I, DANIEL BLAKE
Newcastle Northern Stage,
Friday 20 March – Thursday 2 April 2026
Adapted by Dave Johns
Produced by Northern Stage in association with Leeds Playhouse
From the Palme d'Or and BAFTA award-winning film directed by Ken Loach, written by Paul Laverty
First produced to great acclaim in 2023, I, Daniel Blake returns to Northern Stage — the theatre where it was born — before embarking on a new UK tour. Dave Johns, the actor, comedian and original Daniel Blake, adapted Ken Loach's devastating Palme d'Or-winning film for the stage, and the result remains one of the most urgent pieces of political theatre to emerge from the North East in years.
The story is a simple but
devastating one. Daniel Blake is a 59-year-old Newcastle joiner who, following
a heart attack, is deemed unfit for work by his doctor — yet rejected for
Employment and Support Allowance by a government assessor. Caught between a
system that won't support him and a jobs market he can't safely re-enter,
Daniel is forced to navigate an online bureaucracy designed, it seems, to
defeat him. Along the way he befriends Katie, a young single mother with two
children who has been relocated from London to Newcastle, equally bruised by
the same indifferent machinery. Their friendship, and their shared defiance, is
the beating heart of the play.
Director Mark Calvert and lead
actor David Nellist — winner of Best Performing Artist at the 2023 North East
Culture Awards — both return to the production, with Jessica Johnson joining as
Katie. Together they ask the question at the heart of the piece: has anything
really changed?
Calvert is a working class
theatre-maker from the North East, and his connection to this material is
deeply personal. During the original run he visited Newcastle food banks
regularly, witnessing first-hand the scale of need in the city. That experience
shaped a production which never tips into sentimentality, instead trusting its
audience — many of whom will recognise the world on stage — to draw their own
conclusions. "This production stands as a testament to the need for
realignment," he has said, "a call to keep telling these
stories until our country truly supports its most vulnerable."
David Nellist is a Newcastle
native, known to television audiences from Sherlock and Stonehouse,
while his stage work spans West End productions including Billy Elliott,
War Horse, and the Olivier Award-nominated Animal Farm. His
return to the role of Daniel is a homecoming in every sense — he grew up in
Wallsend and his award-winning portrayal has been described as one of the most
committed performances seen on a North East stage in recent memory.
Jessica Johnson takes on the
role of Katie and brings formidable credentials to the part. A Journal Culture
Award winner, she is perhaps best known locally for the multi-award-winning Key
Change with Open Clasp Theatre and the 40th Anniversary National Tour of Educating
Rita. Her television credits include Vera, Casualty and Coronation
Street. She is an instinctive, deeply naturalistic actor, and the scenes
between her and Nellist in the original production were among the most
emotionally charged of any show in the region that year.
Completing the ensemble are
four actors who all appeared in the original run: Micky Cochrane — Performing
Artist of the Year at the NE Culture Awards 2025, and a cornerstone of North
East theatre for decades — alongside Janine Leigh, Kema Sikazwe, and Jodie
Wild. Their collective experience and familiarity with the material gives this
revival a lived-in assurance that a fresh cast could not replicate.
The creative team is equally
strong. Designer Rhys Jarman, Lighting Designer Simisola Majekodunmi and
Movement Director Martin Hylton return alongside Calvert to recreate a
production that won Excellence in Touring at the 2023 UK Theatre Awards. At the
same year's North East Culture Awards, Dave Johns took home Best Writer and
Nellist Best Performing Artist — a rare double that reflected the depth of
quality on and off the stage.
The statistics behind the
story are hard to ignore. UK food banks distributed 2.9 million emergency food
parcels in 2024–25 — a 51% rise in five years. In October 2024, around 3.2
million of the poorest households cut back on food or went hungry. I, Daniel
Blake does not lecture its audience about these numbers. It simply shows you
one man, one woman, two children — and what happens when the state turns its
back.
Tickets:
Running: 20 March – 2
April 2026
Box Office: 0191 230 5151
Online: www.northernstage.co.uk
Venue: Northern Stage,
Barras Bridge, Newcastle upon Tyne, NE1 7RH
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