Aug 5th

suddenlossofdignity.com

By Saskia Green

Comedy in theatre is usually a path to make the sad, dirty and cruel aspects of life more approachable. In suddenlossofdgnity.com, The Bush Theatre’s second commission for Latitude Festival, it is our very own, sad, and dirty aspects of life that are revealed.

Using examples from people writing in about their most humiliating, undignified moments, five bright young playwrights have compiled and composed a fun and light-hearted sketch show that whizzes through an hour and ten, leaving plenty of time in the bar afterwards with which to drunkenly re-live your own most tragic humiliations.

news_dignity_597630a.jpg

(left to right: Kathryn Drysdale, Felix Scott, Hugh Skinner, Katie Lyons ) 

For those of you that caught last year’s hit, 50 ways to Leave Your Lover, the format is the same. Two guys, two girls, and lots of laughs. This is real take-away humour, based on observations and clips; short, breezy and humorous. So when a real serious note hits us three-quarters of the way in, it feels a bit like a harpoon attack. We aren’t prepared to make the investment in the drunken character making a horrifying best man speech before us, so we find ourselves staring at our feet in discomfort.

The four young actors are put to their paces, working incredibly hard at their graft. Their energy constantly remains high and everything is attacked full vigour (possibly a little too much for the small Bush surrounds). Highlights include Hugh Skinner’s portrayal of a wannabe musician with a huge Westlife fetish and Katie Lyons’ outrageous clubber. Particularly memorable is Lyons’guitar serenade (I’ve never seen my brother blush a deeper shade of red).

The skilled singing and dancing proved these actors, can go further than simply pulling a one-line gag. A fun display of talent.

The Bush Theatre

1st July – 15th August

Book Online www.bushtheatre.co.uk

Box Office 020 8743 5050

Aug 1st

UK Theatre Weekly Newsletter

By Douglas McFarlane

IN THIS UPDATE:-
THEATRE NEWS AND REVIEWS
FILM NEWS AND REVIEWS
INDIE FILM NIGHT
EDINBURGH FRINGE 

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THEATRE NEWS AND REVIEWS

Keep up to date with what’s on at the Edinburgh Fringe with a selection of what our reviewers will be checking out this month. To receive this newsletter regularly in your inbox, send a blank email to subscribe@uktheatre.net

We’re also expanding our film and theatre reviewer base all the time, so if you’re interested in becoming part of the voluntary team around the UK, send an email to editor@uktheatre.net

http://www.uktheatre.tv/magazine   

FILM NEWS AND REVIEWS

Check out first-look images of stars Jake Gyllenhaal, Gemma Arterton and Sir Ben Kingsley in what’s set to be one of 2010’s biggest blockbusters

http://www.ukfilm.tv/magazine  

INDIE FILM NIGHT

I'm delighted that the first film is British Independent Film Award winner, Zebra Crossings by Writer/Director Sam Holland.

Tickets are £5 to UK Film Network readers

Click to use any card on paypal (paypal account not needed):-

https://www.paypal.com/cgi-bin/webscr?cmd=_s-xclick&hosted_button_id=7162597

Full event details at @

http://www.ukfilm.tv/events/profile/9
 
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Luv - "I just feel it in my body"

Published by: Douglas McFarlane on Saturday 1st August 2009 11:08am

Fingerprints and Teeth Productions present

the UK premiere of the hit New Zealand play

LUV

'I just feel it in my body . . .' 

LUV, a pitch black comedy, drags us through the suburban subcultures where texting, clubbing, internet dating and stalking help us stumble towards what we want most – Love.

http://www.uktheatre.tv/magazine/read/luv----andquot;i-just-feel-it-in-my-bodyandquot;_267.html

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RICHARD O’BRIEN WRITES AND STARS IN THE SCOTTISH PREMIERE OF PULP FICTION [MUSICAL] THRILLER

Published by: Douglas McFarlane on Saturday 1st August 2009 11:08am

THE STRIPPER

Book by Carter Brown

Lyrics by Richard O’Brien

Music by Richard Hartley

California 1961, and there’s trouble in Pine City

http://www.uktheatre.tv/magazine/read/richard-o%EF%BF%BDbrien-writes-and-stars-in-the-scottish-premiere-of-pulp-fiction-[musical]-thriller_266.html 

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 “Mary Stuart” – a riveting political thriller about the Scottish Queen’s challenge to Queen Elizabeth I

By Lucy Komisar

Janet McTeer and company, photo Neil Libbert

The fusion of women in 16th century clothes and men in suits in this stunning political thriller underlines the eternal reality of struggles for power. Director Phyllida Lloyd has used the device to enrich her staging of Friedrich Schiller’s play, which premièred in Weimar, Germany, in 1800. It has been adapted by Peter Oswald for a memorable production.

http://www.uktheatre.tv/magazine/read/%EF%BF%BDmary-stuart%EF%BF%BD-%EF%BF%BD-a-riveting-political-thriller-about-the-scottish-queen%EF%BF%BDs-challenge-to-queen-elizabeth-i_265.html 

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Singing In The Rain

Published by: Douglas McFarlane on Saturday 1st August 2009 11:08am

UK Productions proudly presents:

SINGIN’ IN THE RAIN

From the producers of touring hits such as 42nd Street, Disney’s Beauty and the Beast, Seven Brides for Seven Brothers, South Pacific and many more, comes a brand new production of Singin’ in the Rain, which arrives at theatres nationwide as it commences a UK tour, starring the Olivier Award winning West End and Broadway star, Tim Flavin.

http://www.uktheatre.tv/magazine/read/singing-in-the-rain_264.html

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The Mountaintop - Ticket Offer

Published by: Douglas McFarlane on Saturday 1st August 2009 10:08am 

TOP PRICE TICKETS REDUCED TO £25.

http://www.uktheatre.tv/magazine/read/the-mountaintop---ticket-offer_263.html
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 24:7 Theatre Festival, Manchester - Friday

Published by: Caroline May on Sunday 26th July 2009 12:07am

24:7 Theatre Festival, Manchester

Friday 24 July 2009

As We Forgive Them - Pure/Blue

Writer/performer Richard Vergette returns to 24:7 after his acclaimed one-man show An Englishman’s Home in 2007.  This year he is joined by powerful young actor Joe Sims in an intense three-act drama which is perfectly suited to the claustrophobic space in Blue.

http://www.uktheatre.tv/magazine/read/247-theatre-festival-manchester---friday_262.html

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The Comedy Theatre Company presents Victoria Wood’s –dinnerladies

Published by: TREMAYNE (Potter) on Saturday 25th July 2009 11:07am

The Comedy Theatre Company presents Victoria Wood’s –dinnerladies, Richmond Theatre on 13th July 2009.

Who can resist a good love story?  There is a fine line between comedy and tragedy. What may appear, at first sight, a tragedy, may be taken as comedy by other characters and by us , the audience.  Bren and Tony’s story in dinnerladies is made up of all of these elements.

http://www.uktheatre.tv/magazine/read/the-comedy-theatre-company-presents-victoria-wood%EF%BF%BDs-%EF%BF%BDdinnerladies_261.html

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TICKETS FOR ALL THE FOLLOWING EVENTS CAN BE FOUND @

http://www.edfringe.com

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FRINGE FIRST: MERMAN ON BROADWAY

Dominic Mattos delivers stunning tribute to Ethel Merman

A fine tribute to the show-business legend, Ethel Merman, is due to feature at the Edinburgh Festival Fringe 2009 in the show Merman on Broadway… performed by none other than a man.

Oxford Theology graduate Dominic Mattos, a publisher of religious books by day, dons his kaftan and stilettos, borrows his girlfriend's eyeliner, and continues the recently resurrected Merman's 100th Birthday Tour fresh from sell-out shows in London, where additional dates had to be scheduled due to demand.

 ‘The wildly talented Dominic Mattos… pays mind-blowing tribute’ 

- TIME OUT LONDON (CRITICS’ CHOICE)

 Merman on Broadway is performing daily at 21.50 at C-Venues, Chambers Street, Edinburgh, from Sunday 23 August to Monday 31 August.

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The Wild Goose Chase

By John Fletcher

Directed by David Brown

Lighting Design by Nigel Lewis

Last performing at the Edinburgh Festival Fringe six-years ago the acclaimed ensemble, Ealing Shakespeare Players return to stage a rarely performed Jacobean play that both anticipated and influenced the Restoration Comedy of the 17th century.

Virtually unperformed for over 300-years THE WILD GOOSE CHASE by John Fletcher is to make its debut Edinburgh Festival Fringe appearance this August with a limited run at The Quaker Meeting House between 17 and 29 August 09 (excludes 23 August).

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The Regina Monologues

Written and Performed by Robert Inston

Robert Inston’s Reduced Tudor Company is to make its debut at the Edinburgh Festival Fringe with a brand-new, one-man comedy show, THE REGINA MONOLOGUES which is set to perform for a limited run between 16 and 31 August at Spotlites @ The Merchants’ Hall.

This tale of treachery, charts the Tudor dynasty’s remarkable rise through sole survivor Elizabeth Tudor.  Dare we trust Elizabeth’s bawdy, irreverent spin on the politics of power and did this ‘virgin’ fare better than modern-day leaders and celebrities in protecting herself from disfavour, condemnation and scandal?

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One Man Show-off

By Dave Florez

Following the acclaimed, sell-out Edinburgh Festival Fringe 08 comedy sketch show, ‘The Art of Dating & Dumping’ at the Assembly Rooms, Dave Florez returns once more with his latest comedy, ONE MAN SHOW-OFF which has been performing to rave reviews and full-houses in London and is now due to make its Edinburgh premiere, performing daily from 16:15 at the Gilded Balloon between 5 and 31 August 08.

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A Longhardt Look at Love with Chad Longhardt

Written & Performed by Brianne Berkson

Directed by Daniel Kutner

Marking its UK Premiere at this year’s Edinburgh Festival Fringe is a show unlike any other, a show that challenges the true meaning of love in the style of a spoof ‘Big Brother’-cum-‘I’m a Celebrity Get Me Out of Here’-cum-‘Blind Date’ reality TV competition.

Presented by Steadfast Productions and described by the New York Post as a ‘promising offering’ to the Ed Fest Fringe from its ‘East to Edinburgh’ preview in July, A LONGHARDT LOOK AT LOVE WITH CHAD LONGHARDT is an original comedy creation by emerging talent Brianne Berkson who will be making her debut UK appearance in the show which will perform for a limited run between 21 and 31 August at The Bongo Club.

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A Fête Worse Than Death

By Helen Godfrey

Emerging performer and playwright Helen Godfrey’s debut comedy play A FÊTE WORSE THAN DEATH is to make its World Premiere at this year’s Edinburgh Festival Fringe where it will perform between 8 and 30 August excluding 17 August (previews 6 & 7 August) at Laughing Horse @ The Hive.

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Aug 1st

Luv - "I just feel it in my body"

By Douglas McFarlane

Fingerprints and Teeth Productions present

the UK premiere of the hit New Zealand play

 LUV POSTER.jpg

LUV

'I just feel it in my body . . .'

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XWa6nGrAXEc

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2lk7YrtF4uU&feature=channel

 

LUV, a pitch black comedy, drags us through the suburban subcultures where texting, clubbing, internet dating and stalking help us stumble towards what we want most – Love. 

 

Ricky, part time cleaner, full time lothario, believes the key to someone’s heart is breaking and entering. Jacques, Gay White Male, is clean, cut and out for a good time – preferably capturing it all on camera. Michelle, a cosmetic surgery addict, quests for perfection only to succumb to irreparable damage. And Gemma, a desperate wannabe WAG, wants a football star to call her own, and will do the whole team to get to him.

 

LUV will be performed by Daniel Blacker (Skins, Hollyoaks), Sean Hart (Godfather Death, Casualty), Sara Pascoe (Free Agents, Timeout’s rising star of Comedy and 2008’s runner up in the ‘So you’re think you’re funny’ and ‘Funny Women’ competitions), and New Zealand star Aidee Walker (Shortland Street, Outrageous Fortune, The Locals).

 

LUV was written and directed by Thomas Sainsbury. In 2008 Thomas directed performances of his plays Loser, Beast, Gas, 

The Mall andThe Feminine. This year Thomas has directed a performance of his play . . . and then you die at the Tristan Bates and A Simple Procedure at Pleasance Theatre. His plays Main Street and Loser are currently being filmed for the screen.

  

Performances: 7:30pm July 28th to August 15th 

(no performances Sunday)

 

Venue: The Tristan Bates Theatre 

             1a Tower Street. Convent Garden, London, WC2H 9NP

Aug 1st

RICHARD O’BRIEN WRITES AND STARS IN THE SCOTTISH PREMIERE OF PULP FICTION [MUSICAL] THRILLER

By Douglas McFarlane

RICHARD O’BRIEN WRITES AND STARS IN THE SCOTTISH PREMIERE OF PULP FICTION [MUSICAL] THRILLER

THE STRIPPER
Book by Carter Brown
Lyrics by Richard O’Brien
Music by Richard Hartley
Microsoft Photo Editor 3.0 Picture
California 1961, and there’s trouble in Pine City

The forthcoming new production of the musical The Stripper tells the story of police Lieutenant Al Wheeler as he struggles to solve the mystery of the death of wannabe actress Patty Keller.  First call was delectable Deadpan Dolores, a strawberry blonde who worked at the Club Extravaganza. She didn’t usually keep things under wraps, so what was she hiding? With a nose for crime and an eye for the ladies, Wheeler will do whatever it takes to uncover the truth.

Set in the seedy world of strip joints and dodgy dating agencies – The Stripper is based on a pulp fiction novel by Carter Brown whose hugely successful career saw him write more than 150 crime stories which sold in excess of seventy million copies.

Featuring strippers, cops and sexy secretaries, the cast is peopled by classic archetypes from the world of the dime novel.  This burlesque and bullets musical theatre adaptation is by Richards O’Brien and Hartley who are best known for their collaboration on the ever popular Rocky Horror Show

So, Richard O’Brien is coming to Glasgow and he couldn’t be happier! He said:

It was a definite decision for me to take The Stripper to Glasgow, it is an embracing, generous less divided city than others, demographically, both socially and economically it is quite broad but everyone is living together.  I truly believe we will get a clear reading from Glasgow that we may not get elsewhere.  It was my first choice and I think Glasgow will tell us clearly if we've got it right or not.

And it’s not his first experience performing in the city. I was an acting ASM in Robert and Elizabeth, the musical of The Barratts of Wimpole Street, in 1967, I was an understudy and can’t actually recall if I went on stage but remember it was at The Alhambra Theatre which has been torn down.  So have I performed?  Possibly! I may have sung as a banana or tomato it was one of the last old fashioned musicals with a 36 piece orchestra- fantastic!

The Stripper is only on a three venue tour within the UK with the King’s Theatre being the only venue in Scotland to be staging his new work.

Press night Tuesday 29th September @ 7.30pm

LISTINGS

The Stripper
Tue 29 Sep – Sat 3 Oct
Tue – Sat eves 7.30pm
Wed & Sat mat 2.30pm

Tickets: £12 - £25.50
Box Office 08448 717 648 (Bkg fee)
www.ambassadortickets.com/glasgow (bkg fee)

Aug 1st

“Mary Stuart” – a riveting political thriller about the Scottish Queen’s challenge to Queen Elizabeth I

By Douglas McFarlane

“Mary Stuart” – a riveting political thriller about the Scottish Queen’s challenge to Queen Elizabeth I

By Lucy Komisar

Janet McTeer and company, photo Neil Libbert

Janet McTeer and company, photo Neil Libbert

The fusion of women in 16th century clothes and men in suits in this stunning political thriller underlines the eternal reality of struggles for power. Director Phyllida Lloyd has used the device to enrich her staging of Friedrich Schiller’s play, which premièred in Weimar, Germany, in 1800. It has been adapted by Peter Oswald for a memorable production.

The fact that the political contest is between two women adds the fascinating element of feminist assertions of self against men.

Men, as a sex, in fact, were central to the downfall of Mary Stuart (Janet McTeer), who as Queen of Scotland colluded in the murder of her second husband. Her nurse Hanna Kennedy (Maria Tucci) recalls, “You made him King and he wanted to rule you. He had Rizzio, your favorite, stabbed to death.”

Hanna asserts that, “a kind of male recklessness overcame you.” Mary married the seducer who “poisoned her soul.”  Then she was forced to abdicate that marriage and flee to hoped-for safety in England. The story is nothing a modern soap could ever match. And Lloyd builds the tension to a breaking point.

Alas for Mary, her cousin Elizabeth (Harriet Walter) feared she was leading a

Harriet Walker as Queen Elizabeth, photo Neil Libbert

Harriet Walker as Queen Elizabeth, photo Neil Libbert

Catholic plan to incite supporters to civil war, setting up cells of assassins against the crown to install a Catholic legacy. She imprisoned Mary – for 19 years!

We are near the end of that era. Most of the action takes place inside the dreary brick-walled tomb-like dungeon of the Castle of Fotheringhay (set and costumes by Anthony Ward) where Mary is incarcerated with little company but her nurse. Her black gown with gold circles is of the era, but the production is as modern in speech and mood as the briefcases the lords and courtiers carry.

The play meanders between breathless plots being hatched by Stuart’s secret Catholic supporters in Elizabeth’s court. She won’t renounce her claim to the British throne and hopes for support from the French King. The young Sir Mortimer (Chandler Williams), a secret Catholic, turns out to be on her side and brings message from the Cardinal of Lorraine in France.

Janet McTeer as Mary Stuart, photo Neil Libbert

Janet McTeer as Mary Stuart, photo Neil Libbert

The poetry and elegance of the language is vivid. Mary is mocking and without pity: “I see England’s aristocracy, the majestic senate of the realm, scurrying around like eunuchs in a harem at the whim of the Sultan, Henry the Eighth, my uncle. I see the wealthy upper house, not so different from the bribe-hungry commons, making and cancelling laws and marriages, at the command of the big man.”

There is a contest of power and personality between the two women; Elizabeth may hold the chips, but Mary is by no means supine. Lord Burleigh (Nicholas Woodeson) of Elizabeth’s court worries at Mary’s steadfastness, “She knows all about the indecision of the Queen of England. She smells our panic and that rouses her courage!”

Repeatedly, the queens’ roles as women is underlined. Elizabeth pulls a ring from her finger: “This sign has a duality of meanings: duty and slavery. It is a ring that makes a marriage – and it is from rings that chains are made.”

Queen (Harriet Walter) and men of the court, photo Neil Libbert

Queen (Harriet Walter) and men of the court, photo Neil Libbert

Shrewsbury tells Elizabeth: “They say she had her husband murdered. It is a fact that she married his murderer. Appalling crime! But those were bad times for her, in the hurricane of civil war, warlords seizing her power, she, bewildered, in the chaos, sides with the worst of the, possessed by who knows what? Women are not strong.”

Elizabeth: Some of us are.

Shrewsbury: You are an exception!

At what point will the contest descend into thuggery? The Queen will not give an order to murder Mary. But will her acolytes “understand” what she wants and do it? Burleigh tells Amias Paulet (Michael Countryman), a knight who is guarding the captive: “You don’t have to do it yourself, just leave the door unlocked.” He refuses to play that game. “I will let no killer in here!” Burleigh asks Elizabeth for Mary’s head. “You must kill or be killed. If she lives you die, if she dies you live!”

So who is ethical, the highest nobles or the lower knight?

Harriet Walker and Janet McTeer, photo Alastair Muir

Harriet Walker and Janet McTeer, photo Alastair Muir

Mary Stuart and Queen Elizabeth never actually met. However, the essential device of a dramatic confrontation is inserted into the play. The second act opens with a breathtaking scene of Mary and her nurse getting drenched in the pouring rain. They have been allowed into the courtyard to facilitate a “chance” meeting with the Queen. Issues of physical comfort no longer apply. In fact, being out of the dungeon in the fresh air gives Mary joy. Elizabeth approaches in a hunting party. This is the only element that seems bizarre: why would the Queen continue the hunt in the pouring rain? Men rush in with black umbrellas, and then the rain stops.

Mary pleads to Elizabeth, who is angry, cold, icy. Will Mary be appropriately contrite to save her life? Or will her royal sense of self prevent her from any submission? McTeer is enthralling. Walter and the rest of the cast are also uniformly powerful. This is a production that should not be missed.

Mary Stuart was put to death in 1587; she was 44.

“Mary Stuart”
Written by Friedrich Schiller, Adapted by Peter Oswald.
 Directed by Phyllida Lloyd.
Broadhurst Theatre, 235 West 44th Street, New York City.

212-239-6200.
Opened April 19, 2009, Closes August 16, 2009.Reviewed by Lucy Komisar April 22, 009.
http://www.marystuartonbroadway.com/

Aug 1st

Singing In The Rain

By Douglas McFarlane

UK Productions proudly presents:

SINGIN’ IN THE RAIN

From the producers of touring hits such as 42nd Street, Disney’s Beauty and the Beast, Seven Brides for Seven Brothers, South Pacific and many more, comes a brand new production of Singin’ in the Rain, which arrives at theatres nationwide as it commences a UK tour, starring the Olivier Award winning West End and Broadway star, Tim Flavin.

One of the best-loved musicals of all time, Singin’ in the Rain will open at the Nottingham Theatre Royal on Friday 27 February 2009, following which it will visit twenty-eight cities and towns throughout the UK until Saturday 10 October 2009. Tim Flavin plays Don Lockwood, the famous part immortalised by Gene Kelly in the unforgettable film version.

Singin’ in the Rain exudes all the style and spectacle of the MGM golden age and features some of the best loved comedy routines, dance numbers, and songs ever written, including ‘Good Morning’, ‘Make ‘em Laugh’, ‘Moses Supposes’, ‘You Were Meant For Me’ and the most famous song and dance number of all time, ‘Singin’ in the Rain’. It’s a show guaranteed to lift your spirits and send you out singing and dancing, whatever the weather.

Tim Flavin recently starred as the Scarecrow in The Wizard of Oz at the Theatre Royal Brighton, which he also directed. He won an Olivier Award for his role in the West End production of On Your Toes and received best actor nominations for his parts in My One and Only and Crazy For You. His other musical credits include Kiss Me Kate, Chitty Chitty Bang Bang, White Christmas, Chicago and 42nd Street, in a long and distinguished career.

Following its opening dates at the Nottingham Theatre Royal, this brand new UK tour of Singin’ in the Rain visits Manchester, Oxford, Cardiff, Wimbledon, Blackpool, Stoke, Liverpool, Woking, Sunderland, Milton Keynes, Birmingham, Bradford, Bristol, Rhyl, Southend, Bromley, Edinburgh, Sheffield, Lowestoft, Eastbourne, Malvern, Plymouth, Glasgow, Darlington, Wolverhampton, Southampton, High Wycombe and Derry.

Produced by Peter Frosdick and Martin Dodd for UK Productions, Singin’ in the Rain is directed by Alison Pollard, choreographed by Graeme Henderson with Musical Supervision by Gareth Williams. Set design is by Charles Camm, with costumes by Elizabeth Dennis, lighting design by David Howe and sound design by Ross Portway and Jon Higson. Based on the MGM film, Singin’ in the Rain is adapted for the stage from the original screenplay by Betty Comden and Adolph Green, with songs by Nacio Herb Brown and Arthur Freed.

Listings:

Singin in the Rain
Tue 1 - Sat 8 Sept
Tue - Sat eves 7.30pm
Thu and Sat mats 2.30pm

Tickets: £12 - £30
Box Office: 0844 871 7647 (bkg fee)
www.ambassadortickets.com/glasgow (bkg fee)

Aug 1st

The Mountaintop - Ticket Offer

By Douglas McFarlane
 

Opening Offer: First 100 tickets £10, thereafter £22.50 (normally £39.50)*

The world premiere of Theatre503's The Mountaintop by Katori Hall

 

Katori Hall’s stunning two-hander The Mountaintop starring David Harewood opened to rapturous praise on Monday night at The Trafalgar Studios, where it will play a strictly limited season only until 5th September.

THE MOUNTAINTOP
By Katori Hall
Starring David Harewood and Lorraine Burroughs
Directed by James Dacre

An extraordinary encounter on the night before his assassination reveals the man behind the legend, in this thrilling portrait starring David Harewood (Blood Diamond, Robin Hood) as Martin Luther King.

Five Stars
‘Nothing short of a triumph’

Daily Telegraph

Four Stars
‘Wondrous, hilarious, and heartbreaking

The Independent

Four Stars
‘Faultless’

The Times

Four Stars
‘Magnificent’

The London Paper

‘As surreal a ninety minutes of edgy, hopeful magic as any Obamista could wish... A FASCINATING TREAT’
Times Online

TOP PRICE SEATS REDUCED TO £25.00
(normally £39.50)*

Book Tickets Securely online

BOOK NOW!

*Valid for all performances (excluding Saturday evenings) until 15 August.

Subject to availability. A transaction fee applies.

STRICTLY LIMITED SEASON UNTIL 5 SEPTEMBER
Monday - Saturday evenings 8.00pm; Thursday & Saturday matinees at 2.30pm

Trafalgar Studios, Whitehall, London SW1