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22/09/2024

Interview: Stephen Daldry (An Inspector Calls at Sunderland Empire)

Director Stephen Daldry’s insight into An Inspector Calls - coming to Sunderland Empire in April

An Inspector Calls

Sunderland Empire

Tuesday 8 – Saturday 12 April 2025

An Inspector Calls 2024. Photo by Mark Douet

Following a sell-out tour in 2022, Stephen Daldry’s multi award-winning National Theatre production of JB Priestley’s An Inspector Calls is back touring the UK for 2024-25. We spoke to acclaimed director Stephen Daldry about reviving his seminal production, which arrives at Sunderland Empire from Tuesday 8 to Saturday 12 April 2025.


When you were first asked to direct An Inspector Calls for the York Theatre in 1989, in a previous production, you weren't sure about it. Why was that?


It was pretty much a staple of amateur theatre companies at the time. It took some time of researching Priestley, where he wrote it, why he wrote it, where it was first performed, how it was first performed, before I realised that it was much more of a radical piece than it had become known as.


JB himself was a little uninspired by the original London production in 1946. It had originally been done in two theatres in Moscow, and those productions were quite radical. So I tried to bring it back to his radical roots and tried to do production which I thought JB might be more interested in. 


Stephen Daldry



Did you ever meet JB Priestley, who died in 1984? 


Sadly I never met JB, but I was lucky enough to meet Jacquetta Hawkes, who was his wife and a very famous archaeologist. I went to see her and talked her through this production, and got her blessing. I did say to her at the time - I'm trying to do a production which reveals the play as it was meant to be written, and do tell me if you think I've gone off beam. And she loved it.


Tom Priestley, his son, was involved in this production from the very early days. Tom was a great friend to the show, and to me. We talked him through it almost every time, in terms of casting, and Tom would always come and see how it was doing. I felt incredibly supported by Tom. But it was because Jacquetta supported the production, I think that I carried on.

 

An Inspector Calls 2024. Photo by Mark Douet


This production has toured almost every year since 1992. Did you imagine at the time that it could be a long runner?


Not at all. It was originally programmed for quite a short run at the National, and then they had a tour booked. I think there was a certain nervousness at the National about what I was doing. We had some leading actors of the day in the show, Barbara Leigh-Hunt and Richard Pasco, for example, who were not to be revealed straightaway. And there were cobbles, and there was rain, and it was quite - it is still quite - a demanding show for the actors.


I think there was a nervousness about a radical reworking of a classic. But in the end, it all worked fine. And then it just carried on - we transferred it and transferred it again. I can't remember off the top of my head how many West End theatres we've been in, but quite a few. 


What changes have you made over that time? 


Remarkably, very few. It's pretty much the same production as it was when we opened at the National. It's interesting to watch a production that you did all those years ago, that's almost exactly the same production, of a young director grappling with this play. I'm not sure now if I would have done quite the same production, or been as bold as I was in my late twenties. I'm 64 now, so it's a long time ago. It’s a work from a younger version of yourself. 


What is it like returning to something as opposed to working on something new? 


What I love about the play is how it is perceived each time it's done; how the audience reacts. It always seems to be a play for today - a play of our times in one way or another. And it does often intersect with issues of the day. So the issue of the day, for example, would be a young mother, who's living on her own, about to have a baby, and can't find any means of economic support for that. That thing about mothers, about single mothers, about who's meant to support them, what is the role or responsibility of the father, of the family, of the state, still feels like a very current conversation. 

An Inspector Calls 2024. Photo by Mark Douet


Is that why it is being revived again now?


When we first performed it, it was very much in the world of Margaret Thatcher's Conservative government, and Thatcher herself was saying there's no such thing as society, there's only men and women and families, and so this was, in a sense, a broadside against that mentality and against that Edwardian idea. 


The original idea of the production was to have a conversation between three time zones - [it’s set in 1912], Priestley was writing it in 1944-45. It was about trying to create a social debate. There was a Labour government almost inevitably coming in, but the conversation in 1945, about what kind of society we wanted after the war, what is Britain, what sort of society do we want to be a part of now, was very current and very important for JB, who himself was an MP. He stood for the Common Wealth Party; essentially a socialist independent.


That conversation still feels as current today as it did when we first did the play in ‘92, and indeed, when JB first wrote the play in the great Labour landslide of 1945.


It’s a sort of modern morality play - is that something that we do much of these days? 


No, I don't think we do. It is a morality play and it's a little bit agitation and propaganda. You have a character who stands in front of the audience and says what he thinks and what we should be doing, and I love that. I think it's thrilling to have a political play that's directly in conversation with his audience.


When we did it in New York, a lot of the audience felt that it was verging on communist. Some people would leave, saying I don't like this, it's preachy, and so on. It wears its morality on his sleeve. 


Can art inspire social change?


I think that's the reason why we do it. I've always believed anything you make that's in a genuine conversation about the world we live in, shifts the conversation, and even if it makes just one person think or change, then yes. Trying to make the world a better place and trying to have a conversation about the world we live in is, I think, the point of doing any piece of work.


An Inspector Calls was a sort of call to action when it was written, that prefigured the welfare state. How do you think it's going to land now?


The welfare state is in crisis in every possible way, from the NHS, to social care to an ageing population. How we, as a society, wish to embrace those changes that are happening to our population and embrace our health service, what the solutions are - can we afford it? Who's going to pay for it? What is care in the community these days? How do we look after our old folk, how do we look after people in poverty, how do we get people out of poverty? All those questions are, I think, more acute today, perhaps than they've been at any time in my life. So I think the play speaks radically to the audience right now, about what sort of society we want to be a part of.


An Inspector Calls 2024. Photo by Mark Douet

The play is sometimes thought of as a ghost story, but it's actually a ‘time play’. What does that mean?


JB Priestley had this theory, as I remember, that we have parallel lives in parallel time zones. So your behaviour, and your attitudes can determine the life that you are living now in this world, and there are multiple universes. It sounds like The Matrix. 


In this particular play, time stops for a moment, and you see the future. The Inspector comes in, to interrogate what is about to happen. It is, I believe, to give the characters an opportunity, so that when the thing happens, they're prepared, morally, for the responsibility that they have. He gives them a dry run. 


Have you directed any of JB Priestley’s other plays?


No, but I've always wanted to. Time and the Conways is a fantastic play, and hasn't been seen for a while. Dangerous Corner is another great play. I think it’s the time plays that I've always been most fascinated with. It’s such a wild idea. It's a theory that he genuinely believed.


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Tickets:

An Inspector Calls is at Sunderland Empire from Tuesday 8 – Saturday 12 April 2025. Tickets are available from ATG Tickets: LINK



19/09/2024

Preview: Saint Maud at Newcastle Live Theatre

 Radical female talent at the centre of highly anticipated staging of cult horror Saint Maud at Newcastle’s Live Theatre


Saint Maud

Newcastle Live Theatre

Thursday 10 October - Saturday 2 November 2024


Live Theatre, Newcastle Upon Tyne is thrilled to announce the full cast and creative team of their world premiere staging of Saint Maud. Based on the cult film by Rose Glass (voted Mark Kermode’s best film of 2020) the stage adaptation is written by acclaimed Sunderland writer Jessica Andrews, author of the novels Saltwater and Milk Teeth, with brand new music by acclaimed electronic artist Gazelle Twin, movement by experimental choreographer Roberta Jean and set and costume design by Alison Ashton.


Leading the cast will be North East rising star Brogan Gilbert (The Dumping Ground, Bonnie and Fanny’s Christmas Spectacular) as Maud alongside Dani Arlington (Prima Facie, Tiny Beautiful Things) as Amanda, fresh from understudying Jodie Comer in Prima Facie on Broadway, and Scottish actor Neshla Caplan (Rebus, An Oak Tree) as Carol.

Running at Live Theatre from Thursday 10 October 10 to Saturday 2 November,  Saint Maud tells the story of a young devout nurse who becomes increasingly obsessed with saving the soul of a former dancer in the final days of her life.  Live Theatre’s production relocates the story to the North East, giving it a distinctly regional quality whilst retaining the film’s visceral imagery and religious intensity.

Hailed as a masterpiece upon its release, Saint Maud was seen as a major step towards a more radical, female-led approach to the horror genre. Live Theatre has followed suit by appointing a female creative team known for pushing the boundaries of their art forms.

Director Jack McNamara said:

“Each of the artists behind Saint Maud are at the very top of their game, creating work that exists in a genre all of its own. It’s a project that is going to push us, and our audiences, to a different level. The sound, the images, the feelings will be unique and intense, but Jessica has also created a world with real depth and empathy. There are different shades to Saint Maud which the film maker Rose Glass has been excited to see. It might not be an easy watch but we hope it will be a thrilling one.


Tickets:

Saint Maud runs from Thursday 10 October to Saturday 2 November at Live Theatre with tickets priced from £10 to £30. Find out more and book at: www.live.org.uk  or call Box Office on 0191 2321232.

Preview: Newcastle's Tyne Theatre & Opera House secure funding for ‘Grand Saloon’ project

Newcastle's Tyne Theatre & Opera House secure funding for ‘Grand Saloon’ project

The Tyne Theatre and Opera House have secured £0.5m funding, as part of Creative Central NCL, a project funded by the North East Combined Authority and Newcastle City Council to develop creativity and culture in the city.


The Tyne Theatre and Opera House will now embark on enabling works that are the first stage of an ambitious development project.


The work will be carried out on the footprint of what was known as the Westgate Music Hall from 1869, Grand Saloon from c. 1887 and Winter Gardens Tea Room in the Stoll Cinema years.

Chairman of the Tyne Theatre & Opera House Preservation Trust, Mike Wilmot, has said “The space that has operated most recently as the theatre’s Bistro Bar has had a varied history, having run under numerous names and served the local community in differing ways. We’re looking forward to building on this legacy and opening the next exciting chapter for our venue.”

These works will return the Grand Saloon to a double height space, removing the ceiling that was added in the 1960s to create a ‘black box’ performance space.

As well as resolving some critical building issues, creating this new performance space will allow the Tyne Theatre & Opera House to broaden the spectrum of their arts and culture offering, as well as increase the potential for community engagement adding much needed facilities within the Creative Central NCL footprint – a designated area of the city where Newcastle City Council and North East Combined Authority are directing £1.7m of investment to support creativity and culture.

Project Director, David Wilmore, has said “These enabling works are a crucial step forward in the journey to securing the future of this significant heritage venue. The progress made by this project will allow us to lay the foundations for continued development, when the Tyne Theatre & Opera House will create a significant number of new jobs”


At the heart of this overarching goal to refurbish and operate a sustainable independent venue, are plans to increase and strengthen ties with the local community. In addition to hosting a variety of entertainment, the ‘black box’ iteration of the Grand Saloon will be an adaptable space, able to improve access to and engagement with cultural activity by serving as a hub for meetings, rehearsals, workshops and more.


Also included in phase one of the theatre’s masterplan is the creation of a new café and bar in the shop and foyer of the former Bistro Bar. Named ‘1867’ (the year the theatre opened), the café bar will be the new home of the box office and will open in November.  


CEO Jonathan Higgins has said “We’re thankful to the North East Combined Authority and Creative Central NCL with Newcastle City Council for the funding that will allow us to embark on the next chapter of the Tyne Theatre & Opera House’s story. We also want to thank our audiences for their ongoing support. The income generated from ticket sales, hospitality, donations and our Friends Club membership scheme has also played a crucial role in allowing us to fund this project. We look forward to being able to welcome even more people through the doors to our new café bar this autumn, and to reopening the re-envisioned black box space for the benefit of audiences and the local community.”

Website: www.tynetheatreandoperahouse.uk


Preview: Here You Come Again at Sunderland Empire

 

The Dolly Parton Musical is coming to Wearside!

Here You Come Again

Sunderland Empire 

Tuesday 11 - Saturday 15 February 2025


Simon Friend Entertainment and Leeds Playhouse are delighted to announce that, Here You Come Again - which is currently spreading joy across the country on a UK tour – will now also visit Sunderland Empire from Tuesday 11 to Saturday 15 February 2025.

We saw the show earlier in the summer and found it to be “a joyous celebration of the human spirit“. Read our review here: http://www.northeasttheatreguide.co.uk/2024/06/review-here-you-come-again-at-newcastle.html 

For the first time ever, all of Dolly Parton’s biggest hits are brought together in a rollicking and joyful new musical comedy, fully authorised by Dolly herself. Packed with iconic songs like Jolene, 9 to 5, Islands in the Stream, I Will Always Love You, Here You Come Again and more, this lively and touching new musical tells the story of a diehard fan whose imagined version of international icon Dolly Parton gets him through trying times.

Originally written by multi-Emmy award-winning comedy and songwriter Bruce Vilanch with Gabriel Barre (who also directs) and writer and actor Tricia Paoluccio (who co-writes and stars as Dolly). Acclaimed British TV and theatre writer Jonathan Harvey (Gimme, Gimme, Gimme and Coronation Street) provides additional material for the production's UK run.

The wider creative team comprises Gabriel Barre as Director; Set and Costume Designer, Paul Wills; Choreographer, Lizzie Gee; Lighting Designer, Tim Deiling; Sound Designer, Tom Marshall; Associate Director/Assistant Choreographer, Teenie MacLeod; Illusion Designer, Richard Pinner; Orchestrator, Eugene Gwozdz; Orchestra Manager, Maurice Cambridge; Production Manager, Ben Arkell and Casting Director, Stuart Burt.

Here You Come Again is produced by Simon Friend Entertainment and Leeds Playhouse, in association with Jenny King, Patrick Gracey and Vibecke Dahle.

Photos: Hugo Glendinning

#ad Tickets:

Here You Come Again will dazzle Sunderland Empire’s stage from Tuesday 11 – Saturday 15 February 2025. ATG+ Presale tickets available online now. General tickets on sale Friday 20 September at 10am online at https://prf.hn/l/xEaEv05*

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


REVIEW: Abigail’s Party at Newcastle Northern Stage

Abigail’s Party

Newcastle Northern Stage

Until Saturday 28 September 2024

Mike Leigh's classic slice of 1970s live is appearing in Newcastle for two more weeks. Dating back to 1977, the original play was filmed by the BBC and became a well known and memorable television event.

Set in middle class England, Beverly (Laura Rogers) has decided to invite a few neighbours around for drinks and nibbles.  First to arrive is her husband Laurence (Leander Deeney) who has come in from work thanks to his new trusty S-re mini. He has calls to make as the work of an estate agent is not 9-5 - a fact that clearly irritates his wife. Before he has chance to nip out and pick up house keys, and a top up of the drinks, the first batch of neighbours arrive. Angela (Chaya Gupta) and Tony (Joe Blakemore) have just moved into the area and are hoping to meet more people. Angela is an enthusiastic nurse whilst Tony is in computing - though Angela keeps pointing out that he is just an operator which clearly winds him up.

Beverly played by Laura Rogers

The last guest to arrive is Susan (Amy Rockson). She has been a resident for a much longer time and she lives in the bigger house next door. Her daughter Abigail is fifteen and she is having a party next door. The noise from that party is a regular reminder throughout the play. We never meet Abigail or go to her party, rather we watch the "adults" next door interact. Sue is established middle class rather than aspirational. She is divorced, indeed her divorce came through around the same time as the other two couples tied the knot. This does not stop Beverly pushing inappropriate personal questions around.

Amy Rockson Laura Rogers & Chaya Gupta
This show hangs on Beverly and her interaction with the others. As the alcohol flows she becomes more insistent. She is desperate to live a certain lifestyle but money does not necessarily equate to class and the lack of class turn a party into a horror show. Likewise Angela wants to fit in with this new crowd and is reluctant to upset her host. Laura Rogers has the onstage charisma to pull off a fabulous Beverley and Chaya Gupta is able to handle the duality of an excitable new neighbour with the dependable medical professional.

Laura Rogers as Beverly and Joe Blakemore

Local Geordie actor Joe Blakemore combines the initial shyness of Tony's character with the more controlling aspect of his behaviour to create a force in the dynamic of the show. I have seen productions in which this role has had the edges smoothed off to make the person seem more acceptable, so it was refreshing to see the role revert to the more difficult personality. Certainly your opinion changes as more is revealed. In the opposite corner of the social boxing ring is Leander Deeney as the over worked husband who equally misjudges the situation. This role becomes a physically demanding one as the story progresses.

Leander Deeny as Laurence
Amy Rockson has the ability to communicate her character's feelings in a non-verbal way. Whilst she says "thank-you", you can see that she doesn't actually want (or need) a top up of her drink, or yet another snack. Whilst her hosts inability to read the situation is initially amusing, it quickly develops beyond that. 

The show's dialogue is still firmly rooted in the mid-70s. The audience made a number of audible gasps, through the show, as the threats or casual racism occasionally, and rightly, shocked the modern sensibilities of those witnessing the party from hell for the first time. As channels repeating old television shows often warn "This show contains language of the time, which todays viewers may find offensive".

I was sat next to 2 young actors who, during the interval, admitted that they had neither seen this before or knew what happens in the second act. This production did a fine job in introducing them to this era. It is going to push those "woke" buttons as unpleasant things can happen behind closed doors but it also compulsive viewing.

A little note on the music... this is a revival of the original stage play rather than the television drama that followed. Some of the music choices are different between the two (I believe that this was due to copyright reasons as the television show was likely to be exported.) There was one jarring moment for me however (and sorry about this), If the play is set in 1977/78 (as Lawrence always buys a new car and the one on stage is an S plate) then Adam and the Ants will not release Prince Charming until 1981 - unless Abigail and her friends her built a time machine next door and that could lead to a completely different show!

We really enjoyed this production. It is tightly directed by Jack Bradfield and has a intoxicating mix of humour and social horror. Laura Rogers is fabulous as the host whose evening soiree descends into chaos. It is of its time but the play shows how far society has appeared to have moved on in some quarters. 

Review: Stephen Oliver

Photos: Pamela Raith

Tickets:

For more information or to book tickets visit https://northernstage.co.uk/whats-on/abigails-party/ 

Abigail’s Party will open at Northern Stage, Newcastle before touring to Mercury Theatre Colchester (2-12 October), Blackpool Grand (22-26 October) and Rose Theatre (5-16 November).

    

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14/09/2024

Preview: Kinky Boots at Stockton Globe

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Courtney Bowman to Star as Lauren in Kinky Boots The Musical


Kinky Boots

Stockton Globe

Tuesday 29 April – Saturday 3 May 2025.


Producers ROYO and Curve are delighted to announce WhatsOnStage Award-winner, Courtney Bowman, will star as Lauren in the brand-new Made at Curve production of the Olivier, Tony and Grammy Award-winning musical Kinky Boots The Musical, which will tour the UK and Ireland in 2025.

Courtney joins the previously announced Johannes Radebe (Strictly Come Dancing) as Lola and Dan Partridge (Grease) as Charlie Price.


Kinky Boots The Musical features a score by Cyndi Lauper and a book by Harvey Fierstein. It will be directed by Curve’s Artistic Director Nikolai

Foster (The Wizard Of Oz, A Chorus Line, Billy Elliot).


Courtney Bowman won the WhatsOnStage Award for Best Performer in a Musical in 2023 for her portrayal of Elle Woods in Legally Blonde at Regent’s Park Open Air Theatre. Her other theatre credits include: Closer to Heaven (Turbine Theatre), Cool Rider: 10 th Anniversary Concert (London Palladium), Pretty Woman (Savoy Theatre), SIX (Arts Theatre/Lyric Theatre) and she was part of the original cast of Everybody’s Talking About Jamie (Apollo Theatre/Sheffield Crucible). Courtney’s TV credits include Eastenders (BBC) and the lead role of Little Cook Small for 2 series in Big Cook Little Cook (CBeebies).


After inheriting his family’s failing shoe factory and with a relationship on the rocks, life is proving to be very challenging for Charlie Price. That is until he meets Lola, a drag queen whose sparkle and unsteady heels might just hold the answer to saving the struggling business.

Guaranteed to raise you up and celebrate everybody’s individuality, don’t miss Kinky Boots on tour commencing January 2025!



Full casting for Kinky Boots will be announced in due course.

Kinky Boots The Musical was a Broadway and West End phenomenon based on a true story and movie of the same name released in 2005.


Kinky Boots is directed by Nikolai Foster with choreography by Leah Hill, set and costume design by Robert Jones, musical supervision by George Dyer, lighting design by Ben Cracknell, sound design by Adam Fisher, casting by Harry Blumenau CDG CDA, wigs, hair and make-up design by Campbell Young Associates with associate direction by Michaela Powell, associate choreography by Johnny Bishop, associate sound design by Harry Barker and production management by Setting Line.


On the Web:

Stockton Globe

https://www.stocktonglobe.co.uk/ 

Facebook: /TheGlobeStockton

Instagram: @stockton_globe

X/Twitter: @stockton_globe

TikTok: @stocktonglobe


Kinky Boots

www.kinkybootstour.com 

Facebook: /KinkyBootsUK

Instagram: KINKYBOOTS_UK

X: KINKYBOOTS_UK

TikTok: Kinkyboots_uk


Creatives:

Book by Harvey Fierstein

Music And Lyrics by Cyndi Lauper

Original Broadway Production Directed and Choreographed by Jerry Mitchell

Based on the Miramax motion picture Kinky Boots

Written by Geoff Deane and Tim Firth

Kinky Boots  is presented by arrangement with Music Theatre International

www.mtishows.co.uk 


Tickets:

Kinky Boots heads to Stockton Globe from Tuesday 29th April – Saturday 3rd May 2025 and are available now from our affiliates ATG Tickets: https://tinyurl.com/StocktonKinkyboots


Please note: Johannes Radebe will not be performing in the midweek matinees on Wednesday 30th April and Thursday 1st May at Stockton Globe.