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Friday, 30th July 2010
Latest shows
THE Agatha Christie Theatre Company brings their latest murder mystery, And Then There Were None, to Chichester Festival Theatre from October 21 to 25.
Based on the best-selling mystery novel of all time, The Agatha Christie Theatre Company present Christie’s own stage adaptation of this dark and captivating tale, after two successful tours of other Christie classics The Unexpected Man and The Hollow.
A group of 10 strangers are lured to a remote island off the coast of Devon. Upon arrival, it is discovered that their host, an eccentric millionaire, is missing.
At dinner, a recorded message is played accusing each of them in turn of having a guilty secret. By the end of the evening the 10 guests become nine.
Stranded on the island by a torrential storm and haunted by an ancient nursery rhyme, one by one the guests begin to die.
The cast features Gerald Harper, who is best known for playing the title roles in Adam Adamant Lives and Hadleigh, Alex Ferns well known for his award-winning role as the notorious Trevor in EastEnders, Ray Lonnen, best known as Willie Caine in the British cold-war spy drama The Sandbaggers, Georgina Bouzova from Casualty, Jennifer Wilson, star of the hit TV series The Brothers, Bruce Montague best known for his role in Butterflies, and Mark Wynter who has delighted audiences with his all round talents from a pop career to TV, Film and Stage.
Tickets are £10 to £27, available online at www.cft.org.uk or from the box office on 01243 781312.
THE world première of Martin Sherman’s play Aristo (based on material in the book Nemesis by Peter Evans) previews at Chichester’s Minerva Theatre from September 11 in the final show of Chichester Festival Theatre’s summer season.
Robert Lindsay plays tycoon Aristotle Onassis in this play based on the last years of his life, including his complex connections and interwoven relationships with Jackie Kennedy (Elizabeth McGovern) and Maria Callas (Diana Quick), and his son Alexandros (Joe Marsh).
Robert Lindsay’s theatre credits include The Entertainer at The Old Vic, Oliver! in the West End, for which he received the Oliver Award for Best Actor in a Musical and Me and My Girl, for which he received the Olivier Award for Outstanding Performance by an Actor in a musical and the Tony Award for Best Actor in a Musical.
Diana Quick’s credits include Single Spies and You Never Can Tell at Theatre Royal Bath and West End and Mother Courage and Her Children for English Touring Theatre, for which she was nominated for two Best Actress Awards.
Elizabeth McGovern’s credits include The Scarlet Letter at Chichester Festival Theatre and The Misanthrope at the Young Vic. Her films include The Wings of a Dove and The Handmaid’s Tale.
The cast also includes Denise Black, Julius D’Silva, Ben Grove, John Hodgkinson, Robin Soans and June Watson.
Aristo is directed by Nancy Meckler, artistic director of Shared Experience. Her recent work for the Royal Shakespeare Company includes The Comedy of Errors and Romeo and Juliet.
Aristo will be designed by Katrina Lindsay, with lighting by Paul Pyant and music and sound by Ilona Sekacz.Aristo runs until October 11. Tickets are £19 and £25, available from the box office on 01243 781312 or online at www.cft.org.uk
TRUE-life events when Women’s Institute members posed nude for a charity calendar are brought to the stage for the first time.
Calendar Girls prèmieres at Chichester Festival Theatre, featuring Lynda Beliingham, Patricia Hodge, Siân Phillips, Gaynor Faye, Brigit Forysth and Julia Hills.
Written by Tim Firth, who co-wrote the screenplay of the 2003 Miramax film, Calendar Girls follows the fortunes of a group of extraordinary women, all members of a very ordinary Yorkshire Women’s Institute, who persuade each other to pose for a charity calendar with a difference.
Lynda Bellingham, well-known as Helen Herriott in All Creatures Great and Small and as the mother in the OXO adverts, plays Chris.
Herr theatre credits include Vincent River at The Old Vic, Sugar Mummies at the Royal Court and Losing Louis at Hampstead Theatre.
Patricia Hodge plays Annie. Her theatre credits include The Country Wife and Boeing–Boeing in the West End and His Dark Materials at the National Theatre. Her television credits include Portia in TV’s Rumpole of the Bailey.
Siân Phillips plays Jessie and her theatre credits include Regrets Only and Quartet in New York and Great Expectations at the RSC. She won the New York Critics’ Award for Goodbye Mr Chips and BAFTAs for I Claudius and How Green Was My Valley.
Elaine C. Smith plays Cora. Her theatre credits include Jim Cartwright’s The Rise and Fall of Little Voice and Two and she appeared in a national tour of The Woman Who Cooked Her Husband. She is one of Scotland’s best-loved actresses and comedy entertainers, becoming a household name in the hit TV series Rab C. Nesbitt.
Brigit Forsyth plays Marie, President of the Women’s Institute. Her theatre credits include The Triumph of Love at the Royal Exchange Theatre, Arsenic and Old Lace on a national tour and Jerusalem at West Yorkshire Playhouse. Her long and varied career includes playing Francine Pratt in Playing the Field, as well as Thelma in Whatever Happened to The Likely Lads?
Gaynor Faye plays Celia. Her television credits include The Chase, Playing the Field and Coronation Street. Julia Hills plays Ruth. Her theatre credits include Flying Under Bridges at Watford Palace Theatre. She is well-known to television audiences as Rona in the sitcom 2.4 Children.
Calendar Girls will be directed by Hamish McColl, who won an Olivier Award for writing and performing The Play What I Wrote in the West End.
The production will be designed by Robert Jones, who also designed The Music Man at Chichester and the current production of The Sound of Music at the London Palladium. Lighting will be by Malcolm Rippeth and Sound by John Leonard. Music will be by Steve Parry.
The cast also includes Joan Blackham, Abby Francis, Gary Lilburn, Gerard McDermot and Carl Prekopp.
Calendar Girls opens at Chichester Festival Theatre on September 5 and runs until September 27. Tickets, £11 to £33, available form the box office on 01243 781312 or online at www.cft.org.uk
BRENDA Blethyn opens the autumn season at Chichester Festival Theatre in Tennessee William’s Glass Menagerie on October 6.
The new programme line-up includes week-long touring drama, classical ballet from Kiev, an eclectic world music week and a family Christmas show for all the family.
Agatha Christie’s And Then There Were None continues the drama from October 21 and Alan Bennett’s Enjoy runs from October 27, starring Alison Steadman.
A new adaptation of Wuthering Heights is on from November 12 and innovative theatre company Shared Experience present Mine, about a wealthy couple who adopt a new-born baby, from October 4 in the Minerva Theatre.
Liberty follows in the Minerva from November 11, a co-production between Lifeblood Theatre Company and Shakespeare’s Globe which takes audiences deep into the heart of the French Revolution.
Opera lovers will have the chance to experience two very different presentations of classic operas.
Mozart’s The Magic Flute – Impempe Yomlingo is re-imagined the South African way from October 13, with 33 singers, marimbas, drums and township percussion.
Traditional opera company Carl Rosa will perform The Mikado starring Nichola McAuliffe from November 18.
Charles Dickens’ classic Christmas tale A Christmas Carol will be the festive season’s family show, presented by Chichester Festival Youth Theatre in an adaptation by Bryony Lavery.
The Kiev Classical Ballet will perform at Chichester for the first time from January 6, with Swan Lake and The Nutcracker.
Roots Around the World take up their autumn residency with music from folk singer Ralph McTell, the Ian McMillan Orchestra and a return from the Ukulele Orchestra of Great Britain.
The varied programme also includes one-night events, including stand-up comedy from Jimmy Carr and Dara Ó Briain, appearances by Sandi Toksvig and the ever-popular Pam Ayres and a return of children’s theatre in the Minerva Theatre.
Booking opens for Friends of the Theatre on August 7, online only on August 14, with in-person and phone bookings from August 19, from the box office on 01243 781312 or www.cft.org.uk
SUSAN Hampshire returns to Chichester to play Lady Kitty in Somerset Maugham’s social satire The Circle.Susan is back after playing the part of Elizabeth in Chichester Festival Theatre’s 1976 production of the play.
Dorset, 1921: 30 years ago, Lady Kitty abandoned her husband and young son to run away with politician Lord Porteous.
Kitty returns from exile in Italy, worn down by age but clinging to her glamorous past. At the family reunion, she discovers that her daughter-in-law Elizabeth is tempted to embark on an affair leaving Kitty, as events turn full circle, to decide whether or not to encourage the elopement.
In his third season as artistic director of Chichester Festival Theatre Jonathan Church will direct this production.
Church previously directed Hobson’s Choice in Festival 07 and Howard Brenton and David Hare’s Pravda for Festival 06.
He also co-directed the two-part epic hit Nicholas Nickleby, which toured nationally before transferring to the West End and Canada.
Susan Hampshire’s theatre credits include The King and I, Relative Values and Lady in the Van.
Bertie Carvel plays Edward Luton. His theatre credits include Parade at the Donmar Warehouse for which he was nominated for an Olivier Award and Man of Mode and Coram Boy at the National Theatre.
Anna Farnworth plays Lady Shenstone, after appearing in The Waltz of the Toreadors in the Minerva Theatre in Festival 07.
Richard Lintern plays Arnold. His most recently appeared in The Royal Hunt of the Sun at the National Theatre.Philip Voss plays Lord Porteous. He has worked extensively with the RSC as Associate Actor and at the National Theatre.
Most recently he appeared in The Giant at Hampstead Theatre. Charity Wakefield plays Elizabeth. Known to TV audiences for her part in the TV’s Sense and Sensibility, her theatre credits include The Three Musketeers at Bristol Old Vic and Out of Joint’s A Million Plays about London.
The set is designed by Simon Higlett. Associate at CFT, his designs include Nicholas Nickleby and Office Suite.
Lighting design is by Howard Harrison. His credits include Macbeth in Festival 07 for which he received an Olivier Award. Original music is by Associate Matthew Scott, who has composed for Hobson’s Choice and Nicholas Nickleby.
The Circle plays in repertoire with The Music Man at Chichester Festival Theatre from July 22 to August 29.
Tickets, £11-£33, available online at www.cft.org.uk or from the box office on 01243 781312.
THE world première of Ronald Harwood’s new play Collarboration is part of a double bill coming to the Minerva at Chichester Festival Theatre.
Written as companion pieces, separate plays designed to complement each other, Collaboration and Taking Sides both explore the fine line between collaboration and betrayal during the Second World War.
Taking Sides also had its premiere at Chichester in the Minerva Theatre in 1995, with Michael Pennington playing the part of interrogator Major Arnold.
Thirteen years on, Pennington returns to Chichester to play Wilhelm Furtwängler, a famous conductor under cross-examination.
Prized by Hitler as the cultural jewel in the crown of the Third Reich, Furtwängler became the perfect post-war target for interrogation as a Nazi sympathiser.
In Harwood’s play, Major Steve Arnold, who has witnessed the horrors of Belsen, is about to interrogate the conductor.Pennington also plays composer Richard Strauss in Harwood’s new play Collaboration. The play opens in 1931 in a spirit of optimism as Strauss and writer Stephan Zweig embark on an invigorating artistic partnership. However, Zweig is a Jew and the Nazis are on the march.
Michael Pennington’s career has spanned more than 40 years, during which he has played a wide variety of leading roles for the RSC, the National Theatre and the English Shakespeare Company, which he co-founded in 1986 and which toured the world three times.
David Horovitch plays both Major Arnold in Taking Sides and Stefan Zweig in Collaboration. His theatre credits include in Absurd Person Singular at Theatre Royal Windsor and West End, Tony in Losing Louis at Hampstead Theatre and Burleigh in Mary Stuart at Donmar Warehouse.
The cast, which will perform in both plays, also includes Isla Blair, Pip Donaghy, Martin Hutson, Melanie Jessop, and Sophie Roberts.
Isla Blair plays Pauline Strauss. Her theatre credits include Mrs Lintott in The History Boys on a National Theatre tour and at the Wyndhams Theatre.
Pip Donaghy appeared in The Life and Adventures of Nicholas Nickleby at Chichester. Martin Hutson’s theatre credits include The Voysey Inheritance and The Mandate at the National Theatre.
Philip Franks directs. Associate director at Chichester Festival Theatre, he has previously directed The Cherry Orchard (Festival 08), Twelfth Night (Festival 07) and co-directed The Life and Adventures of Nicholas Nickleby (Festivals 06 and 07, UK tour, West End and Toronto).
CFT associate Simon Higlett designs with Mark Jonathan as lighting designer and Matthew Scott composing original music.
All were part of the creative team behind The Life and Adventures of Nicholas Nickleby. John Leonard is sound designer.
Taking Sides and Collaboration are at the Minerva Theatre, Chichester, from July 16 to August 30. Tickets, £19 and £25, available online at www.cft.org.uk or from the box office on 01243 781312.
A NEW version of Luigi Pirandello’s Six Characters in Search of an Author, directed by Rupert Goold, previews in the Minerva Theatre, Chichester.
First staged in 1921, Pirandello’s masterpiece has been updated and re-contextualised in this new adaptation by Rupert Goold and Ben Power.
Six characters arrive unannounced during the editing of a documentary film. Unfinished characters desperately in search of an author, the documentary producer agrees to let them film their story.
Pirandello’s exploration of reality and the blurred border between fiction and life, between the stage and the world outside, is transported into the 21st century in this new version.
Rupert Goold returns to the Minerva Theatre after directing Festival 07’s critically acclaimed production of Macbeth, starring Patrick Stewart, which transferred to the West End, Brooklyn Academy of Music and Broadway and has most recently been nominated for six Tony Awards.
Six Characters is a co-production with Headlong Theatre, of which Goold is artistic director. His productions for Headlong include The Last Days of Judas Iscariot, Faustus, Restoration and Paradise Lost. Ben Power is Literary Associate at Headlong and his previous adaptations for Headlong includes Faustus and Paradise Lost.
He was also dramaturge and literary associate on A Disappearing Number for Complicité, which won Olivier, Evening Standard and Critics Circle awards for Best Play.
Ian McDiarmid plays The Father. Joint artistic director of the Almeida Theatre from 1990-2002 with Jonathan Kent, his theatre credits include Jonah and Otto at the Royal Exchange and John Gabriel Borkman and Henry IV at the Donmar Warehouse.
Noma Dumezweni plays The Producer. She returns to Chichester after appearing in Festivals 03 and 04 in The Master and Margarita, A Midsummer Night’s Dream, The Coffee House and Nathan the Wise. Eleanor David plays The Mother.
Her theatre credits at Chichester include Arcadia and Three Women and a Piano Tuner. John Mackay plays the Executive. He has worked extensively with the RSC and appeared in the Histories Cycle, directed by Michael Boyd.The cast also includes Jamie Bower, Dyfan Dwyfor, Christine Entwisle, Denise Gough, Jake Harders, Jeremy Joyce, Freya Parker and Robin Pearce.
Miriam Beuther designs. Her theatre credits include The Good Soul Of Szechuan at the Young Vic, The Bacchae and Realism at the National Theatre of Scotland. Lighting Designer Malcolm Rippeth’s recent credits include Brief Encounter and Cymbeline for Kneehigh and Faustus for Headlong Theatre. Music and Sound Designer Adam Cork and Video Projectionist Lorna Heavey are part of the award-winning creative team behind Rupert Goold’s Macbeth for which Cork has been nominated for a Tony Award.
Six Characters in Search of an Author runs from June 27 to August 23. Tickets are £19 and £25 available online at www.cft.org.uk or from the box office on 01243 781312.
Calendar Girls
CHICHESTER Festival Theatre announces Festival 08, in the third season under artistic director Jonathan Church and executive director Alan Finch.
Festival 08 features a number of world premieres and new adaptations, including Ronald Harwood’s play Collaboration – a new companion piece to Taking Sides.
There are new versions of Anton Chekhov’s The Cherry Orchard and Luigi Pirandello’s Six Characters in Search of an Author as well as Tim Firth’s new adaptation of the film Calendar Girls.
FUNNY GIRL: Music by Jule Styne and Lyrics by Bob Merrill
April 28 – June 14, Minerva Theatre
Director: Angus Jackson
Designer: Mark Thompson
Choreography: Stephen Mear
Sound Designer: Matt McKenzie
Musical Director: Robert Scott
Lighting Designer: James Whiteside
Orchestrator: Jason Carr
Based on the life and career of Broadway and film star Fanny Brice and her turbulent relationship with the feckless Nicky Arnstein, Funny Girl includes the rousing number Don't Rain on My Parade.
Samantha Spiro plays Fanny Brice, the fearless ‘ugly duckling’ who sets out to win over Broadway.
Her theatre credits include Mike Leigh’s Two Thousand Years at the National Theatre, Merrily We Roll Along at the Donmar Warehouse, for which she received an Olivier Award for Best Actress in a Musical and A Little Night Music for which she received Best Supporting Actress in a Musical in the Joseph Jefferson Awards. A
ssociate director at Chichester Festival Theatre, Jackson has previously directed Carousel and The Father (Festival 06) and The Waltz of the Toreadors (Festival 07) at Chichester.
THE CHERRY ORCHARD by Anton Chekhov
15 May – 7 June, Festival Theatre
Director: Philip Franks
Designer: Leslie Travers
Music: Matthew Scott
Lighting Designer; Rick Fisher
Diana Rigg plays Mme Ranevskaya in Mike Poulton’s version of Anton Chekhov’s masterpiece in the opening production in the Festival Theatre.
Still locked in grief, Ranyevskaya returns for the first time to the country estate where her young son drowned.
The cherry trees, the pride of the province, are in glorious blossom but the estate is now neglected and mortgaged to the hilt. The cherry orchard must be sold and the trees cut down.
Brian Conley
Diana Rigg’s most recent theatre credits include All About My Mother at The Old Vic and Honour at Wyndham’s Theatre.
William Gaunt plays Gayev. His theatre credits include Humble Boy, Albert Speer and Look Back in Anger at the National Theatre.
Jemma Redgrave plays Varya. Her theatre credits include the title role in Peter Hall’s Major Barbara in the West End and A Midsummer’s Night Dream at the Albery Theatre.
Maureen Lipman plays Carlotta. Her theatre credits include Aunt Eller in Oklahoma and Florence Foster Jenkins in Glorious in the West End. Natalie Cassidy plays Dunyasha. Her theatre credits include Bedroom Farce and The Vagina Monologues.
Associate director at Chichester Festival Theatre, Philip Franks has previously co-directed The Life and Adventures of Nicholas Nickleby (Festivals 06 and 07, UK tour, London and Toronto seasons) and Twelfth Night (Festival 07).
Meredith Willson’s THE MUSIC MAN
Book, Music and Lyrics by Meredith Willson. Story by Meredith Willson and Franklin Lacey
June 23 – August 30, Festival Theatre
Director: Rachel Kavanaugh
Designer: Robert Jones
Choreographer: Stephan Mear
Lighting Designer: Howard Harrison
Sound Designer: Matt McKenzie
Orchestrator and Musical Supervisor: Steven Edis
Musical Director: Stephen Ridley
Meredith Willson’s American classic takes to the stage as Festival 08’s large-scale summer musical.
Brian Conley plays fraudster ‘Professor’ Harold Hill, determined to trick his way across America, convincing parents that he can save their wayward children through music. Scarlett Strallen plays Marian Parool, the wilful librarian who recognises Hill for the charlatan he is but nonetheless falls for his charms.
Directed by artistic director of Birmingham Repertory Theatre, Rachel Kavanaugh, the show’s hit numbers include Seventy-six Trombones, Trouble and Till There was You.
Conley’s theatre credits include Chitty Chitty Bang Bang, Jolson and Me and My Girl. Strallen’s credits include Mary Poppins and Chitty Chitty Bang Bang.
SIX CHARACTERS IN SEARCH OF AN AUTHOR by Luigi Pirandello.
A new version by Rupert Goold and Ben Power
June 27 – August 23, Minerva Theatre
Director: Rupert Goold
Designer: Miriam Beuther
Lighting Designer: Malcolm Rippeth
Sound and Music Design: Adam Cork
Video Projection: Lorna Heavey
Following the success of Festival 07’s production of Macbeth Rupert Goold returns to Chichester to direct a new version of Six Characters in Search of an Author by Luigi Pirandello.
A bold re-imagining of a masterpiece, Six Characters blurs the border between fiction and life, between the stage and the world outside. Updated and re-contextualised, it is a dark parable for a media-obsessed age and an exhilarating exploration of how we define ourselves, and what we call 'reality', in the 21st century.
This is a co-production with Headlong Theatre, of which Goold is Artistic Director. Co-adapter Ben Power is Literary Associate at Headlong and his recent work includes A Disappearing Number for Complicité.
TAKING SIDES AND COLLABORATION by Ronald Harwood
July 16 – August 30, Minerva Theatre
Director: Philip Franks
Designer: Simon Higlett
Soundtrack: Matthew Scott
Lighting Designer: Mark Jonathan
Philip Franks directs Ronald Harwood’s two companion plays. Taking Sides premiered in the Minerva Theatre in 1995 and is revived here with a world premiere of Harwood’s new play Collaboration.
After playing Major Arnold in 1995 at Chichester, Michael Pennington returns to play both Furtwängler and Strauss in the two plays.
Taking Sides focuses in on conductor Wilhelm Furtwängler. Prized by Hitler as the cultural jewel in the crown of the Third Reich, he became the perfect post-war target for interrogation as a Nazi sympathiser.
In Harwood’s play, Major Steve Arnold, who has witnessed the horrors of Belsen, is about to cross-examine the conductor.
Collaboration begins in 1931 in a spirit of optimism as composer Richard Strauss and writer Stephan Zweig embark on an invigorating artistic partnership. However, Zweig is a Jew and the Nazis are on the march.
THE CIRCLE by Somerset Maugham
July 22 – August 29, Festival Theatre
Director: Jonathan Church
Designer: Simon Higlett
Lighting Designer: Howard Harrison
Music: Matthew Scott
Jonathan Church directs Somerset Maugham’s The Circle – an elegant and entertaining social satire on the compromises and bargains of married life and the conflict between romance and responsibility.
Susan Hampshire plays Lady Kitty, recently returned to England after abandoning her husband and young son to run away with politician Lord Porteous 30 years ago.
Jonathan Church is artistic director at Chichester Festival Theatre and has previously co-directed The Life and Adventures of Nicholas Nickleby (Festivals 06 and 07, UK tour, London and Toronto seasons) and Hobson’s Choice (Festival 07).
Susan Hampshire appeared in Chichester Festival Theatre’s 1976 production of The Circle as Elizabeth. Her theatre credits include The King and I, Relative Values and Lady in the Van.
CALENDAR GIRLS by Tim Firth
September 5 to 27, Festival Theatre
Tim Firth’s brand new adaptation of the Miramax film Calendar Girls follows the fortunes of a group of extraordinary women, all members of a very ordinary Yorkshire Women’s Institute who persuade each other to pose for a charity calendar with a difference. A hit film in 2003, the story is based upon true-life events.
ARISTO by Martin Sherman
September 11 – October 11, Minerva Theatre
Director: Nancy Meckler
Designer: Katrina Lindsay
Lighting Designer: Paul Pyant
Music and Sound: Ilona Sekacz
Martin Sherman’s new play Aristo completes Festival 08 in the Minerva. Robert Lindsay plays tycoon Aristotle Onassis in a world premiere based on the last years of his life, including his complex connections and interwoven relationships with Jackie Kennedy and Maria Callas, and his son Alexandros.
Robert Lindsay
Nancy Meckler is an artistic director of Shared Experience. Her recent work for the Royal Shakespeare Company includes The Comedy of Errors and Romeo and Juliet. Robert Lindsay’s most recent credits include The Entertainer at The Old Vic and the title role in Channel 4’s The Trial of Tony Blair.
TOAD OF TOAD HALL by AA Milne
August 4 – 16, Promenade performance at Rolls-Royce, Goodwood
Director: Dale Rooks
Designer Siobhan Ferrie
Composer and Music: Jeff Moore
Chichester Festival Youth Theatre returns to the great outdoors with A A Milnes’ adaptation of the classic Kenneth Grahame book for children, Toad of Toad Hall.
Following the success of Festival 06’s Grimm Tales and Festival 05’s Arabian Nights, audiences will follow the action in various locations around Rolls-Royce Motor Cars manufacturing plant at Goodwood.
Priority Booking for Friends of the Theatre opens on February 21. To become a Friend of the Theatre and benefit from priority booking and discounted tickets, call 01243 781312 or join online at www.cft.org.uk/friends
General booking opens online only on March 6 with in person and phone bookings from Monday 10 March. Tickets £11 – £36 available from the box office on 01243 781312 or online at www.cft.org.uk
Hear artistic director Jonathan Church talking about Festival 07 and 08 at
http://www.cft.org.uk/
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