STAY IN-TOUCH
 
Join RSS Feed
Join mailing list






Dominic Cooke
Dominic Cooke
Share
Court Runs US Election Drama & Churchill Tributes
Date: 12 June 2008

This autumn at the Royal Court, artistic director Dominic Cooke (pictured) will direct two premieres by American playwrights – one set, and performed, on the eve of a presidential election and the other taking place in a drag queen cabaret – in the theatre’s main house.

The newly announced season – which, said Cooke at a press briefing today, is “all about sex … the whole thing” - will also include a 70th birthday tribute to veteran Court dramatist Caryl Churchill, a week of Arab debuts and new plays by Alecky Blythe, Leo Butler and Cooke’s own real-life partner Alexi Kaye Campbell, who submitted his manuscript under a pseudonym.

In the Jerwood Theatre Downstairs

In the lead-up to the real contest between Barack Obama and John McCain in November, Christopher Shinn’s fictional election drama Now or Later, exploring the tension between liberalism and fundamentalism in American politics, will receive its world premiere on 9 September 2008 (previews from 3 September) and continue until 18 October. Shinn has had four previous plays staged at the Court: Where Do We Live, Four, Other People and, most recently, 2006’s Dying City, which was this year nominated for a Pulitzer Prize in the US.

On election night, things are looking rosy for the Democratic party. But as the likely President-elect, his wife, advisors and 20-year-old son watch the results roll in, controversial photos of John Jr are gathering momentum on the internet and the press team are working on damage limitation. Eddie Redmayne (who won Newcomer prizes at the Evening Standard and Critics’ Circle awards for 2004’s The Goat, or Who Is Sylvia?) returns to the stage to play the son, John Jr, in a cast that also features Domhnall Gleeson and Adam James. The part of Redmayne’s politician father has yet to be cast.

The second American play will be Wig Out!, written by 26-year-old Tarell Alvin McCraney who received his UK debut last year with The Brothers Size at the Young Vic, where it returns this October along with the UK premiere of his In the Red and Brown Water (See News, 3 Jun 2008). For Wig Out!, the Court’s Downstairs auditorium will be transformed, by designer Ultz, into the House of Light, a “hyper-glamorous and uber-competitive” drag queen refuge where the residents are primping and preening for a catwalk showdown. It runs from 28 November 2008 (previews from 20 November) to 10 January 2009.

During the run of Now or Later, an afternoon series of ten readings of Caryl Churchill plays will also be held Downstairs from 15 to 26 September 2008. Churchill has been associated with the Court for 36 years and is considered not only one of the most influential of living British dramatists but, according to Cooke, “the one who is most admired” by her peers. In recognition of that, the theatre has invited fellow playwrights to select and direct their favourite Churchill play in celebration of her 70th birthday.

The programme comprises one-off rehearsed readings of: 1972’s Owners (directed by April De Angelis), 1976’s Light Shining in Buckinghamshire (Mark Ravenhill), 1976’s Vinegar Tom (Winsome Pinnock), 1980’s Three More Sleepless Nights (Debbie Tucker Green), 1982’s Top Girls (Nicholas Wright), 1989’s Ice Cream (Wallace Shawn), 1994’s The Skriker (Zinnie Harris), 2000’s Far Away (Martin Crimp) and 2002’s A Number (Joe Penhall), with a tenth still to be announced.

The final production in the Downstairs autumn schedule, with September/October dates still to be confirmed, will be Paradise Regained by Mark Ravenhill, an epilogue to his 16-play Shoot/Get Treasure/Repeat cycle of 30-minute plays that ran at the Court and at other London venues in April (See News, 6 Mar 2008).

In the Jerwood Theatre Upstairs

The three new plays by UK playwrights given full runs in the 80-seat Upstairs studio all openly explore sex and sexuality in modern Britain. Alecky Blythe’s new verbatim drama The Girlfriend Experience (running 18 September to 11 October, directed by Joe Hill-Gibbins), a product of the Court’s Rough Cuts season, is created from edited conversations recorded inside a real brothel in Bournemouth. Leo Butler’s Faces in the Crowd (17 October to 8 November, directed by Clare Lizzimore) catches up with an estranged couple with a baby debt ten years after their divorce. And Alexi Kaye Campbell’s The Pride (21 November to 20 December, directed by Jamie Lloyd) looks at convention, compulsion and sex addiction in a triangle that moves between 1958 and 2008.

The Pride is the first play by Kaye Campbell, who is under commission to the Bush. As Dominic Cooke explained at today’s press conference, Kaye Campbell – who is the director’s real-life partner - submitted his manuscript under a pen name. Cooke said that, when the author’s identity was revealed, he resisted taking up the play, despite the recommendations of his staff and only reconsidered when offers were made by other theatres after a reading at the National. He worries that some may believe the play contains "salacious" personal details, but in fact, he laughs, "my life is much more boring".

From 11 to 15 November 2008, the Court, in association with the British Council, will present a week of rehearsed readings of new plays from the Arab world, under the title I Come from There. The readings are the result of an 18-month project begun in April 2007, when 21 writers from Egypt, Jordan, Lebanon, Morocco, Palestine, Tunisia and Syria were invited to Damascus to work with Elyse Dodgson, head of the Court’s international department, and playwrights April De Angelis and David Greig.

Vital statistics, Spatial awareness

At today’s press conference, Cooke also released data on substantial shifts in the Royal Court’s audience. In the first 12 months since he took over as artistic director at the beginning of 2007 (See News, 24 Jan 2006), the Court’s two auditoria played to 91% capacity (up from 74% in the 2006 50th anniversary year, the final season under Cooke’s predecessor Ian Rickson), with just under 100,000 theatregoers coming through the doors (99,851 attendances) and £1.1 million taken at the box office. The year also witnessed a remarkable 311% increase by under-18s, as a proportion of the audience, coming to Sloane Square.

Cooke said that the relationship between a work and its audience was key to the theatre’s ongoing activities – both in terms of finding the right audience for each play and also in how that audience interacts, physically as well as intellectually and emotionally, with the piece. As part of the Court’s spatial explorations, Cooke promised that there would be more productions staged outside the main auditoria in Sloane Square (as with the current sell-out production of Mike Bartlett’s Contractions, presented in a rehearsal room accessed through staff offices) and in new, found spaces across London (as with Levi David Addai’s Oxford Street, staged this week in a disused shop at the Elephant & Castle mall).

Commenting on the new autumn 2008 season, Cooke said: “When I took over at the Royal Court, I said that I wanted the theatre to ask two questions – ‘Who are we today?’ and ‘What is a play?’ The 18 months since have seen us address those questions, taking significant risks, and being rewarded for those risks with a theatre that was 91% full last year. And that experimentation will continue … From the intimacy of the bedroom to the biggest stage in international politics, the autumn season at the Royal Court promises to be an exciting one.”

- by Terri Paddock

Related Content






Write a Comment
Give us your opinion on this entry
Comment:
Name:
Required, will appear on website
Email:
Required, will not appear on website
Confirm: Please type in
Please enter this number > SEVENTY-EIGHT < Just the two digits only, without any spaces.


buy tickets buy tickets
buy tickets
buy tickets
buy tickets




JOIN OUR MAILING LIST
Q Why join yet another mailing list?
A Because, if you visit the theatre more than once or twice a year, we could save you hundreds of pounds.



Tickets For Tonight


Special Offers

Theatre and Meal Deals

Click here for all meal deals


© Whatsonstage 1996-2012
SITE MAP COMPANY INFORMATION

Tickets
Buy London Theatre Tickets
Theatre Ticket & Meal Deals
Discount London Theatre Tickets and Promotions
London Theatre Ticket Hotel Breaks

Content
Theatre News
Theatre Reviews
Interviews & Features
Theatre Videos
Opera News & Reviews
Off-West End News & Reviews
Regional Theatre News & Reviewsl
Whatsonstage.com Awards

Meet the Editorial Team
Add a press release to Whatsonstage.com

Community
Discussion board
Community calendar
Theatre jobs
Theatre blogs

Whatsonstage.com Theatre Club
Join the Club
Log in
Current Club benefits
How to get free theatre tickets

Group Outings
What's On Stage Magazine

Mailing Lists
Newsletter - weekly theatre news
Special Offers - discount theatre tickets direct to your inbox

Information Services
What's On - national theatre listings database

London theatre map
A-Z of London Theatres
A-Z of London Theatre Shows

London Theatre Show openings & closings
FAQ
Work for us - current vacancies
Add a press release to Whatsonstage.com
Find and Book cheap UK Hotels

Marketing Services:
Website design
Email marketing & CRM services

Content feeds
Add a press release to Whatsonstage.com

Whatsonstage.com - Discount London theatre tickets, theatre news and reviews, Theatre videos, Theatre discussion, National Theatre Listings. Covering London's West End, all of Theatreland and all UK theatre. The best for London Theatre Ticket Discounts.

Products
Whatsonstage.com
What's On Stage Magazine
Whatsonstage.com Awards
Whatsonstage.com Theatre Club
Testimonials
Contact us
Advertise with us

Terms and Conditions
Privacy Statement

Loading...

Book by Phone:
London Theatre Tickets: 0207 492 1565

Outings & Club: 020 7317 9100

A Bowl of Cherries Tickets  |  A Tale of Two Cities Tickets  |  Abigail's Party Tickets  |  Absent Friends Tickets  |  All New People Tickets  |  Backbeat Tickets  |  Ballet Preljocaj Tickets  |  Ballet Revolucion Tickets  |  Big Pants and Botox Tickets  |  Billy Elliot - The Musical Tickets  |  Blood Brothers Tickets  |  Chicago Tickets  |  Compania Antonio Gades Tickets  |  Coppelia Tickets  |  Cosi fan tutte Tickets  |  Crazy for You Tickets  |  Dancing to Lorca Tickets  |  Danza Contemporanea de Cuba Tickets  |  Don Giovanni Tickets  |  Dr Dee Tickets  |  Dreamboats and Petticoats Tickets  |  DV8 Physical Theatre Tickets  |  Frank Skinner Tickets  |  Ghost the Musical Tickets  |  Hans Klok Tickets  |  Hay Fever Tickets  |  Horrible Histories - Barmy Britain Tickets  |  I Dreamed a Dream Tickets  |  Jackie Mason Tickets  |  Jersey Boys Tickets  |  Jose Merce Tickets  |  Juno and the Paycock Tickets  |  Legally Blonde Tickets  |  Les Miserables Tickets  |  Long Day's Journey into Night Tickets  |  Mamma Mia! Tickets  |  Manuela Carrasco Tickets  |  Master Class Tickets  |  Matilda Tickets  |  Midnight Tango Tickets  |  My First Sleeping Beauty Tickets  |  Naked Boys Singing! Tickets  |  Nederlands Dans Theater 2 (NDT2) Tickets  |  New Adventures Tickets  |  Noises Off Tickets  |  Olga Pericet Tickets  |  Oliver! Tickets  |  One Man, Two Guvnors Tickets  |  Pajama Men Tickets  |  Pet Shop Boys and Javier De Frutos Tickets  |  Pippin Tickets  |  Play Without Words Tickets  |  Rafael Amargo Company Tickets  |  Richard Alston Dance Company Tickets  |  Rock of Ages Tickets  |  Romeo and Juliet Tickets  |  Royal Ballet of Flanders Tickets  |  Rusalka Tickets  |  Scottish Ballet Tickets  |  Sex with a Stranger Tickets  |  She Stoops to Conquer Tickets  |  Shrek - The Musical Tickets  |  Singin' in the Rain Tickets  |  Stomp Tickets  |  Sweeney Todd Tickets  |  That Thing Friday Night Tickets  |  The 39 Steps Tickets  |  The Awkward Squad Tickets  |  The Ballet Boyz Tickets  |  The Comedy of Errors Tickets  |  The Complete World of Sports (abridged) Tickets  |  The Duchess of Malfi Tickets  |  The Importance of Being Earnest Tickets  |  The Ladykillers Tickets  |  The Leisure Society Tickets  |  The Lion King Tickets  |  The Madness of George III Tickets  |  The Marriage of Figaro (Le nozze di Figaro) Tickets  |  The Mousetrap Tickets  |  The Phantom of the Opera Tickets  |  The Phantom of the Opera Tickets  |  The Pitmen Painters Tickets  |  The Royal Ballet Tickets  |  The Tiger Who Came to Tea Tickets  |  The Wizard of Oz Tickets  |  The Woman in Black Tickets  |  Three Days in May Tickets  |  Thriller Live! Tickets  |  Top Hat Tickets  |  Travelling Light Tickets  |  Umoja - The Spirit of Togetherness Tickets  |  Vicente Amigo Tickets  |  Wah! Wah! Girls Tickets  |  War Horse Tickets  |  Wayne McGregor/Random Dance Tickets  |  We Will Rock You Tickets  |  Wicked Tickets