Showing posts with label Royal Exchange. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Royal Exchange. Show all posts

Tuesday, 21 January 2020

Royal Exchange: ROCKETS AND BLUE LIGHTS

A Royal Exchange Theatre World Premiere

ROCKETS AND BLUE LIGHTS  

By Winsome Pinnock
Directed by Miranda Cromwell
12 March - 4 April 2020
Press Night: Tuesday 17 March, 7.30pm - The Theatre 
Winner of the 2018 Alfred Fagon Award ROCKETS AND BLUE LIGHTS is an astonishing new play from one of the UK’s most pioneering playwrights Winsome Pinnock. Seamlessly weaving the past and the present together ROCKETS AND BLUE LIGHTS explores Great Britain’s role in the Trans-Atlantic slave trade from a unique perspective. This World Premiere production is performed in the Royal Exchange, once one of the world’s largest cotton exchanges, and examines the impact of historical legacy and the representation of painful subjects. Juxtaposing the intimate and the epic, the personal and the political it invites us to ask what is chosen to be represented and what is denied. Innovative director Miranda Cromwell makes her Royal Exchange Theatre debut with this beautifully poetic play powered by love, resilience and hope. ROCKETS AND BLUE LIGHTS can be seen in the Theatre from 12 March - 4 April.  
*****************************************

Friday, 1 November 2019

Review: The Northern Light Falls on Us

 'NORTHERNESS is an elusive thing to define' so says the playwrite Simon Stephens in the programme to his play 'Light Falls' at the Manchester Royal Exchange.  He says this as the current
Artistic Director at the Royal Exchange is about to step down to go down the London and become Director of the prestigious drama school LAMDA (London Academy of Music & Dramatic Art).  

Ms. Sarah Frankcom caused a bit of a stir in

She was reacting to research conducted by The Guardian in collaboration with Elizabeth Freestone, Artistic Director of Pentabus Theatre, Ludlow.  It seems that in contrast to the situation on stage, figures from Ipsos Mori revealed that on average 68% of theatre audiences are women.  But that when it comes to producing the works of Shakespeare there is an inherent gender imbalance due to the original male only casts, with 155 female characters compared to 826 male characters across the Bard’s plays.

Her experiment using Maxine as Hamlet worked a treat but her more recent production of a female dominated version of Macbeth bewilderingly confusion as did other who came with me and I saw it twice.




'That is ridiculous man!  How arrogant of Sarah Frankcom to feel qualified to re-write the work of a genius. Perhaps she should re-pen Beethoven's 9th while she's at it.  It is such a rare treat and luxury to see a Shakespeare play, and I'm sick and tired of the likes of Frankcom trying to give herself a name at the expense of what is a truly genius piece of literature.  Perhaps she'd like to paint the Mona Lisa as a man too.  What a load of self indulgent pseudo-feminist crap. Just give us the art as it was intended.  It really is that simple.  If you don't like it, write your own bloody play!'

But I think the play's writer Simon Stephens is a man.   When he asked people in his research for this play if they considered themselves northern, he said they all did.  When asked how they defined 'northerness', they seemed to hestitate and then suggest it was their capacity to deal with the rain or cold and deal with it with humour:  'We don't like umbrellas, up here.  We just put our hoods up.'

Mr. Stephens, who now lives in London, He claims:  'I think something has happened with kindness in this country.  It seems that suspicion and mockery are the default position in this county.  Kindness has, in a way that has taken me completely by suprise, become a politically default position.' 

 The current play shifts around the North from the high streets of Doncaster and Blackpool, and the farms of Ulverston and the shut-down shops and pubs of Warrington and Durham to Cheshire Plains and the foothills of the Lake Districts and the Yorkshire Dales.  Warrington and Durham he writes:  'shops and bars heaving under the weight of half a decade of austerity.'


Bill Bryson commenting in 'The Road to Little Dribbling' wrote about a Council's lack of funds to afford it to maintain a shrub planter and made a curious comparison with Durham Cathedral:  'Now I'm no expert on the matter, but I am pretty sure that we are a lot richer today than we were in the eleventh century, and yet back then they could find the resources to build something as splendid and eternal as Durham Cathedral an today we can't afford to keep six shrubs in a planter.'

Today we are better at tearing things down than in maintaining things. As when during the time of the last Labour government he had a mad scheme to set up the Pathfinder Initiative to tear down 400,000 homes, mostly Victorian and Edwardian terraced houses, in the north of England - see Bryson.

Bill Bryson can see this decline acutely because he can view it in relief and observe the changes after coming in from the States after being abroad.  Stephen Simon can come back to the North from London and spot 'the seen but unnoticed' features of what's going on in the North. 

The play struggles with the hyper-aspects of everyday life: a middle aged woman has a stroke and dies reaching for a bottle of vodka in a supermarket; a married man attempts to accomplish a three-some; a insecure student tries to please hie older boyfriend; a single mum tussles with the father of her baby.  The roundhouse stage struggles to fit-in these competing elements, and it just about manages to encompass the performances.

******************

  
HYMN to the NORTH
by Jarvis Cocker

Our Father who art down in the pub
Our Mother doing the washing up
Well that was then, an this is now
So you better listen up

Factories lia empty
Manuafacting emptiness
Life still needs to be filled none the less
So go and find something to love
But just promise me this one thing, yes
Please stay in sight of the mainland
I always know you've got to go
I don't want you to go
So before you go, there's just one thing you ought to know, yeah
there's just one thing you ought to know
there's just one thing you ought to know
there's just one thing
just one thing

You can fill your life with love
You can fill your life with hope
You can fill you life with food and drink or whatever floats your boat
I'll be be singing you this song 
There's a million things in store for you just beyond the horizon

But please stay in sight of the mainland
So stay in sight of the mainland
You're wiser than I'll ever be
You're beautiful smart, so funny
You fill my heart, you fill my dreams 
And my only hope is you succeed
my only hope is you succeed
 my only hope is you succeed
you're my only hope
you're my only hope 
 you're my only hope
So please 
Please
Please
Please
Please

Trust and believe
In you and me
Northern lights will guide you home
Northern lives just like you're own
Northern rain turning into a flood 
But Don't forget your northern blood
Do never forget your northern blood

And please stay in sight of the mainland
Yeah please stay in sight of the mainland
Pease stay in touch with me
In this contactless society
Anywhere that you may be
The northern star leads back to me
Yeah the northern star leads back to me
 Yeah the northern star leads back to me
 Yeah the northern star leads back to me
You're my northern star
*******************************

Tuesday, 8 October 2019

LIGHT FALLS at the Manchester Royal Exchange

A Royal Exchange Theatre Production - World Premiere

LIGHT FALLS  

By Simon Stephens
Directed by Sarah Frankcom
With original music by Jarvis Cocker
24 October - 16 November



Royal Exchange Artistic Director Sarah Frankcom and the multi award-winning writer Simon Stephens have taken a journey across the North of England, shaping and developing their latest collaboration, Simon’s newest play LIGHT FALLS. In this extraordinary World Premiere a family is drawn back together following a single, devastating and unpredictable event. An intricate observation of people and places LIGHT FALLS is a powerful allegory to the North. This production features original music by Jarvis Cocker and can been seen in the Theatre from 24 October – 16 November.
A family finds themselves scattered across the north, each one searching for something to hold on to, to root them to a place, tie them to a person. A woman wakes up with a stranger beside her. A student argues with his lover. A single mother fights to feed her baby. A married man flirts with two younger women and one devastating event will change their lives forever.
LIGHT FALLS is performed by an impressive ensemble cast which includes Mercedes Assad, Freddie Gaminara, Carla Henry, Lloyd Hutchinson, Rebecca Manley, David Moorst, Tachia Newall, Jamie Samuel, Katie West and Witney White.
Sarah Frankcom is the Artistic Director of the Royal Exchange Theatre and the new Director of LAMDA. Her recent productions include: THE NICO PROJECT ( co-created with Maxine Peake for MIF 2019) WEST SIDE STORY, DEATH OF A SALESMAN, OUR TOWN (winner of Best Director at the UK Theatre Awards); HAPPY DAYS, THE LAST TESTAMENT OF LILLIAN BILOCCA (Hull City of Culture); A STREETCAR NAMED DESIRE, THE SKRIKER (co-commission with MIF15) and HAMLET (all with Maxine Peake), BLINDSIDED, THAT DAY WE SANG and the Royal Exchange and MIF13 co-production THE MASQUE OF ANARCHY. 
 **************************************************

Thursday, 6 June 2019

Review: Hobson's Choice at Manchester

by Brian Bamford
HOBSONS CHOICE= एक ही विकल्प (pr. {ek hi vikalp} )(Noun)
ROYAL EXCHANGE 

Hobson's Choice by Harold Brighouse.  

In a new adaptation by Tanika Gupta. 

Directed by Atri Banerjee

'HOBSON's CHOICE' has historically come to represent 'a choice of taking what is offered or nothing at all; lack of an alternative'

The original play was drafted in outline by Stanley Houghton, who with Anne Horniman, the tea heiress, worked together to create the so called Manchester School at the then Gaiety Theatre at the junction of Mount Street and Peter Street.  After he died in December 1913, his friend Harold Brighouse reassembled Houghton's plays from his notebooks, and he wrote a new piece using Houghton's original title.

The most powerful figure in the play is Maggy Hobson [Durga Hobson at the Royal Exchange] who is in conflict with her father, and she captures control of the situation by drawing the artisan tailor [Ali Mossop at the Exchange] under her spell and manipulating him in her war with her own father Henry Horatio Hobson [Hari Hobson at the Exchange].

I must confess that I had some misgivings when I went to see this play and I asked the publicity officer Paula Rabbitt, if we would be hearing any Lancashire accents on the night.  I ought not to have worried, it was a fine production adapted by Tanika Gupta.

Albert G. Andrews who took on the role of Mr. Hobson when it was first performed in 1915, wasn't an Eccles lad, but the as the program says:  'but then few professional actors were at that point in time'.  But as the program also says:  'This was a period when it was still perfectly acceptable for an actor playing a regional character to get away with a vague stab at the appropriate accent.' 

It is pointed out that 'Even Dick Van Dyke as a would-be Cockney chimney-sweep in MARY POPPINS was 50 years in the future.'  And we learn that 'Consequently, though many actors were northern, few of them were from anywhere near Salford.'  Even Wilfred Pickles who hailed from Halifax in West Yorkshire developed an enduring relationship with the play, and he took the role of William Mossop [Ali Mossop in the Exchange play].

I ought to say that Esh Alladi as Ali Mossop the hard working tailor at the Royal Exchange played a good part, he has to develop a spine within the play and ultimately take on tho boss.  The dynamic of the play is presented as a case of a deserving hard worker who becomes victorious but with tho aid of a strong woman.  In this way Ali Mossop grows in stature in the play, yet the most comic element is where Ali asks for the advice of his male friends on how to perform on his wedding night and looks for prompts on what to do.  In the end he is told to let nature take its course.

***********



Friday, 26 April 2019

HOBSON’S CHOICE at Royal Exchange

HOBSON’S CHOICE
By Harold Brighouse
In a new adaptation by Tanika Gupta
Directed by Atri Banerjee

31 May – 6 July
MULTI-award-winning writer Tanika Gupta has reimagined her 2003 adaptation of HOBSON’S CHOICE for the Exchange. In this sharp and witty retelling of Harold Brighouse’s classic take on family loyalty, we meet Hari Hobson, played by Tony Jayawardena (Ackley Bridge), who has fled Uganda to make a new life for his family in Manchester’s ever-changing Northern Quarter of the 1980s.  This universal story explores family relationships and reflects the hopes, aspirations and disappointments of families everywhere who are trying to build a new life.  Set in a city with a complex history of cotton and a striking feminist past we meet Durga Hobson (Shalini Peiris) who is determined to challenge the patriarchy and change the status quo.  The Hobson family is completed by Maimuna Memon as Sunita Hobson and Safiyya Ingar as Ruby Hobson. HOBSON’S CHOICE runs in the Theatre from 31 May – 6 July.
Regrettably, due to unforeseen personal circumstances director Pooja Ghai has had to step away from this production, Atri Banerjee will take over as director.  HOBSON’S CHOICE will be his directorial debut for the Exchange’s main-house.  The Royal Exchange looks forward to welcoming Pooja back to Manchester in the future. Pooja commented…
“It’s been a delight to be able to assemble this exceptional cast and creative team, and it’s been a privilege to work for the Royal Exchange.  I have full confidence that Atri will take the lead and fully realise Tanika’s wonderful adaptation.” 
*******************

Tuesday, 1 January 2019

'THE PRODUCERS' Delivers 'HEIL HITLER' Roar

'Don't be stupid, be a smarty / Come & join the Nazi Party'

Review by Brian Bamford


I STRUGGLED to contain myself from waving a 'Heil Hitler' salute at this superb performance of THE PRODUCERS at Manchester's  Royal Exchange.  When the flighty dame Ulla does the floor show with 'When You've Got It,, Flaunt It', it's a randy Max Bialystock who declares:  .'We may both be seated but you've two standing ovations down here'.

It's now over 50 years since THE PRODUCERS was first released as a film in 1967.  It had mixed reviews with the New York Times reviewer Renata Adler saying:  'Some of it is shoddy and gross and cruel; the rest is funny in an unexpected way.'

It took off only when Peter Sellers, who loved the film. took out and paid for full-page adverts in trade magazines such as Variety, insisting it was the 'ultimate film...the essence of all great comedy combined in a single motion picture'.

In 1996, the film was selected for preservation as part of the US National Film Registry in recognition of the fact that it was 'culturally, historically or aesthetically significant'.


Anti-Heroes from Falstaff to Hitler
Leo Bloom is an accountant sent to do the books for Max Bialystock, a failing Broadway producer, and finds that Bialystock raised $2,000 more than he lost on his last failure. You could make a lot of money by overfinancing turkeys, he muses, a glint in his eye:  'The IRS isn't interested in flops.'

In 2000, the critic Roger Ebert described the film thus: 'The movie was like a bomb going off inside the audience's sense of propriety.  There is such rapacity in its heroes, such gleeful fraud, such greed, such lust, such a willingness to compromise every principle, that we cave in and go along.'

It has been argued somewhere that Shakespeare didn't want Falstaff to become such a popular hero as he did in his play Henry IV, part I and II.  Raz Shaw, the director of the Royal Exchange play, argues that Mel Brooks was a second-generation New York jew who in the musical only wanted to mock the Nazis:
'The only people it really bullseyes into ridicule is the Nazis.  Everyone else, it likes.  It tries to glory in difference.'

'Springtime for Hitler'

Their formula for failure is a musical named 'Springtime for Hitler', with a dance line of jackbooted SS girls and lyrics like, 'Don't be stupid, be a smarty! Come and join the Nazi Party!'  Their neo-Nazi playwright Franz Liebkind roars up to the opening night on a motorcycle, wears a Nazi helmet into the lobby, and tells them, 'It's magic time!'

Is Raz Shaw right to claim that the only people it ridicules 'is the Nazis' or to imply the doesn't have other targets?  After all Mel Brooks who wrote the play, told Susan Stamberg of NPR News:  'The comedy writer is like the conscience of the king.  He's got to tell them the truth, and that's my job-to make terrible things entertaining.'


Vitally Vulgar & Politically Incorrect
My partner who came to see the play at the Royal Exchange said 'It is just so politically incorrect!' 
Indeed it is, just as when somebody farts in Church; for 'The Producers' is cheerfully willing to go anywhere for a laugh.  Or as Mel Brooks responded to a woman who had said 'I have to tell you, Mr. Brooks, that your movie is vulgar':  'Lady' he said, 'it rose below vulgarity.'

And yet is Brooks right when he further tells Susan Stamberg:  'The way to deal with despots like Hitler is not to get on a soapbox and fight (then) with rhetoric, but fight them with ridicule, to laugh at them-laugh them into olbivion.'

I think we've got to grasp that even now, no especially now, that popularism, nationalism, religious bigotry and feudal loyalty are far more powerful forces than what some would regard as sensible politics.  As George Orwell remarked in his essay entitled 'Wells, Hitler and the World State''Creatures out of the Dark Ages have come marching into the present, and if they are ghosts they are at any rate ghosts which need a strong magic to lay them.' 

Sometimes ridicule may not be enough despite the seduction of the current Royal Exchange production of 'The Producers' and all the wit and cleverness of Mel Brooks.

***********

Wednesday, 31 October 2018

'Bitch-Godess Success' at M/c Royal Exchange

review by Brian Bamford

Above, is the original cross, Viburnum x bodnantense, flowering at Kew earlier this week.
************ 

BEFORE I went to review the play  'Death of a Salesman' at the Manchester Royal Exchange, I went to put out the rubbish bins in the backyard, and I was delighted to see the Viburnham Farreri in bloom with its pink and white clusters.  It is mid-Autumn and the fragrant shrub flowers at its best now.  It was Autumn when Arthur Miller began to work on :'The Death of a Salesman' (1949), and  Miller says:  'A morning in the spring.  And everything was starting to bud.  Beautiful weather.  Like this, except now it's fall.'

Before Miller began writing the play he constructed a cabin in which he wrote the play to be on his own.  He says it was an impulse to do a practical act before addressing the problems of a man who was impractical:  a salesman called Willy Loman who struggled to make a sale.  He's a salesman who in the first lines in the play tells his wife that 'It's all right.  I came back.'

Arthur Miller in an interview told John Lahr:  'It's a denial.  I mean, imagine a salesman being unable to get past Yonkers.  It's like the end of the world.'  

Yonkers is the fourth most populous city in the U.S. state of New York.

It's a play about human failure of someone confronted with an ideal 'the American Dream' which he somehow can't live up to.  Yet in his mind he deludes himself and he unsuccessfully tries to recruit others to share in his delusions. 

Here is a man who is deluded to some fixed ideas of what it means to be successful by become a different person from what he really is.  In this version of the play at the Royal Exchange he is presented as a black man Willy (Don Warrington) who is not only uneasy in his own skin but who is envious of Charley played by Tom Hodgkins, the white man, who offers him a position that could have saved him.

Here is a fixed body of cultural values which we could call the 'American Dream':  perhaps a false belief system of what the philosopher William James called 'our national disease' or the 'exclusive worship of the bitch-goddess success'.

Sarah Churchwell writing in the programme for the play almost inevitably relates the play to the present day, and she writes:  'The deterioration of American ideals from meritocracy into selfish entitlement' and she adds, 'the damage such a loss of values presents to a society, is the real moral arc of Miller's play; if Willy Loman is an American everyman, then his tragedy is not that of one man, but of a nation he represents.'

Is Willy's problem one of 'Bad Faith', such as Sartre might have called it, or do we see it in the context of Marxist 'False Consciousness'?  Is the play about a state of one man's mind or about a reaching out to a social ideal?

The moral philosopher, Mary Midgley, who died only last week wrote:  'The trouble with human beings is not really that they love themselves too much; they ought to love themselves more.  The trouble is simply that they don’t love others enough.'

The trouble with Willy is that he's not at home in his own skin.  Miller told John Lahr he wanted to have Willy in the play, so 'We should literally see, or be conscious of, his mind working elsewhere, with other people.'   

With Sartre it was the idea of the wine waiter banging the glasses down on the table, while his mind is elsewhere or the woman having sex and imagining she's with someone elseWith Willy he's hearing his brother Ben's voice in his head going on about the gold and wealth in Alaska.  Or as Miller says:  'I think we all think on two, three or four different levels at the same time.'

Sarah Churchwell, the literary academic in the programme writes of the subtitle of the play as being 'Certain private conversations in two acts and a requiem'.  She claims the play condemns the 'superficial fetishization of objects and rationalization of selfishness and greed.'  The materialisn that leaves the American dream 'rotting from the inside out'.

Miller based Willy on a family friend, Manny Newman, but the director of this Royal Exchange play, Sarah Frankcom, has staged 'Salesman' around a black family with what could well be a cultural coconut - brown on the outside and white on the inside, in the central role.

Towards the end of the play Willy tells his brother Ben 'I'm worth more dead than alive!'

And in almost the final utterance of his wife, Linda Loman, ejaculates over his grave is 'I've just paid off the final payment on the mortgage!'

When I got home I checked to make sure the Viburnham Farreri was still in flower and still fragrant..

 Go see the play!

*******

Thursday, 18 January 2018

BLACK MEN WALKING at Royal Exchange

ECLIPSE THEATRE’S NEW PLAY ENRICHES REPERTOIRE WITH BLACK BRITISH STORIES

INSPIRED by a real-life Black men’s walking group based in Sheffield, BLACK MEN WALKING has been conceived by Eclipse in collaboration with Leeds-based rapper, singer, producer and performer Testament. Directed by Eclipse Theatre’s artistic director Dawn Walton, this new work mixes dramatic story-telling with original music written by Testament and performed by a four-person cast. An Eclipse Theatre and Royal Exchange Theatre co-production, BLACK MEN WALKING will premiere on January 18th, 2018 at the Royal Exchange Theatre before embarking on a UK tour.
Thomas, Matthew and Richard meet every month as part of a walking group to explore the dramatic landscape of the Peak District, Yorkshire. On this particular trip, the rest of group cancels and it soon feels like maybe they should have done too. The men find themselves forced to walk backwards through two thousand years of Black history, embarking on a dangerous journey that invokes an element of the supernatural, an encounter with the spirits of their ancestors and an exploration of what it means to be both Black and British today.
A rising star in the theatre landscape, Testament was most recently acclaimed for his one-man show about feminism, WOKE, which fused powerful first-person narrative with his signature beat-boxing and rapping. The walking group which inspired the production was founded in 2004 by a group of men of African and African-Caribbean heritage who started walking for health, wellbeing and camaraderie.
The cast includes Tyrone Huggins as Thomas (THE TEMPEST - Improbable/Northern Stage/Oxford Playhouse) Trevor Laird as Matthew (ONE MAN, TWO GUVNORS - National Theatre) and Tonderai Munyevu as Richard (SIZWE BANZI IS DEAD - Eclipse Theatre Company / Young Vic co-production). Completing the cast is Dorcas Sebuyange (Hayleigh in THE ELASTICATED SOUND SYSTEM - 20 Storeys High).
BLACK MEN WALKING, the first work to be staged as part of the company’s ground-breaking REVOLUTION MIX movement will deliver the largest ever national programme of Black British stories produced and performed in UK theatres.
Eclipse Artistic Director Dawn Walton commented:
'This powerful story perfectly encompasses everything the Rev Mix movement stands for; turning the spotlight onto Britain’s missing Black history with a piece inspired by real people and real events. It is so important that these stories are told, especially when you look at the recent online backlash faced by Mary Beard who was accused of ‘re-writing history’ by pointing out the ethnic diversity of Roman Britain. This reaction is evidence of a real lack of understanding about our true British heritage. Open a history book and you’ll see that the Roman empire, Britain included, featured people from Ethiopia, Algeria and beyond.
'One of the earliest influences for Revolution Mix was Peter Fryer’s seminal book, ‘Staying Power’, which unearths a compelling history of Black people in Britain over the last 2,000 years. The opening line of the book is ‘There were Africans in Britain before the English came here.” That one statement is so wonderfully provocative and for me, it set the wheels in motion for us to produce a body of work that will bring to stage and screen an erased history.  This is just the first of several new works from Revolution Mix set to tour in 2018, which is also the 70th anniversary of the arrival of Windrush, a milestone which is often celebrated as the start of modern multicultural Britain. Acting as the antithesis to this, Revolution Mix will delve deeper to explore Black British history long before, and since,  Windrush, offering a new perspective and insight into the full Black British experience.'
Black Men Walking will run until 3rd February 2018 at the Royal Exchange Theatre, before embarking on a UK-wide tour including Belgrade Theatre, Coventry; Northern Stage, Newcastle; West Yorkshire Playhouse, Leeds; Hull Truck Theatre; Nottingham Playhouse; The Arnolfini, Bristol; Theatre Clwyd, Wales; Royal Court Theatre, London; Sheffield Crucible Theatre; Salisbury Playhouse; The North Wall, Oxford and Unity Theatre, Liverpool.

Sunday, 10 December 2017

Guys & Dolls at Royal Exchange


A Royal Exchange Theatre and Talawa Theatre Company co-production
GUYS AND DOLLS
A musical fable of Broadway based on the story and characters of Damon Runyon
Music and lyrics by Frank Loesser
Book by Jo Swearling and Abe Burrows
Directed by Michael Buffong
2 December 2017 - 27 January 2018
The cast is completely by Koko Basigara, Toyan Thomas-Browne, Nathanael Campbell, Darren Charles, Ewen Cummins, Chelsey Emery, Evonnee Bentley-Holder, Kurt Kansley, Danielle Kassaraté, Fela Lufadeju, Melanie Marshall, Ako Mitchell, Javar Parker, Joe Speare, Jaime Tait, Trevor A Toussaint and T'shan Williams.
This Christmas director Michael Buffong transports the smash-hit musical GUYS AND DOLLS up-town to 1939 Harlem in the UK’s first all-Black cast production of this iconic show. Celebrating the off-beat stories of Damon Runyon that made the gangsters and hustlers of New York City infamous, GUYS AND DOLLS is co-produced by the Royal Exchange Theatre and Talawa Theatre Company – the UK’s primary Black led touring theatre company. Ray Fearon as the charming Nathan Detroit leads a cast that includes Ashley Zhangazha, Abiona Omonua and Lucy Vandi. The reimagined GUYS AND DOLLS is developed with the award winning hip-hop dancer and choreographer Kenrick ‘H20’ Sandy and runs from 2 December – 27 January.
 Director Michael Buffong said:
"Pre-war Harlem was all about the hustle. The creativity of that era was born from a unique collision of talent and circumstance as people escaped the agricultural and oppressive South via the 'underground railroad' into the highly urbanised and industrialised North. Much of our popular culture, from dance to music, has its roots in that period. Our Guys and Dolls brings all of this to the fore, in superb, celebratory style."
 
Nathan Detroit and Sky Masterson take every opportunity to hustle, settling every dispute with a roll of the dice. Lady Luck is on their side, until one night they both take a chance on love. With unforgettable songs including LUCK BE A LADY, SIT DOWN YOU'RE ROCKING THE BOAT and the infectious title number, this high-energy production captures the secrecy and romance of living on the edge.
Musical Supervisor Nigel Lilley and Musical Director Mark Aspinall return to the Exchange following their work on the award-winning, and UK Theatre nominated, sell-out musical SWEET CHARITY.

Friday, 10 November 2017

Flaccid Fantasy: 'Jubilee' at Royal Exchange

 by Brian Bamford
ALMOST nodded-off at this performance of the play Jubilee, directed by Chris Good  at the Royal Exchange.  In the end, I found myself delicately picking my nose with my the little finger of my left hand up my left nostril as a bit of light relief.

It seems that the run up to the staging of the play was more interesting than the play itself.  Days before the kick-off of the play, the lines which had been included that gave a favourable reference to the child murderesss Myra Hindley were removed owing to protests from the cast.

Toyah Willcox, who was in the film and is now in the play, said that using the lines in the city where Hindley and her partner Ian Brady operated, it would have 'undermined the whole play'.  The feeling was that had the words been uttered in the Manchester Royal Exchange it would have led to walkouts in the audience. 

It seems, Chris Goode, the director, initially resisted attempts to delete the reference but in the end admitted he had underestimated the strength of feeling her spectre still stirred, particularly in Manchester.

Hindley and Brady's crimes shook Manchester in the 1960s - when they tortured and killed five children between the ages of 10 and 17.

This play has its origins in the original film by.Derek Jarman’s Jubilee that divided opinion in 1978. Its harshest critics were the leaders of the punk movement it seemingly celebrated, with Vivienne Westwood who claimed it was boring.  Judging by what I saw of this play Vivienne got it right.

Derek Jarman was a leftist shock-jock with very little talent or wit.

In the theatrical review The Stage, writes:  ' What should be a short, sharp shot in the arm feels frustratingly flabby, with a spirited cast never quite corralled into a cohesive whole.  Its self-awareness is refreshing but even that palls during an overlong running time.'

I'm glad that I left after the interval.  That was a first!
******

Saturday, 21 October 2017

Fire & Petrol at the Royal Exchange

 
ON entering the Manchester Royal Exchange yesterday, for the first time ever my plastic M&S shopping bag was perused for explosives.  I've been going to the Royal Exchange since it opened in the 1970s with 'The Prince of Homburg' by Heinrich von Kleist, and I've never experienced a bag search before.  The performance was to be 'Parliament Square' written by James Fritz and directed by Jude Christian.

If we'd been visiting some show be it film or theatre, that had been put on by the politically-correct softies on the British left we might have been cautioned and pre-armed with trigger warnings before the kick-off.  Perhaps the Manchester bourgeoisie are bolder and made of sterner stuff than the local loco-lefties?

The blurb on the Box Office publicity flier says:  'How far would you go for what you believe in?'

Given that the Manchester Arena bombing only occurred on 22 May 2017, it may have been considered a bit risque to put this play on.  Although, the main character Kat is more in the style of a Buddhist Monk self-harming by dousing herself in petrol than Islamic extremist.

Raw, disturbing and compassionate, James Fritz’s searingly powerful play forces a confrontation with some of the most urgent questions we face.  What can one individual do to effect change?  And where do we choose to draw the line between absolute commitment and dangerous obsession? 

It's not that we come up here against the Kantian idea of a moral law* - The Categorical Imperative.  It's more about what we can we do to have impact on events and still stay sane?


*  The Kantian idea of a moral law:
For an action to be morally valid, you must only carry out that action if you believe all people should act in the same way.  If society acted exactly as you do, would this be morally acceptable?’

Friday, 20 October 2017

'Jubilee' at the Royal Exchange

40 YEARS ON DEREK JARMAN'S CULT PUNK FILM IS REMIXED FOR THE SOCIAL AND POLITICAL TURMOIL OF 2017

The Royal Exchange Theatre presents

JUBILEE

Adapted for the stage by Chris Goode
From the origianal screenplay by Derek Jarman and James Whaley 
Directed by Chris Goode
2 November - 18 November
Press Night: Tuesday 7 November, 7.30pm - The Theatre

A free-spirited, gloriously rude, take-no-prisoners blast of a show with a soundtrack to die for. Marking the 40th anniversary of Derek Jarman’s iconic film, the Royal Exchange’s world premiere of Chris Goode’s stage adaptation of JUBILEE is sure to appeal to young punks, old punks, and anyone who’s ever wanted to set the world on fire.
A marauding girl gang are on a killing spree and a time-travelling Queen Elizabeth I, played by original film cast member and legendary punk warrior Toyah Willcox, observes it all. An electrifying ensemble cast, including Lucy Ellinson as Ariel and Travis Alabanza as Amyl reimagine JUBILEE for a 2017 audience. A co-production with Chris Goode & Company this riot of a show will run from 2 – 18 November.
Chris Goode is a writer, director, performer and musician. Since 2011 Chris has been lead artist of Chris Goode & Company, with whom his work has included two (of his four) Fringe First award-winning shows: MEN IN THE CITIES and MONKEY BARS. Other projects with the company include WANTED, EVERY ONE, WEAKLINGS, and THE ADVENTURES OF WOUND MAN AND SHIRLEY. Outside of CG&Co he has made work for and with National Theatre of Scotland, Theatre Uncut, the Royal Court, Headlong, Tate Modern, Royal Opera House Covent Garden and Sydney International Festival among many others. Chris currently directs the all-male performance ensemble Ponyboy Curtis.
Toyah Willcox has avoided categorisation for 41 years. She is an award-winning singer/ songwriter/ actress with multiple silver/gold/platinum albums under her belt. Toyah's career started at the National Theatre when she was 18, where she formed her first band named TOYAH and took the punk scene by storm, even managing to avoid categorisation within the movement, and successfully pushed out the boundaries for women in music. She met Derek Jarman in 1977 and they became loyal friends. In the original film JUBILEE Toyah played Mad the Pyromaniac, a role she created with Jarman's blessing. Toyah continues to sing to sell out audiences and has a passion for British Film, acting in recent films such as AAAAAAAAH!, EXTREMIS, HOUND, SWIPERIGHT, and TO BE SOMEONE.

Saturday, 14 October 2017

Parliment Square at Royal Exchange

“How far would you go for what you believe in?”

A Royal Exchange Theatre and Bush Theatre co-production
PARLIAMENT SQUARE
By James Fritz
Directed by Jude Christian
Designed by Fly Davis
18 - 28 October at the Royal Exchange Theatre, Manchester
30 November – 6 January at the Bush Theatre, London
Royal Exchange Press Night: Friday 20 October, 7.30pm – The Theatre Bush Theatre Press Night – Friday 1 December

In his powerful new play PARLIAMENT SQUARE, James Fritz skilfully interrogates the draw of extreme demonstration, compassionately exploring the impact and fall-out of a single, selfless act of protest.

Esther Smith (BBC3’s CUCKOO and UNCLE BBC 3) takes the lead role of Kat, who watches as ‘the world gets worse’ and finds herself compelled to take action. Selected for a Judges Award in the Bruntwood Prize for Playwriting 2015, PARLIAMENT SQUARE deftly asks where the line falls between complete commitment and dangerous obsession. Directed by Jude Christian this compelling World Premiere is a Royal Exchange Theatre co-production with the Bush Theatre. It will run in Manchester from 18 – 28 October before transferring to London from 30 November – 6 January.
The Story: 
 Kat gets up one morning, leaves her family behind, and travels to London to carry out an act that will change her life and, she hopes, everyone else’s. But what are the real consequences?

James Fritz’s searingly powerful play 'Parliament Square' won a Judges Award in the 2015 Bruntwood Prize for Playwriting. Raw, disturbing and compassionate, it forces a confrontation with some of the most urgent questions we face. What can one individual do to effect change? And where do we choose to draw the line between absolute commitment and dangerous obsession?

Monday, 4 September 2017

Thornton Wilder's 'Our Town' at Royal Exchange

THORNTON WILDER'S EPIC TALE OF COMMUNITY AND HUMANITY


The Manchester Royal Exchange Theatre presents

OUR TOWN

By Thornton Wilder
Directed by Sarah Frankcom
Designed by Fly Davis
14 September - 14 October
Manchester is OUR TOWN and the people of the city sit at the heart of the action in Sarah Frankcom’s new production of Thornton Wilder’s Pulitzer Prize winning play. On this intimate in-the-round stage Wilder’s epic exploration of human existence is redefined for now. On designer Fly Davis' set audience members can choose to join the actors on stage, in their homes and at their kitchen tables as OUR TOWN becomes everybody’s town. This hugely significant piece of 20th century drama is performed by an ensemble cast of 15 actors with Youssef Kerkour as Stage Manager, Norah Lopez Holden as Emily Webb, Patrick Elue as George Gibbs, Carla Henry as Mrs. Julia Gibb, Nicolas Khan as Dr. Gibbs, Graeme Hawley as Mr. Webb and Wyllie Longmore as Professor Willard. The production opens on the 14 September and runs until 14 October
Love and marriage, birth and death. Seen from a distance they’re just the rhythm of everyday life: but when you’re caught up in the middle and they’re happening to you, they’re the whole world. OUR TOWN tells the story of Emily and George, two unremarkable teenagers growing up in a small New Hampshire town at the turn of the last century. You’re invited to eavesdrop on this tightly wound community as events unfold – both the apparently trivial and the deeply profound – across the course of a decade. 

**********

Wednesday, 26 April 2017

Jane Austin's 'Persuasion' at Royal Exchange

JEFF JAMES DIRECTS A LOVE STORY FOR GROWN-UPS


The Royal Exchange Theatre presents the World Premiere of

PERSUASION

By Jane Austen
Adapted by Jeff James with James Yeatman
Directed by Jeff James
25 May- 24 June
Press Night: Thursday 1 June, 7.30pm - The Theatre
Jeff James, one of the UK’s most original young theatre makers, adapts and directs a bold retelling of Jane Austen’s final masterpiece PERSUASION at the Royal Exchange Theatre. James creates an emotionally powerful love story for grown-ups for the Exchange’s intimate in-the-round stage, revealing how startlingly relevant Austen’s story remains today. Designed by Alex Lowde this contemporary production of Austen’s beautifully crafted novel discards the bonnets and trappings of formal life for a startlingly modern vision of Austen. Developed in collaboration with dramaturg James Yeatman and with sound design from the award-winning Ben and Max Ringham, PERSUASION runs from 25 May to the 24 June.
When Captain Wentworth proposed to Anne eight years ago, he had only love and ambition to offer. Talked out of accepting his proposal by her family, Anne’s never quite got over her first love. But now Wentworth is back. Rich, successful and single, the handsome Captain has been transformed into a serious catch. When circumstances bring the two face to face again, Anne Elliot is forced to confront the past. As old wounds reopen, will Wentworth’s resentment keep him away, and will Anne finally decide what she really wants?
Director Jeff James has worked regularly with the Young Vic, most recently on his production of LA MUSICA, and extensively as Associate Director with international and multi award-winning director Ivo van Hove. His directing credits also include STINK FOOT (The Yard), and ONE FOR THE ROAD & VICTORIA STATION (Young Vic and the Print Room). He is Associate Director on Ivo van Hove's English language productions, including A VIEW FROM THE BRIDGE (London, Paris, Broadway & Los Angeles), OBSESSION (Barbican, Amsterdam and international tour), HEDDA GABLER (National Theatre), LAZARUS by David Bowie and Enda Walsh (New York & London), and THE CRUCIBLE (Broadway).
Designer Alex Lowde has worked extensively in Scotland for Scottish Opera, Dundee Rep, The Lyceum, The Citizens and The Traverse. Receiving the Critics Award for Theatre Design in Scotland in 2009 and 2010 with a nomination in the Best Design Category at the 2010 TMA Awards. Other design credits include the National Theatre, Young Vic, Lyric Hammersmith, Opera North, The Royal Court, Almeida, West Yorkshire Playhouse and Sheffield Theatres.
Lara Rossi takes on the role of Austen’s heroine Anne alongside Samuel Edward-Cook as Captain Wentworth. The cast is completed by Geraldine Alexander, Antony Bunsee, Helen Cripps, Cassie Layton, Caroline Moroney, Dorian Simpson and Arthur Wilson.
Music and sound designers Ben and Max Ringham have produced scores and sound designs for more than 40 major productions and have worked extensively in the West End, at the National Theatre and the RSC. The creative team also includes Lighting Designer Lucy Carter and movement from Morgann Runacre-Temple.
For further information, images or interviews please contact Paula Rabbitt, Communications Manager 0161 615 6783 / paula.rabbitt@royalexchange.co.uk

Wednesday, 8 March 2017

'Twelfth Night' at Manchester Royal Exchange

GENDER POLITICS, SHIFTING SEXUALITY AND SUBVERTING SHAKESPEARE


The Royal Exchange Theatre presents

TWELFTH NIGHT

By William Shakespeare
Directed by Jo Davies
13 April - 20 May – The Theatre
Press Night: Thursday 20 April, 7.30pm
An intoxicating comedy with gender, identity and love at its centre storms onto the Royal Exchange Theatre’s main stage this spring. TWELFTH NIGHT is directed by the award-winning Jo Davies who makes her Royal Exchange debut with Shakespeare’s whirlwind comedy. Faith Omole, Kevin Harvey and Mina Anwar return to the Exchange as Viola, Orsino and Maria, Kate Kennedy takes on the role of Olivia and Anthony Calf is Malvolio. Award-winning Manchester-based transgender artist and activist Kate O’Donnell makes her Royal Exchange debut in the role of Feste, the wise observer in this foolish, lovesick kingdom. Live music from the critically acclaimed folk musician Kate Young and lap-tap guitarist Joe Gravil adds to the complexity of this intricate comedy which probes gender-politics and ideas of belonging. The play runs from 13 April – 20 May.
Washed up on the shores of Illyria after a ship-wreck, Viola hides her true identity by disguising herself as a man. Finding a job – and love – at the court of Duke Orsino, Viola becomes muddled in mistaken identities when her disguise begins to cause more problems than it solves.

Friday, 17 February 2017

'THE SUPPLIANT WOMEN' at Royal Exchange

CELEBRATED CONTEMPORARY VERSION OF EARLIEST GREEK DRAMA REINVENTED IN MANCHESTER

Royal Exchange Theatre, Actors Touring Company and Royal Lyceum Theatre Edinburgh present

THE SUPPLIANT WOMEN

By Aeschylus in a new version by David Greig
Directed by Ramin Gray; Composer John Browne; Choreographer Sasha Milavic Davies
10 March - 1 April - The Theatre
Press Night: Tuesday 14 March, 7.30pm
THIS spring the Royal Exchange Theatre sees one of the world’s oldest dramas play out on its unique stage. THE SUPPLIANT WOMEN by Aeschylus, in a new version by the multi award-winning writer David Greig, is an extraordinary theatrical event featuring, at its heart, a chorus of forty women and men from across Greater Manchester arguing for their lives. Reimagined for the Exchange by director Ramin Gray (Artistic Director of the Actors Touring Company) this production has been beautifully reworked for this in-the-round space and, following its original critically-acclaimed production in 2016, is remade for and with the people of Greater Manchester.

Written 2,500 years ago THE SUPPLIANT WOMEN has startling resonance for 2017, reflecting major issues of contemporary society. Suppliant means ‘asylum seeker’ and the play explores issues of migration and democracy, gender politics and political power. The Royal Exchange Theatre, Actors Touring Company and Royal Lyceum Theatre Edinburgh 

 present 'THE SUPPLIANT WOMEN' from 10 March – 1 April.

A group of women leave everything behind to board a boat in North Africa and flee across the Mediterranean. They are escaping forced marriage in their homeland, hoping for protection and assistance, seeking asylum in Greece.
The forty-strong Chorus is a diverse mix of talented and passionate volunteers from across Greater Manchester who have been working with the company to create the power and energy of a Greek chorus. They perform alongside Oscar Batterham, Omar Ebrahim and Gemma May Rees.
The production features new music by composer John Browne who has used the ancient Greek instrument the aulos (likely to have been used in the original production 2,500 years ago) to create a beautiful and unique sound for the production, clashing ancient sounds with contemporary composition for a 2017 chorus and audience.

Friday, 16 December 2016

Garcia Lorca's 'House of Bernada Alba'



 A Royal Exchange Theatre and Graeae Theatre Company co-production

THE HOUSE OF BERNARDA ALBA


By Federico García Lorca
Translated by Jo CliffordDirected by Jenny Sealey
Press Night: Tuesday 7 February

3 - 25 February - The Theatre

A bold exploration of female identity, sexuality and power: Lorca’s THE HOUSE OF BERNARDA ALBA is beautifully transformed for the Royal Exchange’s distinctive in-the-round theatre in a co-production with the trail-blazing Graeae Theatre Company. THE HOUSE OF BERNARDA ALBA is directed by Graeae’s Artistic Director Jenny Sealey, in a translation by Jo Clifford with the award-winning Kathryn Hunter in the title role. Deftly weaving the incredible talent of Deaf and disabled actors into this compelling drama, each performance creatively integrates British Sign Language, Audio Description and Captioning. The production will run from 3 – 25 February.
Jenny Sealey said:
‘I have wanted to direct this play for many years, and am thrilled to finally be doing so with this full-blooded translation by the wonderful Jo Clifford and in the unique space that is the Royal Exchange Theatre. Alongside this heated tale of competitiveness, danger and fragility, we’ll be weaving Graeae’s famous aesthetics of access into the fabric of the production, ensuring it truly is a landmark event, while showcasing the extraordinary talent of our Deaf and disabled actors.’  
Bernarda’s husband is dead. Now she alone rules her household and the lives of her five daughters. A period of eight years mourning will be observed without contact with the outside world and the men who might bring them ruin. That is except for Angustias, whose inheritance has attracted a wealthy local suitor. As the wedding approaches, Bernarda struggles to retain her suffocating grip on the family and on these women whose appetite for defiance is growing. 

Royal Exchange Artistic Director Sarah Frankcom said:
‘We are thrilled to be making this show with the brilliant Jenny Sealey cementing our relationship further with Graeae. Their work is synonymous with access, placing Deaf and disable actors centre-stage and ensuring that every show is fully accessible, BSL, captioning and audio-description are seamlessly woven into the production. This is the first time audiences will experience work on our stage in this way. In January Amit Sharma will join us from Graeae, as part of the Arts Council’s Change Makers programme, to continue the work we’ve started here.’ 

Thursday, 27 October 2016

'Sweet Charity' at Manchester Royal Exchange

SWEET CHARITY
Book by Neil Simon / Lyrics by Dorothy Fields / Music by Cy ColemanDirected by Derek BondChoreographed by Aletta CollinsDesigned by James Perkins


Sat 3 Dec 2016 – Sat 21 Jan 2017 - The Theatre

TRANSFORMING the Royal Exchange into the hustle and bustle of New York City, Derek Bond returns to the theatre this Christmas to direct the Tony-nominated Broadway hit SWEET CHARITY. Bursting at the seams with instantly recognisable hit songs (Rhythm of Life, Big Spender, and If My Friends Could See Me Now) and stunning choreography by Aletta Collins this show, which defined a decade, is created by the team behind the 2014 sell-out success LITTLE SHOP OF HORRORS. Kaisa Hammarlund takes on the role of the hapless Charity Hope Valentine, who dreams of finding luck in love in the big smoke. SWEET CHARITY runs at the Exchange from 3 December 2016 – 21 January 2017.
Charity is a dancer in New York City. With a heart tattooed on her arm and always looking for love, she has a habit of falling for the wrong man. When she meets shy tax accountant Oscar it seems as though Charity’s luck might have changed. Their romance sends them whirling and spinning through the dance halls, churches and streets of 1960s New York. But not everything’s a walk in the park and Charity soon faces a choice between Oscar and the wild existence she has chosen to hide from him.
Derek Bond’s work for the Exchange includes the hugely successful LITTLE SHOP OF HORRORS by Howard Ashman and Alan Menken which was nominated for 3 Manchester Theatre Awards. Other credits include AS YOU LIKE IT by William Shakespeare (Southwark Playhouse), MICROCOSM (Soho Theatre), SHIVER and LOST IN YONKERS (Watford Palace, 2012), MANY MOONS (Theatre503) and FLOYD COLLINS (Southwark Playhouse) which was named Best Musical at the Off West End Awards, and was nominated for the Ned Sherrin Award for Best Musical at the Evening Standard Theatre Awards. Up -coming projects include JESS AND JOE FOREVER (Orange Tree Theatre) and STIG OF THE DUMP (Storyhouse Chester). He was Associate Director of Theatre503 from 2010-2011. He is also the creator of the PLAYlist project.
Aletta Collins was born in London, studied at the London Contemporary Dance School and was a dancer and choreographer for London Contemporary Dance Theatre. She is a former Associate Artist at the Royal Opera House, where her work included choreographing and directing THE RED BALLOON, COCTEAU VOICES and MAGICAL NIGHT in the Linbury Studio Theatre. Aletta won Best Choreographer at the 2012 Music Video Awards for LOSING MYSELF by Will Young. Choreographic work includes: WIND IN THE WILLOWS (Plymouth & National Tour); THE HAIRY APE (Old Vic); BEND IT LIKE BECKHAM (Phoenix Theatre); MADE IN DAGENHAM (Adelphi Theatre); LA TRAVIATA (Glyndebourne Festival and UK Tour); ANNA NICOLE (Royal Opera House and Brooklyn Academy of Music); AWAKENINGS AND BLOOM (Rambert Dance Company); DRIFTING AND TILTING – THE SONGS OF SCOTT WALKER (Barbican); THE EFFECT AND HIS DARK MATERIALS (National Theatre) and JESUS CHRIST SUPERSTAR (Lyceum).
Kaisa Hammarlund trained at Mountview Academy of Theatre arts. Originally from Sweden, Kaisa’s theatre work includes BAKKHAI (Almeida Theatre); CAN I BE STRAIGHT WITH YOU? / COURTING DRAMA (The Bush Theatre); The Sculptress in THE CAPTAIN OF KOPENICK (NT, directed by Adrian Noble); JUNO IN THE TEMPEST (Theatre Royal, Bath, directed by Adrian Noble); Elle Woods in LEGALLY BLONDE (Malmo, Sweden); Petra in A LITTLE NIGHT MUSIC (The Menier Chocolate / Garrick Theatre, directed by Trevor Nunn) and Crystal in DESPERATELY SEEKING SUSAN (Novello Theatre). Television credits include an upcoming 5 episode guest lead role in Holby City (BBC).
The cast is completed by Lucy Jane Adcock, Christine Allado, Michelle Andrews, Josie Benson, Olly Christopher, Michelle Cornelius, Daniel Crossley, Bob Harms, Natalie Hope, Cat Simmons, Holly Dale Spencer, Sévan Stephan and Alex Thomas-Smith.

Monday, 17 October 2016

Alan Turing story at the Royal Exchange

MAJOR REVIVAL OF HUGH WHITEMORE’S CELEBRATED STORY OF ALAN TURING
 
The Royal Exchange Theatre presents
BREAKING THE CODE
By Hugh Whitemore
Directed by Robert Hastie
 
Friday 28 October - Saturday 19 November – The Theatre
Press Night: Wednesday 2 November, 7.30pm
 
IN a major revival of Hugh Whitemore’s Tony-nominated play BREAKING THE CODE BAFTA award-winning actor Daniel Rigby takes on the role of the mathematical genius Alan Turing. Manchester born Rigby leads a cast of eight in the Royal Exchange’s new production of this compelling play which brings Turing’s story back to Manchester, the city in which he lived, worked and died. Robert Hastie’s new production celebrates the mind of this incredible man revealing the infinite wonder of Turing’s mathematical world and the brutal constraints set against sexual freedom in post-war Britain. The production runs from 28 October – 19 November.
 
In the leafy surroundings of Bletchley Park at the height of the Second World War, a brilliant young mathematician called Alan Turing was working away at a problem. The creation of a machine. A machine that would crack the German Enigma code and win Britain the war. In the aftermath of victory, Turing arrived in Manchester with an even bigger task in mind – the development of the modern computer. It would be a task he left unfinished, publicly humiliated and destroyed by the revelation of his sexuality and prosecution for indecency.
 
Daniel Rigby, who makes his Royal Exchange debut, is a BAFTA Award-winning actor, comedian and writer who works across theatre, television and film. Daniel’s theatre credits include Alan Dangle in the original cast of ONE MAN, TWO GUVNORS (National Theatre/West End/Broadway), THE COUNT OF MONTE CRISTO (West Yorkshire Playhouse) HAMLET (Barbican and tour) and BURIAL AT THEBES (UK premiere Nottingham playhouse). Daniel’s television credits include FLOWERS and BLACK MIRROR: THE WALDO MOMENT (Channel 4), JERICHO (ITV), THAT DAY WE SANG (BBC) and UNDERCOVER (UKTV). In 2011, he won the Leading Actor BAFTA for his portrayal of Eric Morecambe in BBC2’s ERIC AND ERNIE.
 
This year Robert Hastie will take over as the new Artistic Director of Sheffield Theatres. Recent work includes HENRY V (Regents Park Open Air Theatre), CAT ON A HOT TIN ROOF (Theatr Clywd) for which he was nominated for Best Director at the UK Theatre Awards. As Associate Director of the Donmar Warehouse he directed SPLENDOUR by Abi Morgan, and MY NIGHT WITH REG by Kevin Elyot, which also ran at the Apollo Theatre, West End. Other productions include: A BREAKFAST OF EELS (Print Room), CARTHAGE and EVENTS WHILE GUARDING THE BOFORS GUN (Finborough Theatre) and SUNBURST by Tennessee Williams (UK Premiere, Holborn Grange Hotel).
 
The cast of BREAKING THE CODE is completed by Geraldine Alexander, Phil Cheadle, Natalie Dew, Harry Egan, Dimitri Gripari, Mark Oosterveen and Raad Rawi.
 
This Manchester story is supported by local business the King Street Townhouse