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24/03/2025

Cast: The Bench

Final Team Sheet Announced for The Bench by Jeff Brown

A CaroleW Productions & Gala Durham Co-Production

The Bench - A moving tale of love, loss and football

Written by Jeff Brown 

Directed by Olivia Millar-Ross

Touring the North East & Cumbria: Thursday 22 May - Saturday 21 June 2025

CaroleW Productions and Gala Durham are delighted to announce the full team sheet for The Bench, a moving and humorous play about love, loss and football, written by broadcaster and playwright Jeff Brown. The highly anticipated regional tour will kick off on Thursday 22 May 2025 at Gala Durham, with fixtures scheduled across the North East and Cumbria before concluding on Saturday 21 June 2025 at The Customs House in South Shields.

Jeff Brown
Photo: Cultured. North East

Newly announced fixtures include stops at Live Theatre in Newcastle, Monkwearmouth Academy in Sunderland - where Jeff attended school - and community spaces across the region as part of the Highlights Rural Touring Scheme.

The talented cast for the play includes Jason Njoroge, Hannah Marie Davis, Abigail Lawson, Dan Howe and David Nellist.



“This cast embodies everything we hoped for – talent, passion, and a deep understanding of the characters’ journeys, and I can’t wait to see them bring The Bench to life” said Jeff. “On the surface, it’s a boy-meets-girl story, but there’s so much more beneath it – themes of poverty, racism, and searching for your place in the world. Even the title has layers of meaning, from where the characters meet to Adi’s struggles on the substitutes’ bench, and the feeling that both of them are waiting for their chance. It’s a play packed with humour and heart, and if it can spark conversations and bring people together, then that’s something really special.”

The Bench tells the story of Vicky (Hannah Marie Davis), a single mother struggling with the pressures of daily life, and Adi (Jason Njoroge), a young footballer striving to find his place both on and off the pitch. Though from different worlds, their unexpected meeting on a park bench reveals shared struggles and unlikely hope. Abigail Lawson plays Becs, Vicky’s best friend, with David Nellist as Mike, Ali’s agent. Dan Howe completes this stellar ensemble cast.

With its sharp wit, heartfelt storytelling, and relatable characters, The Bench is much more than a play about football - it’s a touching and entertaining story about life, resilience and connection.

Whether you’re a football fanatic or don’t know the offside rule, this is a feel-good night out filled with laughter, warmth, and a few surprises along the way.


Carole Wears of CaroleW Productions, co-producer of The Bench said: “We’re beyond excited to share The Bench with audiences. It’s a play brimming with emotion that tackles big themes with humour and a touch of football magic. But you don’t have to be a football fan to enjoy it - this is a story about people, about life’s ups and downs, and about finding connection in the most unexpected places. We want audiences to come along, have a brilliant night out, and experience the kind of theatre that stays with you after the final whistle. This production is part of CaroleW Productions commitment to making theatre with heart, right here in the North East of England.”

Learning Engagement activity for The Bench is supported by the North East Combined Authority and Show Racism the Red Card, the UK’s leading anti-racism educational charity. An early version of The Bench premiered at The Customs House in South Shields, in 2023.

Tickets:

For full tour dates, visit: www.carolewproductions.com/the-bench 

Suitability: Approx. 2 hours including an interval

Duration: 14+

Full Tour Dates & Venues

• Thursday 22 May 1pm & 7.30pm, Friday 23 May, 7.30pm & Saturday 24 May, 2.30pm & 7.30pm – Gala Durham

• Tuesday 27 May, 7.30pm - Coundon & Leeholme Community Centre

• Wednesday 28 May, 2.30pm & 7.30pm – The Exchange 1856, North Shields

• Thursday 29 May, 7.30pm - Askham & Helton Community Centre, Cumbria*

• Friday 30 May, 7.30pm - Kentmere Institute, Cumbria*

• Saturday 31 May, 7.30pm - Hamsterley Village Hall, County Durham*

• Sunday 1 June, 7.30pm - Great Whittington Village Hall, Northumberland*

• Wednesday 4 June, 7.30pm – Middlesbrough Town Hall

• Thursday 5 June, 7.30pm – Arts Centre Washington

• Friday 6 June, 7.30pm - Alnwick Playhouse

• Sunday 8 June, 3pm – St Johns Hall Meadowfield, County Durham

• Tuesday 10 June, 12.45pm & 7.30pm – Queen’s Hall Arts Centre, Hexham

• Wednesday 11 June, 7.30pm, Thursday 12 June, 1pm & 7.30pm, Friday 13 June, 7.30pm and Saturday 14 June, 7.30pm - Live Theatre

• Tuesday 17 June, 7pm - Monkwearmouth Academy, Sunderland

• Wednesday 18 June, 1pm & 7.30pm – Bishop Auckland Town Hall

• Thursday 19 June, 7.30pm - Saltburn Community Theatre

• Friday 20 & Saturday 21 June, 7.30pm – The Customs House, South Shields

*These dates are presented as part of the Highlights Rural Touring Scheme.

Interview: Adam Strong, Rocky Horror Show in Darlington

 Talking Frankly With Adam Strong


North East born Adam Strong will be donning his best pair of fishnet stocking as he struts on to the Darlington Hippodrome stage as Frank n Furter in the UK Tour of The Rocky Horror Show at the end of March. We spoke to Adam about the show, his role and his stage highlights.

Adam Strong (Frank n Furter)
Photo:  David Freeman

Age, partner, kids, pets?? Where you live now? When did you first realise you had some talent - was it encouraged at school? At home?

I have 5 dogs at the family home, I’m based just outside of Durham, but I’m always on the tour. 

My sister was a dancer for many years, and I used to love watching her, especially in the Panto at the Sunderland Empire, which she did for many years. She was the one who encouraged me to get started in musical theatre and helped me land my first role in the Sound of Music at the Sunderland Empire.


Adam Strong (Frank n Furter)
Photo:  David Freeman

Tell me a bit about your childhood, growing up in the North East. Do you still consider yourself a North-Easterner? Do you still have your Sunderland accent?

I very much consider myself as someone from the North East. My accent is quite mild now. But it certainly comes out when I speak to my Mam, or when I’m at home. 


What was the first major role you played and where?

My first musical as an adult was Jesus Christ Superstar, the Arena tour, Starring Tim Minchin and Mel C, I played a priest and understudied the role of Annas. I had the most amazing time touring the world with that show and performing in an arena was just unbelievable.


Adam Strong (Frank n Furter)
Photo:  David Freeman

You've performed all over the world. What have been the highlights (venues and roles).

I have many career highlights, I think performing opposite Brian May for our Gala Performance of We Will Rock You will always stick out as being one of my proudest moments. The North East always has a special place in my heart, so anytime I get to come home to perform is a blessing. 


Have you played Frank n Furter before - what do you love about the role?

I haven’t played Frank before until this tour, it has always been a dream and goal of mine. It’s such an empowering role and I get to sing all of my favourite songs and be part of the cult musical’s history. 


Adam Strong

Are you looking forward to performing back in the region and will you be visiting family while you are here? Do you get to come back home to Sunderland much? And when you do, what are your favourite places in the region to visit?

I can’t wait to bring the show back to the North East, I’ve got a lot of friends and family who are coming to support me. I’ll be staying at my house which is rare and my parents live on the same street as me, so I can’t wait for some home cooked food and to get to see the dogs. I get back home when I can, it just all depends on my tour schedule, I’m quite south for a lot of this tour, so not as much as I’d like. I’m looking forward to getting some fresh sea air when I’m home and having some proper fish and chips, nobody does it like we do. 


What's next on the Adam Strong agenda?

As for what’s next, it’s way too early to say, I’m with Rocky Horror until the end of August, so I haven’t even started auditioning for the next project as yet.  


Tickets:

The Rocky Horror Show runs at Darlington Hippodrome from Monday 31 March to Saturday 5 April. For full details or to book visit www.darlingtonhippodrome.co.uk or call the Box Office on 01325 405405



Intrview: Tina – The Tina Turner Musical at Sunderland Empire

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Simply The Best

Liam Rudden interviews Jochebel Ohene MacCarthy and Elle Ma-Kinga N’Zuzi ahead of Tina – The Tina Turner Musical reaching Sunderland this week for the first time

This week sees Tina – The Tina Turner Musical visiting Sunderland Empire from Wednesday 26 March to Saturday 5 April 2025 on the first ever UK and Ireland tour. 

Elle Ma-Kinga N’Zuzi and Jochebel Ohene MacCarthy will share the iconic role of Tina Turner, alongside David King-Yombo as Ike Turner. Martin Allanson will play Record Producer Phil Spector, with William Beckerleg as record company Marketing Manager Erwin Bach, Rushand Chambers as Tina’s father Richard Bullock, Claude East as Tina’s grandmother Gran Georgeanna (GG), Isaac Elder as Tina’s Manager Roger Davies, Georgia Gillam as Tina’s sister Alline Bullock, Letitia Hector as Tina’s mother Zelma Bullock, Kyle Richardson as Tina’s first love Raymond Hill, and Gemma Sutton as Ike and Tina’s manager Rhonda Graam.

On the 24th of May 2023, Anna Mae Bullock, the ‘Queen of Rock ’n’ Roll better known to the world as Tina Turner, died at her home in Küsnacht, Switzerland, at the age of 83. 

Jochebel Ohene MacCarthy

It was a day that Jochebel Ohene MacCarthy will never forget as, at the time, she was starring as the pop legend in the Australian production of Tina - The Tina Turner Musical. It wouldn’t be until the next day that she would learn of the sad news, making that night’s performance one of the most emotional of her career. 

Looking back, she recalls, “When I first performed this show, Tina was still alive, a week after we opened, she passed. I didn't know until I started receiving messages from people the next day telling me how sorry they were to hear the sad news. I was like, ‘Whoa, whoa, whoa...’ 

“That night, the house was packed, people wanted to be there to pay their respects and show their gratitude. Having experienced doing the show with the potential for Tina to walk in the door at any moment, that night I experienced it with the potential of her presence being there… the emotion was phenomenal, a different level of performance, like an out of body experience.” 

Gemma Sutton (Rhonda Graam) and Jochebel Ohene MacCarthy (Tina).
Photo by Johan Persson


MacCarthy is one of two performers reprising their role as Tina for the UK tour of the smash hit musical that charts the highs and lows of the singer’s journey from Nutbush, Tennessee, to becoming one of the world’s best loved performers. Joining MacCarthy on the production directed by Phyllida Lloyd (Mamma Mia!) is Elle Ma-Kinga N’Zuzi - the pair will alternate the role.

Elle Ma-Kinga N'Zuzi

Today, both Tina’s are together, sharing their love of the star who first came to public attention as one half of Ike and Tina Turner and later scored global success on her own with songs such as What’s Love Got To Do With It?, We Don’t Need Another Hero, and, of course, The Best.

Elle Ma-Kinga N’Zuzi (Tina) and Ikettes
Photo by Johan Persson 
N’Zuzi says, “My foster dad was a huge fan of Tina Turner, consequently, she was the first black artist I was introduced to as he had all her cassettes and CDs. I’d dance in front of the TV whenever she was on, that’s why they sent me to dance school, to stop me blocking the view of the telly.”

As a child, N’Zuzi’s party-piece was Proud Mary, indeed you could say she was destined to play her current role, “Maybe there was something in the stars,” she agrees, admitting her road to the musical was “random”. 

She explains, “I was in rock bands at the time and at several concerts I'd been asked to sing the likes of Proud Mary. I was working in Germany when the producers needed an alternate Tina and they emailed me. I thought, ‘Why not? So, I went along, and I got the job. It just happened.” 

It was at the age of seven that MacCarthy first came across the name Tina Turner thanks to a singing birthday card she’d bought for her mum. She laughs as she recalls, “That was the first time I ever came across her name, it was back in the day when you got these cards that, when opened, would sing. This one sang, ‘Simply the best,’ over and over again."

To their regret, neither N’Zuzi nor MacCarthy met the rock legend whose story they tell, the former missing the opportunity to do so by just a few months. 

Jochebel Ohene MacCarthy (Tina Turner).
Photo by Johan Persson
“Tina had visited the show a few months before I joined during a cast change,” she says. “So, half of the cast had met her, the other half, like me, had not. But I discovered that Tina loved Germany and that when she ran away from Ike, she hid in Stuttgart, just around the corner from our theatre there. Not many people are aware of that. In fact, while I was there, I went to a local recording studio to record some stuff and there, on the walls, were all these amazing photos of Tina that I’d never seen before.” 

Being on stage when Tina died meant MacCarthy couldn’t pay her respects to the star until the tour had finished, at which point she embarked on a pilgrimage to Switzerland, to visit Tina’s home. 

“I went to her house and laid some flowers by her door. Unlike many huge stars who live in secluded communities, her house was by the road, she always wanted to be accessible. I spent 45 minutes there; I knew she wasn’t there, but I wanted the connection of having walked the streets that she would have walked. It allowed me to say, 'Thank you,' to her for being the incredible woman she was and for giving strength to so many people. It was a visit filled with joy and gratitude.”

Elle Ma-Kinga N'Zuzi (Tina) and William Beckerleg (Erwin Bach).
Photo by Johan Persson


For both actors, telling Tina’s story is a challenge they are revelling in, from her trademark strut to her powerful, distinctive vocals, they have spent many hours studying the singer in order to capture her essence.  

“Our choreographer Simone Mistry-Palmer worked a lot with Tina so knew all the moves. She has ensured that what you see in the show is faithful to what Tina did on stage and both Jochebel and I have watched a lot of videos. We still do because we are very different Tinas,’ says N’Zuzi, adding, "No one will ever be her, but as we are telling her story, we have a toolbox of things we can choose to implement in the songs, for example, she had a very specific way of forming some words that audiences expect to hear."

MacCarthy confesses that the famous strut was something she took time to master. “That whole Tina-esque presence was definitely something I had to work at and took about eight or nine weeks to perfect, but with Tina you are constantly learning. If you want to be better and better you have to constantly go back to the documentaries about her, to revisit her story, and then drive that into your performance. Every day, you learn something new. The thing is, when you finish rehearsals and go to the shops and suddenly hear, 'What’s love got to do, got to do with it...' coming over the store's speakers, you do think, “Tina's following me. She wants me to do better - that’s how I feel anyway.”

“Me too," laughs N’Zuzi.

With such an iconic back-catalogue to choose from, it almost seems unfair to ask the pair to choose their favourite song, for the record it's Tina’s cover of The Tramps’ classic floor-filler, Disco Inferno, although MacCarthy, adds, “I also love singing I Can’t Stand The Rain because a sample of it was used in Missy Elliot’s The Rain (Supa Dupa Fly) - I like that, the past and the present coming together through Tina’s influence.”

N’Zuzi ranks River Deep Mountain High and, unsurprisingly, Proud Mary among her favourites, but admits, “It’s so hard to choose, however, my favourite moment in the show is when it's time to sing Simply The Best. The second the audience hears the introduction they are on their feet, singing out loud and in that moment Tina is alive. I look up and think, ‘Tina’s up there somewhere watching this going, ‘Oh, this one again…’.” 

Simply The Best begins the musical's explosive concert finale, which recreates Turner's record-breaking 1988 show in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. Recalling the first night she stepped in front of an audience to deliver that scene, N’Zuzi reveals the audience reaction left her in tears. “I cried because, oh my God, I had done it, we had done it, and the audience gave us so much love. We were celebrating and honouring Tina together.” 

That love continues at the stage door, says MacCarthy, “When you come out the Stage Door, having given it your all, and audience members, many of whom saw Tina in concert, are waiting to thank you for giving them back the memory of seeing her live, it is so encouraging. It’s a lovely, lovely feeling, so many blessings of love that can sometimes be a little overwhelming.”

N’Zuzi smiles, as she remembers, “I’m quite small in real life, so often I’m not recognised, but when I started playing Tina, my hair was shaved. When I walked back to my car after the show people never recognised me. I’d hear them replaying the medley at the end of the show on their phones, saying things like, ‘Oh my god, she is Tina Turner!’ I’d stay silent but hearing them say that was such a gift for me. I’d just have a little smile. But it’s also lovely to do pictures and sign for people. Hearing them tell you how much they loved the show is so validating. That’s why you do it, to make people happy and feel nostalgic." 

Elle Ma-Kinga N’Zuzi (Tina).
 Photo by Johan Persson


As they prepare to take Tina’s story around the UK, just what would they say to the Queen of Rock if she were to appear in their dressing room one night?

“Thank you… but then there would be so much to say, I think I would lock the door so that we could have a chat for about three hours..." laughs N'Zuzi, "… and then I’d cry.” 

“I’d scream, either out of excitement or fear...” beams MacCarthy, without a second's hesitation, “... and when I’d finished screaming, I’d ask, ‘What are you doing here?’ Because I’m not worthy of being in the presence of such greatness.”

  Jochebel Ohene MacCarthy (Tina Turner).
Photo by Johan Persson


N'Zuzi speaks for both of them, when she says, “That’s the great thing about Tina - The Tina Turner Musical, it ensures her amazing story can live on, and on, and on, and we are honoured to be keeping a part of her alive.”

Tina – The Tina Turner Musical  is the story of legendary artist Tina Turner, the twelve-time Grammy Award winning Queen of Rock ‘n’ Roll. Set to the pulse-pounding soundtrack of her iconic hits, including The Best, What’s Love Got To Do With It?, Private Dancer and River Deep, Mountain High, the musical is an inspiring true story of a woman who dared to dream fiercely, shatter barriers and defy the bounds of age, gender, and race to conquer the world against all odds.

Tina – The Tina Turner Musical  continues to run in the West End at the Aldwych Theatre, where it has played for over 6 years following its world premiere, receiving critical acclaim, and breaking all Box Office records at the venue. It is currently booking until 25 October 2025 - making it the longest running show to ever run at the Aldwych. The production is also a global success, with 8 productions having opened worldwide since 2018, including on Broadway and across North America, Germany, Spain, Netherlands and Australia. The show is currently on tour in both North America and Australia.

Directed by Phyllida Lloyd and written by Olivier Award and Pulitzer Prize-winner Katori Hall, with Frank Ketelaar and Kees Prins, Tina – The Tina Turner Musical L is choreographed by Anthony van Laast, with set and costume designs by Mark Thompson, musical supervision by Nicholas Skilbeck, lighting by Bruno Poet, sound by Nevin Steinberg, projection design by Jeff Sugg, orchestrations by Ethan Popp, and wigs, hair and makeup design by Campbell Young Associates, casting by Pippa Ailion CDG and Natalie Gallacher CDG.

Tickets:

Tina – The Tina Turner Musical will hit Sunderland Empire’s stage from Wednesday 26 March – Saturday 5 April 2025. Tickets available online now at ATGTickets.com/ Sunderland*

* A £3.95 transaction fee may apply to online bookings. 

 

23/03/2025

News: Theatre To Capture Your Heart – New Season On Sale Now At Newcastle Theatre Royal!


Theatre To Capture Your Heart – New Season On Sale Now At Newcastle Theatre Royal


From heartwarming stories to breathtaking spectacles, the new season at Newcastle Theatre Royal promises unforgettable moments that will stay with you long after the curtain falls. Featuring world-class productions, thrilling drama, and show-stopping musicals, this is theatre to capture your heart.


Now in its 10th anniversary year, Project A is Newcastle Theatre Royal’s professional actor training programme. For their final production, this year’s students present The Skriker (Tue 8 – Fri 11 Jul 2025), a story of love, loss, and transformation in the newly refurbished Studio theatre. 
Max Harwood and Paisley Billings
The Lightning Thief - Photo: Manuel Harlan


Adapted from Rick Riordan’s best-selling Percy Jackson novel, The Lightning Thief (Wed 27 – Sun 31 Aug 2025) is the perfect school holiday treat for gods, half-bloods and mortals! Join Percy and his friends on an epic adventure, guaranteed to have you on the edge of your seat.


Opera North return to Newcastle Theatre Royal later this year with another stunning Winter season featuring Puccini’s ever-popular La bohème (Wed 5 – Sat 8 Nov 2025), an exciting new collaboration between Opera North and Phoenix Dance Theatre in Handel’s Susanna (Fri 7 Nov) and a production for all the family, The Big Opera Mystery (Sat 8 Nov 2025). Opera North return in Spring 2026 with Mozart’s unmissable opera, The Marriage of Figaro (Thu 19 – Sat 21 Mar 2026), and Britten’s outstanding Peter Grimes (Fri 20 Mar 2026).

Griffin Stevens as Harry Maguire and the cast of
Dear England in the West End 2023. Photo: Marc Brenner

In the week the England team play their final first-round qualifier for the 2026 World Cup, National Theatre’s Dear England (Tue 11 – Sat 15 Nov 2025) tells the uplifting, at times heartbreaking, and ultimately inspiring story of Gareth Southgate’s revolutionary tenure as England manager in a gripping examination of the nation and game.


With 5,000 tickets to week-day performances being donated to local schools, Sat 31 Jan 2026 will be the first opportunity for the public to experience Weird, the electrifying pop-powered musical reimagining Shakespeare’s Macbeth through the eyes of the fiercely fabulous and fun three witches, which is making its world premiere at Newcastle Theatre Royal. 


Marking the first-ever stage adaptation of the iconic detective, Inspector Morse (Tue 3 – Sat 7 Feb 2026) is a must-see for fans of compelling detective stories and thrilling mysteries, and ABBA fans can enjoy the ultimate feel-good factor when MAMMA MIA! (Wed 11 – Sat 28 Feb 2026) brings the Greek sunshine to Newcastle next year. 


Photo: Brinkhoff-Moegenburg
In Spring, the Royal Shakespeare Company return to Newcastle with a spectacular new production of Hamlet (Tue 31 Mar – Sat 4 Apr 2026). Fresh from its run in Stratford-upon-Avon, this gripping production of Shakespeare’s famous revenge drama visits Newcastle Theatre Royal as part of a major national tour.


A true celebration of the power of love, friendship and embracing others for who they are, grab your heels, pack the glitter and get ready to Shake Your Groove Thing when Priscilla Queen of the Desert (Mon 6 – Sat 11 Apr 2026) comes to Newcastle next year!


Set in 1934 Alabama, To Kill a Mockingbird (Tue 21 – Sat 25 Apr 2026) is the thrilling courtroom drama inspired by novelist Harper Lee’s own childhood. Having sold more than 45 million copies worldwide, this award-winning stage adaptation is set to be popular with fans both old and new.

And finally, the intoxicating drama where life imitates art with fateful consequences, Matthew Bourne’s spectacular production of The Red Shoes (Tue 28 Apr – Sat 9 May 2026) will dazzle your senses and break your heart when it is brought to life on stage for fans to enjoy once more in 2026.

Tickets:

Tickets for all performances can be purchased at www.theatreroyal.co.uk or from the Theatre Royal Box Office on 0191 232 7010 after the booking dates below.


Booking Dates:

Friends Plus: Mon 24 Mar, 10am
Friends: Fri 28 Mar, 10am
Flexi Priority Pass, Groups and Schools: Tue 1 Apr, 10am
Public: Fri 4 Apr, 10am




18/03/2025

REVIEW: The Shark is Broken at Newcastle Theatre Royal

The Shark is Broken

Newcastle Theatre Royal

Until Saturday 22 March 2025


A play about making a classic feature film has arrived in Newcastle this week. Co-writer Ian Shaw is the son of actual Jaws actor Robert Shaw, and he gets to appear in this play as his father.


The movie Jaws (1975), directed by Steven Spielberg, was a thriller about a great white shark terrorizing the small beach town of Amity Island. As the shark attacks locals and tourists, the town's police chief, a marine biologist, and a grizzled fisherman work together to capture and kill the creature. 



The filming was not smooth as it had mechanical sharks braking down, boats sinking, actors arguing fiercely, and regular script changes. This show focusses on the three stars, Roy Scheider, Richard Dreyfuss and Robert Shaw, who found themselves stuck on a small boat called the Orca for sixteen weeks with little to do except drive each other crazy.



The show begins with Bruce (as the mechanical Shark is called) heading across the screens at the back of the stage to the instantly recognisable music from John Williams before promptly breaking down again. Dan Fredenburgh appears as the calm and collected Roy Scheider who is taking the delays, and endless filming, in his stride. His two co-stars are something of a contrast. The younger Richard Dreyfuss, at this stage of his career is still looking for the movie that will make his name. Ashley Margolis plays him is a way that suggests that he can be irritating in such a small space as this boat the the three of them find themselves on Dreyfuss hopes to perform in a Shakespearean play - or work with Pinter himself - in order to get that creditability that he craves.



After the audience get to know these two, Ian Shaw appears as his real life father, Robert Shaw. This character is very British. Irascible, cantankerous and not someone who easily suffers fools. Whilst Dreyfuss is after some glamour, Shaw is there for a profit sharing payday. (A good move it seems as the $9 million movie who go on to make a reported $476.5 million). 



The set is a cutaway of the boat. The cabin lending itself to cabin fever as the three actors await the repairs to Bruce to take place so they can get on with filming at some indeterminate point in the future. They talk, discuss the newspaper, play card games and Shaw even introduces them to shove ha'penny. The comedic moment come from the shared cultural capital with the audience. For example a description of Present Nixon is clearly aligned to the current president. When discussing movies, two of them assume Jaws will be a quickly forgotten flop. Likewise they assume that recent movies like The Exorcist will fade away. Of course they may have done if it had not been for the home video revolution that was around the corner - but that is the point. The actors talk as they don't know the future - but the audience does. Certainly, the audience has plenty to laugh about and for many, The Shark Is Broken will pass the six laughs test to confirm the show as a comedy.



For others, they may find the knowing suggestions of incorrect predictions tyring after a while. Do you need to have seen Jaws to get the plot, is another question? Most of the audience on opening night seem to be familiar with it. Most laughed when Scheider jokes about appearing in an unlikely sequel. I, for one, cannot remember seeing the sequel - was it that bad?



Despite the antagonistic characters that they portray, the show works as they is on stage chemistry between Shaw, Fredenburgh and Margolis. The decision to go 90 minutes without an interval helps keep the momentum and tension between the scenes. Simple staging enables the show to be about these three men who would not choose to be at sea with one another for a number of weeks.



The Shark Is Broken was, in my opinion, an enjoyable and entertaining night at the theatre. Classic drama, with comedic overtones, make for an accessible piece that went down well with the audience. Not only did it make us want to watch Jaws again - but also Close Encounters!


Review: Stephen Oliver

Photo: Manuel Harlan

Tickets:

The Shark is Broken plays Newcastle Theatre Royal Tuesday 18 – Saturday 22 March 2025. Tickets can be purchased at www.theatreroyal.co.uk or from the Theatre Royal Box Office on 0191 232 7010.