901 posts
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Post by bordeaux on Jun 22, 2023 12:33:21 GMT
Straightforward booking today after half an hour's wait. Lots of front cheapies for Bernarda Alba, lots of availability for the Annie Baker. Will be plenty left when it opens to other members, I hope.
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2,496 posts
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Post by zahidf on Jun 22, 2023 12:48:04 GMT
Straightforward booking today after half an hour's wait. Lots of front cheapies for Bernarda Alba, lots of availability for the Annie Baker. Will be plenty left when it opens to other members, I hope. Any idea when AMEX booking opens please?
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901 posts
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Post by bordeaux on Jun 22, 2023 14:46:51 GMT
Straightforward booking today after half an hour's wait. Lots of front cheapies for Bernarda Alba, lots of availability for the Annie Baker. Will be plenty left when it opens to other members, I hope. Any idea when AMEX booking opens please? Sorry, no. Advance is Monday 26th.
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Post by Jan on Jun 23, 2023 17:32:41 GMT
Straightforward booking today after half an hour's wait. Lots of front cheapies for Bernarda Alba, lots of availability for the Annie Baker. Will be plenty left when it opens to other members, I hope. It's not really that long since they did Bernarda Alba (2005) when the combined talents of Howard Davies, Penelope Wilton and Deborah Findlay didn't manage to raise it above the average. I assume it has been selected for revival because it helps Norris meet his overall gender quota but there are other Lorca plays that don't get revived that often which would have been more interesting for me.
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901 posts
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Post by bordeaux on Jun 24, 2023 15:56:58 GMT
Straightforward booking today after half an hour's wait. Lots of front cheapies for Bernarda Alba, lots of availability for the Annie Baker. Will be plenty left when it opens to other members, I hope. It's not really that long since they did Bernarda Alba (2005) when the combined talents of Howard Davies, Penelope Wilton and Deborah Findlay didn't manage to raise it above the average. I assume it has been selected for revival because it helps Norris meet his overall gender quota but there are other Lorca plays that don't get revived that often which would have been more interesting for me. Interesting points. In thirty-five years of theatre-going I don't think I've seen a convincing Lorca play here (I missed the Simon Stone-Billie Piper Yerma). I'm hoping Rebecca Frecknall can do something interesting with it. I've seen brilliant Chekhov, Gorki, Ibsen, Brecht, Schiller, Moliere, Racine, Lope de Vega but Lorca doesn't seem to travel well - or have I just missed something? I must say Pirandello is another author whose work has never really travelled - I'm sure the plays are great, but I've never seen a production worthy of his reputation.
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Post by Jan on Jun 24, 2023 19:24:27 GMT
It's not really that long since they did Bernarda Alba (2005) when the combined talents of Howard Davies, Penelope Wilton and Deborah Findlay didn't manage to raise it above the average. I assume it has been selected for revival because it helps Norris meet his overall gender quota but there are other Lorca plays that don't get revived that often which would have been more interesting for me. Interesting points. In thirty-five years of theatre-going I don't think I've seen a convincing Lorca play here (I missed the Simon Stone-Billie Piper Yerma). I'm hoping Rebecca Frecknall can do something interesting with it. I've seen brilliant Chekhov, Gorki, Ibsen, Brecht, Schiller, Moliere, Racine, Lope de Vega but Lorca doesn't seem to travel well - or have I just missed something? I must say Pirandello is another author whose work has never really travelled - I'm sure the plays are great, but I've never seen a production worthy of his reputation. I think there are some plays that are so specific to a particular location and culture that they are almost impossible to transfer to another. For example has there ever been a single entirely successful production in UK of a Spanish Golden Age play ? Ionesco another I’d say.
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901 posts
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Post by bordeaux on Jun 24, 2023 19:55:28 GMT
I'd say the Fuente Ovejuna by Lope de Vega done by Declan Donellan in the Cottesloe in 1988/89 was truly fabulous and I have vague memories of what struck me then as an excellent Young Vic production of Peribanez directed by a young Rufus Norris in 2003. Complicité did a very good job with The Chairs in the late 90s with Richard Briers and Geraldine McEwan. But your larger point stands. Some things don't translate well.
There are presumably UK writers for whom the same applies - though given how popular UK writing is abroad there are perhaps not many. I don't imagine Terence Rattigan strikes many chords in France and Germany for example. I think the same is true for Alan Bennett.
Equally there are writers who are more highly valued abroad than they are at home. That may apply to contemporary writers like David Harrower and Simon Stephens who seem very highly in demand in Germany. I always used to think that novelist Lawrence Durrell was more highly regarded in France than the UK. Of course, some people are just lucky with their translators.
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Post by mkb on Jun 24, 2023 20:29:10 GMT
I think there are some plays that are so specific to a particular location and culture that they are almost impossible to transfer to another. For example has there ever been a single entirely successful production in UK of a Spanish Golden Age play ? Ionesco another I’d say. I saw three Arcola Theatre productions at the Coventry Belgrade in 2014. I am not sure how you measure success, but I thought them very good. They were Don Gil of the Green Breeches (Tirso de Molina), Lady of Little Sense and Punishment Without Revenge (both Lope de Vega).
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Post by Mr Crummles on Jun 24, 2023 22:27:17 GMT
It's not really that long since they did Bernarda Alba (2005) when the combined talents of Howard Davies, Penelope Wilton and Deborah Findlay didn't manage to raise it above the average. I assume it has been selected for revival because it helps Norris meet his overall gender quota but there are other Lorca plays that don't get revived that often which would have been more interesting for me. Interesting points. In thirty-five years of theatre-going I don't think I've seen a convincing Lorca play here (I missed the Simon Stone-Billie Piper Yerma). I'm hoping Rebecca Frecknall can do something interesting with it. I've seen brilliant Chekhov, Gorki, Ibsen, Brecht, Schiller, Moliere, Racine, Lope de Vega but Lorca doesn't seem to travel well - or have I just missed something? I must say Pirandello is another author whose work has never really travelled - I'm sure the plays are great, but I've never seen a production worthy of his reputation. I saw an mesmerising production of Pirandello's Six Characters in Search of an Author, back in 2008. It was directed by Rupert Goold and had, I believe, Denise Gough and Ian McDiarmid in it. I was thinking about it for many days after I saw it.
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Post by Mr Crummles on Jun 24, 2023 22:35:39 GMT
Interesting points. In thirty-five years of theatre-going I don't think I've seen a convincing Lorca play here (I missed the Simon Stone-Billie Piper Yerma). I'm hoping Rebecca Frecknall can do something interesting with it. I've seen brilliant Chekhov, Gorki, Ibsen, Brecht, Schiller, Moliere, Racine, Lope de Vega but Lorca doesn't seem to travel well - or have I just missed something? I must say Pirandello is another author whose work has never really travelled - I'm sure the plays are great, but I've never seen a production worthy of his reputation. I think there are some plays that are so specific to a particular location and culture that they are almost impossible to transfer to another. For example has there ever been a single entirely successful production in UK of a Spanish Golden Age play ? Ionesco another I’d say. I believe that the Donmar's production of Calderón de la Barca' Life is a Dream (2009), with Dominic West, got great reviews. I certainly enjoyed it very much.
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Post by Jan on Jun 25, 2023 12:49:05 GMT
I'd say the Fuente Ovejuna by Lope de Vega done by Declan Donellan in the Cottesloe in 1988/89 was truly fabulous and I have vague memories of what struck me then as an excellent Young Vic production of Peribanez directed by a young Rufus Norris in 2003. Complicité did a very good job with The Chairs in the late 90s with Richard Briers and Geraldine McEwan. But your larger point stands. Some things don't translate well. There are presumably UK writers for whom the same applies - though given how popular UK writing is abroad there are perhaps not many. I don't imagine Terence Rattigan strikes many chords in France and Germany for example. I think the same is true for Alan Bennett. Equally there are writers who are more highly valued abroad than they are at home. That may apply to contemporary writers like David Harrower and Simon Stephens who seem very highly in demand in Germany. I always used to think that novelist Lawrence Durrell was more highly regarded in France than the UK. Of course, some people are just lucky with their translators. The prime example of a living English playwright who has a huge reputation abroad (France and Germany in this case) but whose work hardly ever gets staged here these days (quite understandably in my view) is Edward Bond. Some of our younger readers have probably never heard of him.
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Post by Jan on Jun 25, 2023 12:50:10 GMT
I think there are some plays that are so specific to a particular location and culture that they are almost impossible to transfer to another. For example has there ever been a single entirely successful production in UK of a Spanish Golden Age play ? Ionesco another I’d say. I believe that the Donmar's production of Calderón de la Barca' Life is a Dream (2009), with Dominic West, got great reviews. I certainly enjoyed it very much. I didn’t think much of it but it was at least better than the previous RSC version of it.
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901 posts
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Post by bordeaux on Jun 27, 2023 11:01:15 GMT
I'd say the Fuente Ovejuna by Lope de Vega done by Declan Donellan in the Cottesloe in 1988/89 was truly fabulous and I have vague memories of what struck me then as an excellent Young Vic production of Peribanez directed by a young Rufus Norris in 2003. Complicité did a very good job with The Chairs in the late 90s with Richard Briers and Geraldine McEwan. But your larger point stands. Some things don't translate well. There are presumably UK writers for whom the same applies - though given how popular UK writing is abroad there are perhaps not many. I don't imagine Terence Rattigan strikes many chords in France and Germany for example. I think the same is true for Alan Bennett. Equally there are writers who are more highly valued abroad than they are at home. That may apply to contemporary writers like David Harrower and Simon Stephens who seem very highly in demand in Germany. I always used to think that novelist Lawrence Durrell was more highly regarded in France than the UK. Of course, some people are just lucky with their translators. The prime example of a living English playwright who has a huge reputation abroad (France and Germany in this case) but whose work hardly ever gets staged here these days (quite understandably in my view) is Edward Bond. Some of our younger readers have probably never heard of him. Howard Barker another one. His Scenes from an Execution was brilliant but the other couple of things I've seen were very hard work.
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Post by Jan on Jun 27, 2023 16:20:36 GMT
The prime example of a living English playwright who has a huge reputation abroad (France and Germany in this case) but whose work hardly ever gets staged here these days (quite understandably in my view) is Edward Bond. Some of our younger readers have probably never heard of him. Howard Barker another one. His Scenes from an Execution was brilliant but the other couple of things I've seen were very hard work. Howard Brenton another but I don’t think either are quite as lionised in Europe as Bond is. At one time the RSC used to champion that type of British playwright who had limited purely commercial appeal, Peter Barnes, John Whiting. Now no-one does.
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Post by crowblack on Jun 27, 2023 16:44:19 GMT
Howard Brenton another but I don’t think either are quite as lionised in Europe as Bond is. At one time the RSC used to champion that type of British playwright who had limited purely commercial appeal, Peter Barnes, John Whiting. Now no-one does. Yes, I just missed the RSC Red Noses, but saw the War Plays in the Barbican pit when I was a teenager with Ian McDiarmid and Gary Oldman in the cast (it was the production film director Alex Cox saw when casting Sid and Nancy).
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Post by Jon on Jun 27, 2023 17:11:10 GMT
Edward Bond's last play was such a disaster, the Secombe Theatre in Sutton ended up closing although TBF I don't think it was the sole cause.
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Post by Jan on Jun 27, 2023 17:38:46 GMT
Edward Bond's last play was such a disaster, the Secombe Theatre in Sutton ended up closing although TBF I don't think it was the sole cause. The tedious old Marxist could shut any theatre in the country but they like that sort of thing in France. Here he is explaining why he wouldn't want any of his plays done by the NT in an interview with old Billers: "Take the last guy who ran the National Theatre. I don’t know his name …” Sir Nicholas Hytner? “Was it him? Puppets? Was he the puppets one?” {This seems to be a reference to War Horse, adapted from Michael Morpurgo’s novel, which ran for two years at the National, seven in the West End and is now touring the UK}. “Yes. That was an obscenity. Black Beauty goes to war. What is wrong with our society? That is obscene! And it goes around the world.”
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Post by Mr Crummles on Jun 28, 2023 7:10:50 GMT
Equally there are writers who are more highly valued abroad than they are at home. That may apply to contemporary writers like David Harrower and Simon Stephens who seem very highly in demand in Germany. I always used to think that novelist Lawrence Durrell was more highly regarded in France than the UK. Of course, some people are just lucky with their translators. Lawrence Durrell is a good example. Another one I can think of is Charles Morgan. I was surprised of how little appreciated his novel Sparkenbroke is in the UK (I didn't appreciated it myself, actually. I found it a bit morbid and slow-going). I think France retains a powerful influence on what the rest of the world reads.
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Post by Jan on Jun 28, 2023 8:11:31 GMT
Equally there are writers who are more highly valued abroad than they are at home. That may apply to contemporary writers like David Harrower and Simon Stephens who seem very highly in demand in Germany. I always used to think that novelist Lawrence Durrell was more highly regarded in France than the UK. Of course, some people are just lucky with their translators. Lawrence Durrell is a good example. Another one I can think of is Charles Morgan. I was surprised of how little appreciated his novel Sparkenbroke is in the UK (I didn't appreciated it myself, actually. I found it a bit morbid and slow-going). I think France retains a powerful influence on what the rest of the world reads. And in film Norman Wisdom is still a national hero in Albania. A reverse example is that Arthur Miller was ignored in USA for many years around the 1970-80s and found it hard to get his new plays produced while his reputation was still high in UK.
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Post by crowblack on Jun 28, 2023 9:38:55 GMT
A reverse example is that Arthur Miller was ignored in USA for many years around the 1970-80s and found it hard to get his new plays produced while his reputation was still high in UK. It was wall-to-wall Arthur Miller in my all-girls school (I'm still p-ed off about this: other 20thc dramatists are available!).
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Post by bordeaux on Jun 28, 2023 11:00:41 GMT
And of course a lot of European writers who are regarded as major figures in Europe don't get a serious look-in over here. They tend to be done in studio productions or not at all, rather than being put on at prestigious national houses with big name casts. I must admit I can understand why - I have seen plays by people like Peter Handke, Botho Strauss, Elfriede Jelinek, Bernard-Marie Koltes and they are all very oblique, fragmentary, difficult in that modern way, which even I who likes to think himself open to modern art find challenging and ultimately unengaging. The French authors who have been successful in recent years in the UK, Yasmina Reza and Florian Zeller, write much more straightforward plays, often very witty social comedies, which go down much better over here (and are translated by the very witty Christopher Hampton). One thing that has been so unusual about the success of Stefano Massini's The Lehman Trilogy is that it is a translated contemporary play. It is a rare success where the author's name is less well known than the director too. No one say's 'I'm going to see Massini's The Lehman Trilogy'.
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Post by Jan on Jun 28, 2023 14:51:14 GMT
The London subsidised sector has no interest at all in general in plays coming out of the EU addressing European issues. They are however very interested in equivalent USA contemporary plays. It is a great paradox given their handwringing over Brexit.
Roland Schimmelpfennig is a prolific German playwright who is produced throughout Europe but you’ll struggle to see anything by him here. Why ? I would have thought the very fact he was popular in Europe would make it interesting to see his best work.
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Post by bordeaux on Jun 28, 2023 21:02:03 GMT
The London subsidised sector has no interest at all in general in plays coming out of the EU addressing European issues. They are however very interested in equivalent USA contemporary plays. It is a great paradox given their handwringing over Brexit. Roland Schimmelpfennig is a prolific German playwright who is produced throughout Europe but you’ll struggle to see anything by him here. Why ? I would have thought the very fact he was popular in Europe would make it interesting to see his best work. Oh, yes. Someone (English Touring Theatre?) did The Golden Dragon a decade or so ago, directed by Ramin Gray, which I quite enjoyed. Reading a review, to remind myself what it was about (a Chinese restaurant), it does sound little like the Icke The Doctor with its cross-age, cross-gender, cross-race casting.
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Post by Someone in a tree on Jun 29, 2023 8:04:17 GMT
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Post by Jan on Jun 29, 2023 10:06:40 GMT
The London subsidised sector has no interest at all in general in plays coming out of the EU addressing European issues. They are however very interested in equivalent USA contemporary plays. It is a great paradox given their handwringing over Brexit. Roland Schimmelpfennig is a prolific German playwright who is produced throughout Europe but you’ll struggle to see anything by him here. Why ? I would have thought the very fact he was popular in Europe would make it interesting to see his best work. Oh, yes. Someone (English Touring Theatre?) did The Golden Dragon a decade or so ago, directed by Ramin Gray, which I quite enjoyed. Reading a review, to remind myself what it was about (a Chinese restaurant), it does sound little like the Icke The Doctor with its cross-age, cross-gender, cross-race casting. I saw a version of a Greek tragedy by him at The Gate. It was very good.
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