September is always a fantastic time for London theatre as
venues launch their autumn seasons to tempt us back after the quieter summer
months. September’s Top Picks includes the usual list of must-see shows, but
we’re also providing a run-down of the months to come so you start planning
further ahead. Here is the WOS guide to autumn on the Fringe.
Running until 6 September, there’s just time to catch Phil
Willmott’s double bill of Jason and the Argonauts and
Medea at The Scoop. The next opportunity to see a show on
this scale for free might not come around for a while, so put it on the to-do
list.
Opening at the end of the month at Riverside Studios is
The York Realist by Peter Gill (from 22 September to 11
October). The Hammersmith venue is marking its founding artistic director’s 70th
birthday with the first production of a Gill play in almost 30 years. The show
will be directed by Adam Spreadbury-Maher.
Katrina, which runs from 1 to 26 September at The Bargehouse, Oxo Tower Wharf,
is a promenade production based on the accounts of those involved in the
disaster following hurricane Katrina’s destruction of New Orleans in 2005.
Drawing on the rich musical heritage of the Louisiana city, Katrina
promises to be a deeply affecting theatre experience.
Audiences have another chance to see Stockwell: The
Inquest into the Death of Jean Charles de Menezes , the verbatim drama
about the shooting of the Brazilian electrician by police in 2005. Following its
run at The Landor in June, the show transfers to the Tricycle from 9 to 20
September.
Coming quick on the heels of Stockwell is
the Tricycle’s Not Black and White season, which runs from 8
October to 19 December. Leading black contemporary playwrights Roy Williams,
Kwame Kwei-Armah and Bola Agbaje each examine life in 21st-century
London with their plays, Category B, Seize the Day and Detaining Justice . The season was commissioned as a follow-on to the one
presented by the Kilburn venue three years ago which focused on the
African-American experience in the 20th-century.
The Orange Tree meanwhile is launching its new season on 3
September. First up is The Ring of Truth, a play receiving
only its second production since its premiere at the Savoy Theatre in 1959
(3 September to 3 October). Alison’s House was inspired by the life
and work of Emily Dickenson and won its writer, Susan Glaspell, the Pulitzer
Prize in 1930 (7 October to 7 November). The two final works are The
Making of Moo by Nigel Dennis, which premiered at the Royal Court in
1957 (11 November to 12 December) and the musical, The Lady and the
Tiger, first seen at the Orange Tree in 1975 (16 December to 13
February).
Elsewhere in West London the Lyric Hammersmith presents its
first season under the new artistic directorship of Sean Holmes, beginning with Punk Rock, a new play by Simon Stephens produced in
collaboration with the Royal Exchange, Manchester (3-26 September). This is followed
by Comedians, a revival of the Trevor Griffiths modern
classic directed by Holmes and featuring Mark Benton, David Dawson and Matthew
Kelly (7 October to 14 November). More on the venue’s autumn/winter season,
which continues until April, in later WOS news bulletins.
Great things also await at the Almeida with Christopher Hampton’s new
translation of the Ödön von Horváth play, Judgement
Day (3 September to 17 October); a revival of Mrs Klein ,
Nicholas Wright’s drama about the renowned psychoanalyst, directed by Thea
Sharrock and starring Claire Higgins (22 October to 5 December); and Patrick
Hamilton’s dark classic, Rope (10 December to 6 February).
And
finally, Polka Theatre, which produces work purely for children, begins its new
season with The Ride of Your Life, a funny new play about
the life and work of Charles Darwin (25 September to 31 October). Goldilocks and the Three Bears, a new telling of the classic
tale, will be playing in the venue’s second space from 21 October to 20
February, while David Wood’s adaptation of James and the Giant
Peach plays in the main space from 13 November to 13 February.