Quantcast

Jodie McNee with her uncle Les Dennis
Jodie McNee with her uncle Les Dennis

Scouser Jodie McNee is keeping comedy in the family

Date: 25 April 2009

Young actress Jodie McNee is appearing alongside her famous uncle in the JB Priestley farcical comedy When We Are Married and makes the return to her home city next week. Michael Hunt finds out more.

The 24-year-old from Huyton, who is comedian Les Dennis’ niece, plays maid Ruby Birtle and has already been generating plenty of praise since the co-production between Liverpool Playhouse and West Yorkshire Playhouse opened in Leeds at the start of April.

McNee said working with her uncle has been a long time ambition and she is benefiting from the experience. “I’ve always wanted to follow in the footsteps of my uncle Les,” she says.

“He has been an inspiration to me and is someone who is constantly challenging himself. He’s very versatile.”

Dennis plays down trodden Herbert Soppitt in the play and is making a return having last appeared at the Liverpool Playhouse in 2003 in a production of the comedy Art by Yasmina Reza.

When We Are Married is JB Priestley’s sharp observation of marriage, social standing and petty snobbery set in a small Yorkshire town in the early 20th century.

“It’s a good night out for anyone wanting to come and see it. The play questions marriage and even though you’re thinking about the issue at the same time you are laughing along with it,” the former Broughton Hall High School pupil tells me.

McNee is joined by a strong cast which includes Polly Hemingway, Tom Georgeson and Eileen O’Brien amongst them.

Three couples gather to celebrate their silver wedding anniversaries but as the day unfolds some truths surface and all are put in a scenario they totally unexpected.

West Yorkshire Playhouse artistic director Ian Brown has revived the satire, who has kept to JB Priestley’s original intention according to McNee.

“Ian has done it the way it says to do,” she says. “I don’t think you can make it a post-modern play because it may start to over complicate it, so he’s looked at what the play is asking - such as ‘what is marriage? Or why is marriage important?’ - and kept it true to what Priestley has written.”

McNee’s character Ruby is representing the serving class from the period the play is set and she says the young character is someone she’s taken to heart. “Ruby is a little gem really. Full of joy, youth and innocence – lives in the moment – and intuitive. She keeps asking questions all the time which isn’t socially good for the times I suppose, but it’s refreshing.”

McNee last appeared in A Taste of Honey at Manchester’s Royal Exchange, playing pregnant teenager Jo, which followed a performance at Shakespeare’s Globe in King Lear as Cordelia.

She trained at London’s Drama Centre and has since taken residence in the capital. Since turning professional, McNee has never done a comedy professionally before but is enjoying a return to her roots.

“It’s funny because when I was at the Drama Centre I was doing a lot of impressions and stand-up,” she explains.

“But when I finished my training I went in a different direction and I’m in my forth year out of the Drama Centre now and, particularly since my first real theatre role as Antigone in The Burial at Thebes and with Imogen in Cymbeline, they’ve all been mostly tragic leads.

“Most of the work has been tragedies which I’ve loved doing, but I’ve been thinking it’s about time I did some comedy!”

And McNee need not turn much further than to her uncle for advice on theatrical comedy. “I was quite scared going into comedy but Les knows all about it and is very knowledgeable and knows how to play with the audience.

“It’s funny because I was even scared when people started laughing, but he would always say to use your instinct and always be aware the audience is a fourth wall – but you’ve got to wait for them to laugh.

“There have been times when the audience have laughed when I wasn’t expecting them to and it is a bit of a shock because you’re wondering why are they laughing? But Les has said it’s as much about the audience feeding the play as it is about the play feeding the audience.”

When We Are Married arrives to the Liverpool Playhouse for a three-week run from Thursday 30 April.

*Photograph taken by Keith Pattison

Related Content



Back to Northwest Homepage



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.

Free Newsletter

Subscribe to our free newsletter


Featured Video

Twitter

Featured Editor's Picks

X Factor musical titled I Can't Sing!, opens Palladium March 2014
The forthcoming X Factor musical will be called I Can't Sing! The Musical and will premiere at the L...

Kazeem Tosin Amore. Photo: Jethro ComptonTanzi Libre
starstar
First things first, it's great to see the Southwark Playhouse open again. Set halfway down New...

Oscar winner: Clint EastwoodClint Eastwood on board to direct Jersey Boys film?
Hollywood legend Clint Eastwood has reportedly been signed up to direct the film version of Jersey B...

Michael Coveney: Big Apple bites and Manhattan memories
You should always do new things in familiar cities. Over the past few days in New York, I walked a...

Tom Hiddleston. Photo: Dan WoollerDonmar stages Nick Payne premiere, Wesker's Roots & Tom Hiddleston in Coriolanus
The Donmar Warehouse has announced its new season, which features the premiere of Nick Payne's new p...

Kara Tointon in Relatively Speaking. Photo: Nobby ClarkPodcast: Kendal & co in Relatively Speaking Q&A
Last night (21 May 2013), 140 Whatsonstage.com theatregoers attended Relatively Speaking at the West...

Jonathan Coy, Felicity Kendal, Kara Tointon & Max Bennett. Photo: Dan Wooller1st Night Photos: Kimberley Walsh & Denise Van Outen toast Tointon in Relatively Speaking
Strictly Come Dancing stars Kimberley Walsh, Denise Van Outen and Artem Chigvintsev toasted former S...

Sealed with a kiss: <em>Spiderman<em>ATG acquires Broadway's largest theatre The Foxwoods, home of Spider-Man
In another significant step for transatlantic theatre relations, the UK’s biggest theatre ...

Video: Sheila Hancock shows wild side in Barking in Essex trailer
As this new trailer reveals, Sheila Hancock has had a dramatic TOWIE-style makeover for her forthcom...

Kara Tointon in Relatively Speaking Review Round-up: Critics convinced by Relatively Speaking?
Lindsay Posner's revival of Alan Ayckbourn's Relatively Speaking opened at the Wyndham's Theatre las...
>> More Editor's Picks
>> Most Recent Stories
>> Most Popular Stories

Follow Us

Facebook Twitter Google Plus YouTube