author himself.” North’s theatre director, Ron Parker, states, “This is a very different PETER PAN than the one most people are familiar with. It is neither the popular musical version nor the Disney animated recreation, but goes back to Barrie’s original play and novel. -
Christopher Marlowe: Ideology and Subversion1
Christopher Marlowe: Ideology and Subversion1 ‘In Elizabethan and Jacobean drama ... there is almost no analysis of the particular society of the times’ ... the dramatists ‘believed in their own age... And, accepting their age, they were in a position to concentrate their attention ... upon the common characteristics of humanity in all ages, rather than upon the differences.’2 1. Subversion and Representation To begin from a moment in 1 Tamburlaine when Tamburlaine spectacularly violates an Egyptian and, presumably, an Elizabethan cultural practice or ideological code. A Messenger describes to the Soldan of Egypt the quaint and very theatrical device of Tamburlaine’s white, red, and black tents. The Soldan retorts: Merciless villain, peasant ignorant Of lawful arms or martial discipline! Pillage and murder are his usual trades – The slave usurps the glorious name of war. (1 Tamburlaine, 4.1.64-7)3 His outburst seems to be in excess of the facts until we reflect that, by constituting a new set of martial signals and abrogating to himself the meaning of language (usurping the ‘name of war’), Tamburlaine is in fact re-constituting the state, what the Elizabethans termed the ‘nation’.4 This immodest, audacious upstart is enhancing his absolute military authority over Asia by a process of totalisation, and the Soldan is offering a description not only of sedition but of 1 An early version of this paper was given as a lecture at Corpus Christi College, Cambridge on 12 May 1993 as part of the Corpus Marlowe Celebrations. I am grateful to the Master and Fellows for the invitation to this occasion. -
THE MODERATE SOPRANO Glyndebourne’S Original Love Story by David Hare Directed by Jeremy Herrin
PRESS RELEASE IMAGES CAN BE DOWNLOADED HERE Twitter | @ModerateSoprano Facebook | @TheModerateSoprano Website | www.themoderatesoprano.com Playful Productions presents Hampstead Theatre’s THE MODERATE SOPRANO Glyndebourne’s Original Love Story By David Hare Directed by Jeremy Herrin LAST CHANCE TO SEE DAVID HARE’S THE MODERATE SOPRANO AS CRITICALLY ACCLAIMED WEST END PRODUCTION ENTERS ITS FINAL FIVE WEEKS AT THE DUKE OF YORK’S THEATRE. STARRING OLIVIER AWARD WINNING ROGER ALLAM AND NANCY CARROLL AS GLYNDEBOURNE FOUNDER JOHN CHRISTIE AND HIS WIFE AUDREY MILDMAY. STRICTLY LIMITED RUN MUST END SATURDAY 30 JUNE. Audiences have just five weeks left to see David Hare’s critically acclaimed new play The Moderate Soprano, about the love story at the heart of the foundation of Glyndebourne, directed by Jeremy Herrin and starring Olivier Award winners Roger Allam and Nancy Carroll. The production enters its final weeks at the Duke of York’s Theatre where it must end a strictly limited season on Saturday 30 June. The previously untold story of an English eccentric, a young soprano and three refugees from Germany who together established Glyndebourne, one of England’s best loved cultural institutions, has garnered public and critical acclaim alike. The production has been embraced by the Christie family who continue to be involved with the running of Glyndebourne, 84 years after its launch. Executive Director Gus Christie attended the West End opening with his family and praised the portrayal of his grandfather John Christie who founded one of the most successful opera houses in the world. First seen in a sold out run at Hampstead Theatre in 2015, the new production opened in the West End this spring, with Roger Allam and Nancy Carroll reprising their original roles as Glyndebourne founder John Christie and soprano Audrey Mildmay. -
Royal Opera House Performance Review 2006/07
royal_ballet_royal_opera.qxd 18/9/07 14:15 Page 1 Royal Opera House Performance Review 2006/07 The Royal Ballet - The Royal Opera royal_ballet_royal_opera.qxd 18/9/07 14:15 Page 2 Contents 01 TH E ROYA L BA L L E T PE R F O R M A N C E S 02 TH E ROYA L OP E R A PE R F O R M A N C E S royal_ballet_royal_opera.qxd 18/9/07 14:15 Page 3 3 TH E ROYA L BA L L E T PE R F O R M A N C E S 2 0 0 6 / 2 0 0 7 01 TH E ROYA L BA L L E T PE R F O R M A N C E S royal_ballet_royal_opera.qxd 18/9/07 14:15 Page 4 4 TH E ROYA L BA L L E T PE R F O R M A N C E S 2 0 0 6 / 2 0 0 7 GI S E L L E NU M B E R O F PE R F O R M A N C E S 6 (15 matinee and evening 19, 20, 28, 29 April) AV E R A G E AT T E N D A N C E 91% CO M P O S E R Adolphe Adam, revised by Joseph Horovitz CH O R E O G R A P H E R Marius Petipa after Jean Coralli and Jules Perrot SC E N A R I O Théophile Gautier after Heinrich Meine PRO D U C T I O N Peter Wright DE S I G N S John Macfarlane OR I G I N A L LI G H T I N G Jennifer Tipton, re-created by Clare O’Donoghue STAG I N G Christopher Carr CO N D U C T O R Boris Gruzin PR I N C I PA L C A S T I N G Giselle – Leanne Benjamin (2) / Darcey Bussell (2) / Jaimie Tapper (2) Count Albrecht – Edward Watson (2) / Roberto Bolle (2) / Federico Bonelli (2) Hilarion – Bennet Gartside (2) / Thiago Soares (2) / Gary Avis (2) / Myrtha – Marianela Nuñez (1) / Lauren Cuthbertson (3) (1- replacing Zenaida Yanowsky 15/04/06) / Zenaida Yanowsky (1) / Vanessa Palmer (1) royal_ballet_royal_opera.qxd 18/9/07 14:15 Page 5 5 TH E ROYA L BA L L E T PE R F O R M A N C E S 2 0 0 6 / 2 0 0 7 LA FI L L E MA L GA R D E E NU M B E R O F PE R F O R M A N C E S 10 (21, 25, 26 April, 1, 2, 4, 5, 12, 13, 20 May 2006) AV E R A G E AT T E N D A N C E 86% CH O R E O G R A P H Y Frederick Ashton MU S I C Ferdinand Hérold, freely adapted and arranged by John Lanchbery from the 1828 version SC E N A R I O Jean Dauberval DE S I G N S Osbert Lancaster LI G H T I N G John B. -
David Yelland Photo: Catherine Shakespeare Lane
Paddock Suite, The Courtyard, 55 Charterhouse Street, London, EC1M 6HA p: + 44 (0) 20 73360351 e: [email protected] Phone: + 44 (0) 20 73360351 Email: [email protected] David Yelland Photo: Catherine Shakespeare Lane Eastern European, Scandinavian, Location: London Appearance: White Height: 5'11" (180cm) Other: Equity Weight: 13st. 6lb. (85kg) Eye Colour: Blue Playing Age: 51 - 65 years Hair Length: Mid Length Stage Stage, Cardinal Von Galen, All Our Children, Jermyn Street Theatre, Stephen Unwin Stage, Antigonus, The Winter's Tale, Globe Theatre, Michael Longhurst Stage, Lord Clifford Allen, Taken At Midnight, Chichester Festival Theatre & Haymarket Theatre, Jonathan Church Stage, Earl of Caversham, An Ideal Husband, Gate Theatre, Ethan McSweeney Stage, Sir George Crofts, Mrs Warren's Profession, Gate Theatre, Dublin, Patrick Mason Stage, Selwyn Lloyd, A Marvellous Year For Plums, Chichester Festival Theatre, Philip Franks Stage, Serebryakov, Uncle Vanya, The Print Room, Lucy Bailey Stage, King Henry, Henry IV Parts 1&2, Theatre Royal Bath & Tour, Sir Peter Hall Stage, Anthony Blunt, Single Spies, The Watermill, Jamie Glover Stage, Crofts, Mrs Warren's Profession, Theatre Royal Bath & West End, Michael Rudman Stage, President of the Court, For King & Country, Matthew Byam shaw, Tristram Powell Stage, Clive, The Circle, Chichester Festival Theatre, Jonathan Church Stage, Ralph Nickleby, Nicholas Nickleby, Chichester Festival Theatre,Gielgud , and Toronto, Philip Franks, Jonathan Church Stage, Wilfred Cedar, For Services Rendered, The Watermill -
Shakespeare in Production
Cambridge University Press 978-0-521-77338-6 — The Merchant of Venice William Shakespeare , Edited by Charles Edelman Frontmatter More Information SHAKESPEARE IN PRODUCTION THE MERCHANT OF VENICE For over four hundred years, in every country where Shakespeare’s plays have been performed, The Merchant of Venice has aroused controversy and excitement. This edition is the first to offer a comprehensive account of the Merchant in performance. Charles Edelman’s introduction challenges many of the myths and preconceptions associated with the play, and shows how historical events and cultural attitudes have shaped actors’ interpretations and audi- ence responses. The commentary, printed alongside the text, describes how different actors, directors and designers have approached each character and episode on stage, film and television, from the first performances in the s down to the present day. The extraordinary variety of The Merchant of Venice in production, from England to the United States, from Germany to Israel, from Canada to Aus- tralia to China, presented here in a clear and original way, will give every reader new and different insights into one of Shakespeare’s most powerful but troubling plays. © in this web service Cambridge University Press www.cambridge.org Cambridge University Press 978-0-521-77338-6 — The Merchant of Venice William Shakespeare , Edited by Charles Edelman Frontmatter More Information SHAKESPEARE IN PRODUCTION : . This series offers students and researchers the fullest possible staging of individual Shakespearean texts. In each volume a substantial introduction presents a conceptual overview of the play, marking out the major stages of its representation and reception. The commentary, presented alongside the New Cambridge edition of the text itself, offers detailed, line-by-line evi- dence for the overview presented in the introduction, making the volume a flexible tool for further research. -
Cahiers Élisabéthains a Biannual Journal of English Renaissance Studies
Cahiers Élisabéthains A Biannual Journal of English Renaissance Studies General Editors: Yves Peyré & Charles Whitworth Revue fondée en/Founded in 1972 (ISSN 0184-7678) & publiée par/ published by L’INSTITUT DE RECHERCHES SUR LA RENAISSANCE, L’ÂGE CLASSIQUE ET LES LUMIÈRES (IRCL) UMR 5186 du CNRS, Université Paul Valéry, Route de Mende, 34199 Montpellier, France A PLAY, FILM AND OPERA REVIEW INDEX TO Cahiers Élisabéthains 1-70: CORIOLANUS (compiled by Janice Valls-Russell, Managing Editor, IRCL) Issue no. Pages Coriolanus, directed by Terry Hands for the Royal Shakespeare Company, The Aldwych Theatre, London, 9 June 1978 (Jean VACHÉ) 14 111-12 Coriolanus, directed by Terry Hands for the Royal Shakespeare Company, Théâtre National de l’Odéon, Paris, 3-8 April 1979 (Frédéric FERNEY) 16 97-99 Coriolanus, directed by Brian Bedford for the Stratford Shakespeare Festival, Stratford, Ontario, 16 June 1981 (Charles HAINES) 20 119-20 Coriolan, directed by Bernard Sobel, Théâtre de Gennevilliers, 3 March 1983 (Leonore LIEBLEIN) 24 96-97 Coriolanus, produced by Shaun Sutton and directed by Elijah Moshinsky, BBC Shakespeare, BBC 2, 21 April 1984 (G. M. PEARCE) 26 96-98 The Roman Tragedies. 60 mn video cassette, based on Julius Caesar, Antony and Cleopatra, and Coriolanus. Written and presented by David Whitworth, produced and directed by Noël Hardy (G. M. PEARCE) 28 87-88 Coriolanus, directed by Peter Hall, National Theatre, London, 8 May 1985 (G. M. PEARCE) 28 93-95 Coriolanus, directed by Jane Howell, The Young Vic, London, 27 May 1989 (Peter J. SMITH) 36 97-98 Coriolanus, directed by Terry Hands for the Royal Shakespeare Company, Barbican Main Theatre, London, 2 May 1990 (Jill PEARCE) 38 95-96 Coriolanus, directed by Michael Bogdanov for the English Shakespeare Company, Theatre Royal, Nottingham, 12 December 1990 (Peter J. -
Craig Pinder
3rd Floor, Joel House 17-21 Garrick Street London WC2E 9BL Phone: 0207 420 9350 Email: [email protected] Web: www.shepherdmanagement.co.uk Photo: Ric Bacon Email: [email protected] Website: www.shepherdmanagement.co.uk Craig Pinder Other: Equity, AEA Greater London, England, United Kingdom Eye Colour: Hazel Location: Cambridgeshire, England, United Kingdom Hair Colour: Light/Mid Brown Height: 5'9" (175cm) Hair Length: Bald Weight: 11st. 7lb. (73kg) Facial Hair: Beard Playing Age: 51 - 65 years Voice Quality: Melodious Appearance: Mixed Race, White Voice Character: Natural Stage 2019, Stage, The Constable, Fiddler on the Roof, Playhouse Theatre & Menier Chocolate Factory, Trevor Nunn 2017, Stage, Senator Carlin, The Best Man, Bill Kenwright Ltd & Tour, Simon Evans 2017, Stage, John MacCormick Butts, Veteran's Day, Finborough Theatre, Hannah Boland Moore 2016, Stage, Bee Doyle, Floyd Collins, Wilston's Music Hall, Jonathan Butterell 2016, Stage, Harry the Horse, Guys and Dolls, Runaway Entertainment, Gordon Greenberg 2015, Stage, Dave/Dan, Walking the Chains, Show of Strength Theatre Company, Robin Belfield 2014, Stage, Eli, Hibiscus Hotel, Yellowtale Theatre Company, Robin Belfield 2014, Stage, Robert, Blue/Orange, Canoe Theatre, Julia Thomas 2013, Stage, Seth, High Society, Music and Lyrics, Anna Linstrum 2012, Stage, Parson & Dawn, The White House Murder Case, Orange Tree, Richmnd, Christopher Morahan 2012, Stage, Lewald/Snyder/Sherrill, 1936, Attic Theatre Company, Jenny Lee 2012, Stage, Willy Loman, Death of a Salesman, Upside Out, Amy Bonsall 2012, Stage, Othello, Othello or the Tragedy of Conchy Joe, Yellowtale Theatre Company, Robin Belfield 2011, Stage, Othello, Othello, Nuffield Theatre Southampton, Robin Belfield 2010, Stage, John, The Subject Was Roses, English Theatre of Hamburg, Jenny Lee 2009, Stage, Woodcutter, Rashoman, RADA, MinJae Kang 2008, Stage, Cecil B.