CINDERELLA 2017 Pantomime
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A Midsummer Night's Dream
Monday 25, Wednesday 27 February, Friday 1, Monday 4 March, 7pm Silk Street Theatre A Midsummer Night’s Dream by Benjamin Britten Dominic Wheeler conductor Martin Lloyd-Evans director Ruari Murchison designer Mark Jonathan lighting designer Guildhall School of Music & Drama Guildhall School Movement Founded in 1880 by the Opera Course and Dance City of London Corporation Victoria Newlyn Head of Opera Caitlin Fretwell Chairman of the Board of Governors Studies Walsh Vivienne Littlechild Dominic Wheeler Combat Principal Resident Producer Jonathan Leverett Lynne Williams Martin Lloyd-Evans Language Coaches Vice-Principal and Director of Music Coaches Emma Abbate Jonathan Vaughan Lionel Friend Florence Daguerre Alex Ingram de Hureaux Anthony Legge Matteo Dalle Fratte Please visit our website at gsmd.ac.uk (guest) Aurelia Jonvaux Michael Lloyd Johanna Mayr Elizabeth Marcus Norbert Meyn Linnhe Robertson Emanuele Moris Peter Robinson Lada Valešova Stephen Rose Elizabeth Rowe Opera Department Susanna Stranders Manager Jonathan Papp (guest) Steven Gietzen Drama Guildhall School Martin Lloyd-Evans Vocal Studies Victoria Newlyn Department Simon Cole Head of Vocal Studies Armin Zanner Deputy Head of The Guildhall School Vocal Studies is part of Culture Mile: culturemile.london Samantha Malk The Guildhall School is provided by the City of London Corporation as part of its contribution to the cultural life of London and the nation A Midsummer Night’s Dream Music by Benjamin Britten Libretto adapted from Shakespeare by Benjamin Britten and Peter Pears -
Tina Turner Said: “I First Met Aisha During Early Rehearsals for Our Show
AISHA JAWANDO TO PLAY TITLE ROLE IN T I N A - T H E T I N A T U R N E R M U S I C A L AT THE ALDWYCH THEATRE Aisha Jawando, who has been with the Company since its world premiere in Spring 2018, steps up to play the title role in TINA – THE TINA TURNER MUSICAL from 8 October 2019. Having originally played Tina’s sister Alline Bullock, Jawando has subsequently performed the iconic role of Tina at certain performances. Tina Turner said: “I first met Aisha during early rehearsals for our show. She was in our original West End Company playing my sister Alline and I loved her performance. It has been special to watch her journey with us and see the development of her extraordinary talent. I am so pleased that Aisha will now lead our company through its next chapter here in London.” Aisha Jawando said: “I have loved being part of this show from the very beginning, and I am thrilled to have the opportunity to play this exceptional role. Tina Turner is such an inspirational woman and I hope that I continue to make her proud.” Based on the life of legendary artist Tina Turner, TINA – THE TINA TURNER MUSICAL will continue its open-ended run in London at the Aldwych Theatre with new seats on sale this Autumn. Jawando takes on the leading role from Nkeki Obi-Melekwe, who will join the Broadway company later this year to play Tina at certain performances. Adrienne Warren, who originated the role here in the West End, will lead the Broadway cast. -
A PSILLAS Biog Audiocraft
Sound Designer: Mr Avgoustos Psillas Avgoustos established AudioCarft Scandinavia in 2020 after 12 years at Autograph Sound in London, where he worked as a sound designer. Autograph Sound is a leading British sound design and equipment hire company, responsible for numerous theatre productions in the UK and abroad, including: Hamilton, Les Misérables, Wicked!, Mamma Mia!, Book of Mormon, Marry Poppins, Matilda, Harry Potter and the cursed child and many others. Avgoustos’ designer credits for musical theatre and theatre: The Sound of Music Stockholm Stadsteater Circus Days and Night Malmö Opera & Circus Cirkör Matilda The Musical Royal Danish Theatre Funny Girl Malmö Opera Sweeney Todd Royal Danish Opera BIG The Musical Dominion Theatre, London Blues in the Night The Kiln Theatre Matilda The Musical Malmö Opera The Ferryman St James Theatre, on Broadway, NY Kiss Me Kate Opera North, London Coliseum Pippin Malmö Opera Elf The Musical The Lowry, Manchester BIG The Musical Theatre Royal Plymouth & Bord Gais, Dublin Oliver! The Curve, Leicester AGES The Old Vic, London Pygmalion Garrick Theatre, London Strangers on a Train Gielgud Theatre, London Spamalot The Harold Pinter Theatre, London Spamalot (Remount) London Playhouse EPIDEMIC The Musical The Old Vic, London Henry V Open Air Theatre Regent’s Park Hobson’s Choice Open Air Theatre Regent’s Park Winter’s Tale Open Air Theatre Regent’s Park AudioCraft Scandinavia AB | Svanvägen 59, 611 62, Nyköping, Sweden e: [email protected] | t: +44 79 50292095 | Organisation no: 559281-2035 | VAT -
Artistic Director Rupert Goold Today Announces the Almeida Theatre’S New Season
Press release: Thursday 1 February Artistic Director Rupert Goold today announces the Almeida Theatre’s new season: • The world premiere of The Writer by Ella Hickson, directed by Blanche McIntyre. • A rare revival of Sophie Treadwell’s 1928 play Machinal, directed by Natalie Abrahami. • The UK premiere of Dance Nation, Clare Barron’s award-winning play, directed by Bijan Sheibani. • The first London run of £¥€$ (LIES) from acclaimed Belgian company Ontroerend Goed. Also announced today: • The return of the Almeida For Free festival taking place from 3 to 5 April during the run of Tennessee Williams’ Summer and Smoke. • The new cohort of eleven Resident Directors. Rupert Goold said today, “It is with enormous excitement that we announce our new season, featuring two premieres from immensely talented and ground-breaking writers, a rare UK revival of a seminal, pioneering American play, and an exhilarating interactive show from one of the most revolutionary theatre companies in Europe. “We start by welcoming back Ella Hickson, following her epic Oil in 2016, with new play The Writer, directed by Blanche McIntyre. Like Ella’s previous work, this is a hugely ambitious, deeply political play that consistently challenges what theatre can and should be. “Following The Writer, we are thrilled to present a timely revival of Sophie Treadwell’s masterpiece, Machinal, directed by Natalie Abrahami. Ninety years after it emerged from the American expressionist theatre scene and twenty-five years since its last London production, it remains strikingly resonant in its depiction of oppression, gender and power. “I first saw Belgian company Ontroerend Goed’s show £¥€$ (LIES) at the Edinburgh Fringe last year. -
Women in Theatre 2006 Survey
WOMEN IN THEATRE 2006 SURVEY Sphinx Theatre Company 2006 copyright. No part of this survey may be reproduced without permission WOMEN IN THEATRE 2006 SURVEY Sphinx Theatre Company copyright 2006. No part of this survey may be reproduced without permission The comparative employment of men and women as actors, directors and writers in the UK theatre industry, and how new writing features in venues’ programming Period 1: 16 – 29 January 2006 (inclusive) Section A: Actors, Writers, Directors and New Writing. For the two weeks covered in Period 1, there were 140 productions staged at 112 venues. Writers Of the 140 productions there were: 98 written by men 70% 13 written by women 9% 22 mixed collaboration 16% (7 unknown) 5% New Writing 48 of the 140 plays were new writing (34%). Of the 48 new plays: 30 written by men 62% 8 written by women 17% 10 mixed collaboration 21% The greatest volume of new writing was shown at Fringe venues, with 31% of its programme for the specified time period featuring new writing. New Adaptations/ New Translations 9 of the 140 plays were new adaptations/ new translations (6%). Of the 9 new adaptations/ new translations: 5 written by men 0 written by women 4 mixed collaboration 2 WOMEN IN THEATRE 2006 SURVEY Sphinx Theatre Company copyright 2006. No part of this survey may be reproduced without permission Directors 97 male directors 69% 32 female directors 23% 6 mixed collaborations 4% (5 unknown) 4% Fringe theatres employed the most female directors (9 or 32% of Fringe directors were female), while subsidised west end venues employed the highest proportion of female directors (8 or 36% were female). -
PROGRAM the TEMPEST Actors from the London Stage
PROGRAM THE TEMPEST Actors From The London Stage Thursday, February 27, 2020; 7 pm Friday, February 28, 2020; 7 pm Saturday, February 29, 2020; 7 pm Media Sponsor The Actors From The London Stage residency at the University of Notre Dame is generously supported by the McMeel Family Endowment for Excellence for Actors From The London Stage, the Paul Eulau Endowment for Excellence for Actors From The London Stage, the Deborah J. Loughrey Endowment for Excellence in Shakespeare Studies, the D & J Smith Endowment for Shakespeare and Performance, and the College of Arts and Letters. THE AFTLS APPROACH For most of his working life, William Shakespeare was a sharer in the King’s Men, London’s leading theatre company. He knew the actors he was writing for and collaborated with them on seeing the plays into performance. All theatre is a collaboration, of course, and while actors can no longer collaborate directly with Shakespeare, the Actors From The London Stage (AFTLS) company always aims to work with him, respectfully and creatively, throughout the rehearsal process. Our company’s aim is to make his words exert their magic and their power in performance, but we do this in a vital, and perhaps unconventional, way. We have no massive sets to tower over the performers and no directorial concept to tower over the text of Shakespeare’s play. In fact, AFTLS does not have a director at all; instead, the play has been rehearsed by the actors, working together to create theatre, cooperating with each other in their imaginative engagement with the play’s words. -
Theatre Archive Project
THEATRE ARCHIVE PROJECT http://sounds.bl.uk Auston Cole – interview transcript Interviewer: Dominic Shellard 6 November 2007 Theatre-goer. Frank Adie; Tommy Cooper; Cecily Courtneidge; Noel Coward; G.H. Elliot; Roy Hudd; Jack and Claude Hulbert; London Coliseum; Murray and Mooney; music hall; new writing; Ivor Novello; Beryl Reid; Sheffield theatres; theatre seating; variety; Waiting for Godot; West End. DS: Well, welcome to the British Library Austin, and thank you very much indeed for agreeing to be interviewed for the AHRC British Library Theatre Archive Project. AC: Thank you. DS: Could I just ask you first of all whether you’re happy for the interview to deposited in the British Library Sound Archive. AC: I’m totally happy with that. DS: Thank you very much indeed. And perhaps we can start by discussing how you first became interested in the theatre. AC: That’s quite simple Dominic, and I’m glad you asked me that as a kick-off, because before the war my parents took me to London, to the theatre. And also we had two theatres in Cambridge. I was born in a village not far from Cambridge, and that was our weekend visiting town – now it’s a city. And I realised that anywhere I went, if I could get in theatre – that’s what as I thought of as I worked so hard, no matter all stages of my life – I found that when I’d finished that, the thought was ‘where can I get into the theatre?’. DS: Wonderful. AC: Now, as a consequence of that, little wonder then when the war came and I was recruited into a particular service of the Royal Navy. -
Black and Asian Theatre in Britain a History
Black and Asian Theatre in Britain A History Edited by Colin Chambers First published 2011 ISBN 13: 978-0-415-36513-0 (hbk) ISBN 13: 978-0-415-37598-6 (pbk) Chapter 8 ‘All a we is English’ Colin Chambers CC BY-NC-ND 4.0 8 ‘All A WE IS English’1 Britain under Conservative rule in the 1980s and for much of the 1990s saw black and Asian theatre wax and then wane, its growth the result of earlier forces’ coming to a head and its falling away a consequence of cuts allied to a state-driven cultural project that celebrated the individual over the collective and gave renewed impetus to aggressive, narrow nationalism. How to survive while simultaneously asserting the heterodox, hybrid nature of non-white theatre and its contribution to British theatre was the urgent challenge. Within two years of the Thatcher government’s election to power in 1979, Britain saw perhaps the most serious rioting of its postwar era, which led to major developments in public diversity policy, though less significant change at the level of delivery. The black community could no longer be taken for granted and was demanding its rights as British citizens. The theatre group that epitomized this new urgency and resilience and the need to adapt to survive was the Black Theatre Co-operative (BTC).2 The group was founded by Mustapha Matura and white director Charlie Hanson in 1978 after Hanson had failed to interest any theatres in Welcome Home Jacko, despite Matura’s standing as the leading black playwright of his generation. -
Love and Information
Thursday 29 April, 7.30pm Friday 30 April, 2pm & 7.30pm Saturday 1 May, 7.30pm Love and Information By Caryl Churchill Directed by Pooja Ghai Guildhall School of Music & Drama Founded in 1880 by the City of London Corporation Chairman of the Board of Governors Vivienne Littlechild Principal Lynne Williams Vice-Principal & Director of Drama Orla O’Loughlin Vice-Principal & Director of Production Arts Andy Lavender Please visit our website at gsmd.ac.uk Photographs of the final year acting company are by: Dave Buttle (Charlie Beck, Lily Hardy, Isla Lee, Noah Marullo, Umi Myers, Felix Newman, Jidé Okunola, Guildhall School is part of Culture Mile: Sonny Pilgrem, Alyth Ross, Dan Wolff), Robert Harper culturemile.london (Kitty Hawthorne), Harry Livingstone (Nia Towle), Wolf Marloh (Zachary Nachbar-Seckel), Clare Park (Grace Cooper Milton), Phil Sharp (Genevieve Lewis, Sam Thorpe-Spinks), Michael Shelford (Levi Brown, Guildhall School is provided by the City of London Sheyi Cole, Aoife Gaston, Brandon Grace, Conor McLeod, Corporation as part of its Hassan Najib, Millie Smith, Tara Tijani, Dolly Webb), contribution to the cultural life David Stone (Justice Ritchie), Faye Thomas of London and the nation (Caitlin Ffion Griffiths), YellowBelly (Hope Kenna) Love and Information By Caryl Churchill Pooja Ghai director Rosa Maggiora designer Diane Alison-Mitchell movement director Andy Taylor composer Sam Levy lighting designer Maisie Roberts sound designer Thursday 29, Friday 30 April and Saturday 1 May 2021 Live performances broadcast from Silk Street Theatre Recording of this performance by any means whatsoever is strictly prohibited. Please note this production contains strong language and adult themes. -
Hackney Empire
Hackney Empire Charity No: 1062085/0 Company No: 2060996 www.hackneyempire.co.uk Description A Grade II* listed building, opened as a music hall in 1901. The auditorium has a seating capacity of 1,275. The theatre was a bingo hall for over 2 decades and reopened as performance venue in the late 1980s. In 2001 the building had a £17m refurbishment. The venue is famous for comedy but also hosts music, theatre, opera and films. The theatre has a community and education programme and a small performance studio. The theatre bars are run by Parola LDN and the café bar by pop-up, Platterform. In the year ending March 2014 the venue attracted £61k in location filming fees. In 2011 the theatre had a 9 month dark period and most of the staff were made redundant. A rescue plan was put together for the venue including donations from celebrities such as Griff Rhys Jones and Lord Alan Sugar. Budget Summary Comments Income Only £3k profit made from bars and catering. Donations 19k Box office was £941k and theatre hire £377k. Trading 1,760k Arts Council 476k The venue has substantial support from Arts LB Hackney 193k Council England and LB Hackney ACE Capital 339k Other Grants 124k The venue has a large main auditorium with 1,275 seats making it commercially attractive Expenditure to comedy promoters. Publicity 235k Fundraising 57k Staff 877k Depreciation 638k Productions 728k Premises 858k Other 78k Greenwich Theatre Charity Number: 246186 Company Number: 860847 www.greenwichtheatre.org.uk Description It was originally built as a music hall in 1855 as part of the Rose and Crown Pub. -
Barber Shop Chronicles
Barber Shop Chronicles A Fuel, National Theatre, and West Yorkshire Playhouse co-production WHEN: VENUE: THURSDAY, NOV 8, 7∶30 PM ROBLE STUDIO THEATER FRIDAY, NOV 9, 7∶30 PM SATURDAY, NOV 10, 2∶30 & 7∶30 PM Photo by Dean Chalkley Program Barber Shop Chronicles A Fuel, National Theatre, and West Yorkshire Playhouse co-production Writer Inua Ellams Design Associate Director Bijan Sheibani Catherine Morgan Designer Rae Smith Re-lighter and Production Electrician Lighting Designer Jack Knowles Rachel Bowen Movement Director Aline David Lighting Associate Sound Designer Gareth Fry Laura Howells Music Director Michael Henry Sound Associate Fight Director Kev McCurdy Laura Hammond Associate Director Stella Odunlami Wardrobe Supervisor Associate Director Leian John-Baptiste Louise Marchand-Paris Assistant Choreographer Kwami Odoom Barber Consultant Peter Atakpo Company Voice Work Charmian Hoare Pre-Production Manager Dialect Coach Hazel Holder Richard Eustace Tour Casting Director Lotte Hines Production Manager Sarah Cowan Wallace / Timothy / Mohammed / Tinashe Tuwaine Barrett Company Stage Manager Tanaka / Fifi Mohammed Mansaray Julia Reid Musa / Andile / Mensah Maynard Eziashi Deputy Stage Manager Ethan Alhaji Fofana Fiona Bardsley Samuel Elliot Edusah Assistant Stage Manager Winston / Shoni Solomon Israel Sylvia Darkwa-Ohemeng Tokunbo / Paul / Simphiwe Patrice Naiambana Costume Supervisor Emmanuel Anthony Ofoegbu Lydia Crimp Kwame / Fabrice / Brian Kenneth Omole Costume and Buying Supervisor Olawale / Wole / Kwabena / Simon Ekow Quartey Jessica Dixon Elnathan / Benjamin / Dwain Jo Servi Abram / Ohene / Sizwe David Webber Co-commissioned by Fuel and the National Theatre. Development funded by Arts Council England with the support of Fuel, National Theatre, West Yorkshire Playhouse, The Binks Trust, British Council ZA, Òran Mór and A Play, a Pie and a Pint. -
Production Credits Oct 19
Name date venue company role type A Real Princess December 2003 The Blue Elephant Stonecrabs Composer Children's Sotoba Komachi and the Damask Drum Mar - Dec 04 Greenwich Picture Playhouse Stonecrabs Composer International theatre The Brockley Jack. New End A Servant of Two Masters November 2004 Theatre Stonecrabs Composer Theatre Miss Julie February 2005 Greenwich Picture Playhouse Stonecrabs Composer Theatre Runners - the return August 2005 Edinburgh Festival - Underbelly Merco Productions Composer Theatre Josephine the singer April 2005 The Diorama Stonecrabs Composer Caberet/Performance Waltz no. 6 June 2005 Greenwich Picture Playhouse Stonecrabs Composer International Theatre Our Lady of the Drowned June 2006 Southwark Playhouse Stonecrabs Composer International Theatre Composer/Sound Basic April 2007 Hackney Empire studio Stonecrabs designer New Writing Composer/Sound Charity wars September 2007 The Pleasance Stonecrabs designer International Theatre Composer/Sound Dogs Sep - Oct 07 Oval House / UK tour Yellow Earth designer Theatre The Story of the Eye June 2008 Central St Martins Degree show Sound design Degree show Name date venue company role type Stonecrabs Young 00:13:00 March 2009 The Albany Directors Showcase Composer New Writing Vivid Dreams Composer/Sound The Doorbells of Florence May 2009 The Rosemary Branch theatre productions designer New Writing Hanjo and Hellscreen double Composer/Sound bill June 2009 Oval House Stonecrabs designer International Theatre Churchill Bromley, Hampstead Ambassador Composer/Sound Heartbreak