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National Theatre unveils Queer Theatre event series

The National Theatre is set to mark the 50th anniversary of the partial decriminalisation of homosexuality in England and Wales by staging its first Queer Theatre event series from July 6 – 10, 2017.

As part of the programme a group of world-class actors and directors will look at how theatre has charted the LGBT+ experience through a series of rehearsed readings and post-show discussions in the Lyttelton Theatre.

Tarell Alvin McCraney: Photo by George Schiavone
Tarell Alvin McCraney: Photo by George Schiavone

Launching the initiative, playwright Tarell Alvin McCraney spoke about directing a reading of his play Wig Out!: “I feel grateful to be returning to the UK and reading this piece” he said. “As we continue better to understand ourselves and how we perform in the world I hope this investigation back into the ‘ball scene’ will be as exciting as it is important. #Alllove&Allpride.”

Stephen Daldry
Stephen Daldry

Speaking about directing Martin Sherman’s ground-breaking 1979 play Bent, Stephen Daldry said: “As a teenager Bent was the first play I ever saw on the London stage. Amazingly at a theatre I went on to be the director of. It was a devastating experience for a young gay man from a small market town in Somerset. I can honestly say the experience changed my life. The play went on to take London by storm. I am thrilled and honoured to direct a rehearsed reading of Martin Sherman’s explosive play to mark this important anniversary.”

The NT’s Queer Theatre event series is hosted in partnership with London Pride. As well as the rehearsed readings it will include a free exhibition and other talks and screenings, details of which will be announced shortly.

The full programme of rehearsed readings is:

♦      Neaptide by Sarah Daniels (1986), Thursday, July 6 7.30pm, directed By Sarah Frankcom

Neaptide was the National Theatre’s first full-length play by a female playwright. It presents a ferocious but funny account of the public and private battles of a lesbian mother in the 1980s, alongside the ancient myth of Demeter & Persephone. Having recently come out to her family, Claire now faces a bitter custody battle and uncertainty over her teaching career.

♦      Wig Out! by Tarell Alvin McCraney (2008), Friday, July 7, 7.30pm, directed by Tarell Alvin McCraney

Witness the fiercest battle in New York as the House Of Light compete with the House Of Diabolique for drag family supremacy at the Cinderella Ball. When Eric meets Wilson, it’s a good old-fashioned boy meets boy fairytale. However, when Wilson reveals his drag alter-ego Nina, questions of masculinity and gender come to the fore.  In the tradition of Paris Is Burning, this big, bold and riotous play looks at gender, drag and fabulousness.

Peter Gill: Photo by Nobby Clark
Peter Gill: Photo by Nobby Clark

♦      Certain Young Men by Peter Gill (1999), Saturday, July 8, 7.30pm, directed by Peter Gill

‘To be really queer you have to have someone nail your foreskin to a piece of wood and generally kick up a bit of a fuss.’ As the new millennium approaches, four gay couples illuminate the differences within the ‘gay community’. Is gay life defined by living in coupled suburban bliss or chasing casual sex?

♦      Bent by Martin Sherman (1979), Sunday, July 9, 2.30pm, directed by Stephen Daldry

Following Nazi Germany’s Night Of The Long Knives in 1934, gay lovers Max and Rudy are taken away to Dachau by the Gestapo. Desperate to avoid the dreaded Pink Triangle, Max claims to be Jewish. In amongst the horrors of the Camp, he meets Horst who wears his Pink Triangle with pride.

Polly Stenham: Photo by Laura Pannack
Polly Stenham: Photo by Laura Pannack

♦      The Drag by Mae West (1927), Monday, July 10, 7.30pm, directed by Polly Stenham

The play that scandalised 1920s New York follows respected, married socialite Rolly. Son of a homophobic judge and married to the daughter of an eminent gay conversion therapist, Rolly is keen to keep his homosexual tendencies under wraps. However, when he decides to host a drag ball in his drawing-room, events soon spiral out of control. One of the first plays to shed light on gay counter-culture, Mae West’s rarely performed comedy was banned after ten performances.

The Queer Theatre event series will coincide with 2017 London Pride weekend and tickets will go on sale from Friday, May 5. Tickets include entry to each post-show discussion.

For more information on the Queer Theatre event series, click here:

REVIEW: Ruffian on the stair@The Lantern @ ACT

Pretty much Joe Orton’s first play – written in 1964 – this 3-hander deals comically and darkly with love, sex for sale , Catholicism, homosexuality, lies,   power and loneliness.

If we believe what the characters tell us, Mike is an ex-boxer fallen on hard times, and now involved in shady goings on in the toilets at Kings Cross. He’s living with Joyce alias Maddie, the 3rd generation of a family of whores. What’s certain is Mike has a loaded gun and a guilty secret.

Their dysfunctional domestic routine is turned upside down by the mincing arrival of the very handsome young male hairdresser Wilson, who knows a lot more about them than a stranger should.

What unravels is a story of death, revenge and coincidence – very reminiscent of the early writings of Harold Pinter. Orton uses the heightened language of a poet to comic relief in this most mundane and claustrophobic bedsit, getting laughs out of many excellent one-liners – as in “They think just because you’re a criminal they can treat you like dirt “ and “they enquired into my circumstances – I don’t have any circumstances “.

When Mike murders Wilson , Joyce’s comment is “this is what comes of not having a regular job “.

The Blue Devil Theatre Company’s production at the Lantern Theatre, has very strong players who really spark off each other and rarely lose an opportunity for humour, pathos and menace. Kiki Kendrick as the bored and past her best Joyce, Padraig Lynch as the self-righteous Mike and Elliott Rogers as truly menacing Wilson all excel.

The play runs again on May 26 and 27.

REVIEW: ELVIS Las Vegas 1969@The Woodville, Gravesend

ELVIS Las Vegas 1969 is really two shows in one. A play and a musical!

The first half, mainly spoken with little music is a dramatic reconstruction of the hours leading to Elvis Presley’s return to the stage on July 31, 1969, after a ten-year break from live concerts, to make a string of low-budget Hollywood movies.

The second half, is a stunning and faithful reconstruction of the set Elvis performed that night at the International Hotel in front of 2,000 of the world’s top celebrities.

Writer and director Gerry Tebbutt has produced a smart script, which cleverly introduces us to the professional entourage that surrounded Elvis, affectionately known as the ‘Memphis Mafia’ and all the principal characters in his life.

He creates a believable storyline, cramming in so much background information about Elvis, that by the end of the 50 minute first half I really felt I intimately knew all about him and his hangers-on.

The narrative at times is dark, almost depressing. Tebbutt pulls no punches, shining a spotlight on Elvis’s flaws while managing to maintain our sympathy in his character.

Elvis is weak, controlled by his manager Colonel Tom Parker, played very effectively by Tom Dussek. At times Parker’s treatment of Elvis verges on bullying. However, Elvis seems happy to let this man control his life so he can enjoy himself with his male mates. Joe Connors plays his stage manager and close confident Charlie Hodge perfectly, keeping the action moving nicely along while providing much of the humour and wisecracks.

Despite his legendary sex symbol status, Elvis it seems, was more comfortable in the company of men, than with his young, beautiful wife Priscilla who is sidelined by his relationship with his ‘buddies’.

Elvis is innocent and naive, he is generous beyond belief and childlike in his approach to everything, but despite all his weaknesses which Tebbutt carefully identifies, when he goes on stage he becomes the ‘King’ to his adoring fans.

The first half finishes with Elvis waiting to go on stage and the second half opens with him arriving to recreate the original set he performed on July 31, 1969 at the International Hotel in Las Vegas, complete with banter between the audience and Elvis.

While Scott Elvis who plays Elvis is convincing in the first half in his serious acting role, he explodes into life in the second half with a stunning live performance of Elvis numbers including, Blue Suede Shoes, All Shook Up, Love Me Tender, Jailhouse Rock, Heartbreak Hotel, Hound Dog, Are You Lonesome Tonight, In the Ghetto, Suspicious Minds and Can’t Help Falling in Love to mention a few. He commands the stage, has a very impressive voice and phrases beautifully.

Scott is backed by a superb band of live musicians which include three guitarist, a keyboard, horns, trumpets, trombone, drums, three female and one male backing singer. Some of the musicians double as character in the first half of the show and the collective sound they make is glorious and had the older women in the audience up and dancing, including a very old lady to the side of me, who rose from her wheelchair to dance to the soundtrack of her youth. Her carer told me later she was 89, it was quite intoxicating.

Attention to detail throughout the production is precise right down to the original chic black tunic and bell bottoms Elvis wore in 1969.

The set is minimal but effective, however, once the second half commenced it didn’t really matter because the electric atmosphere these first class musicians generated in the theatre, transported us all back to the showroom at the International Hotel in Las Vegas in 1969.

I really enjoyed this show, especially the second half which gave us a first class orgy of classic rock and roll numbers. However, I sat all evening waiting to hear American Trilogy which I found out later Elvis did not actually sing in the 1969 show.

At the end of the show the voice over announced “Elvis has left the building” leaving us, especially the dancing ladies in the audience wanting and expecting an encore. Maybe as the show is developed an encore should be considered to include American Trilogy or a mega mix of the main numbers because those dancing ladies of a certain age in the audience were just not ready to leave the party and go home.

The show is produced by Brighton based Anscombe Production Associates and based on an original idea by Neale Hobday.

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