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Chichester Festival Theatre – complete Festival 2021 announcement

The Long Song

Four new productions to follow South Pacific in Chichester’s Festival 2021 have today been announced by Artistic Director Daniel Evans and Executive Director Kathy Bourne. 

Two world premieres: 

THE LONG SONG, a new adaptation by Suhayla El-Bushra based on  Andrea Levy’s novel, directed by Charlotte Gwinner 

THE FLOCK by Zoe Cooper, directed by Guy Jones 

Revivals of two great modern dramas:  

Rachel O’Riordan directs Martin McDonagh’s THE BEAUTY QUEEN OF  LEENANE in a co-production with Lyric Hammersmith Theatre 

HOME by David Storey, directed by Josh Roche 

Full cast and streaming dates announced for Daniel Evans’s new production of  Rodgers & Hammerstein’s SOUTH PACIFIC 

Open Air Weekend and Minerva Cabaret in June 

Chichester Festival Youth Theatre’s production of PINOCCHIO by Anna Ledwich  returns for Christmas 2021 

New partnership with Ecologi offering patrons option to carbon-offset travel as part  of CFT’s green strategy 

Tickets held at 2019 prices; 14,500 tickets at £10 in the Festival Theatre and 6,000 £5  PROLOGUE tickets for 16 – 30 year olds  

Daniel Evans and Kathy Bourne said: 

‘We’re delighted to announce four new productions to add to our summer musical, South  Pacific. The Long Song, Suhayla El-Bushra’s new adaptation of Andrea Levy’s great novel,  follows South Pacific into the Festival Theatre, while Zoe Cooper’s new play The Flock joins  Martin McDonagh’s The Beauty Queen of Leenane (in a co-production with the Lyric  Hammersmith) and David Storey’s Home in a stimulating line-up in the Minerva Theatre. 

‘These plays – each with a director new to CFT at the helm – take us from the South Pacific to  Jamaica, rural Ireland, the North-East of England and back to the Home Counties. All engage, in varying ways, with the differences that divide us – from racial prejudice to warring families,  social mores and conflicting beliefs – and whether tolerance and understanding can bring us  together. 

‘And before we open the Festival Theatre in July, we look forward to welcoming audiences to  our Open Air Weekend in Oaklands Park with socially distanced picnic plots for all the family. 

‘Our commitment to our local community has remained undimmed over the past year. If  anything, this work has grown and deepened, notably through initiatives such as Young Carers  Connect, and this – alongside our greatly expanded digital presence – will continue. 

‘While we’re all looking forward to a thoroughly good night out, it is important we welcome  audiences back safely. We’re continuing to offer a choice of socially distanced performances in  both theatres in July and August. And everyone can book with confidence, knowing that should  we have to cancel, they’ll be entitled to a full refund. 

‘After a challenging year, we can’t wait to reopen our doors – and to see Chichester  productions reaching audiences far beyond West Sussex again. In addition to our film of Crave (streaming 18 – 29 May), Caroline, Or Change is now scheduled for New York in the autumn  and Singin’ in the Rain splashes down in London later this summer.’ 

FESTIVAL 2021 PRODUCTIONS – JULY TO OCTOBER 

Gina Beck, Julian Ovenden,  

Joanna Ampil, Keir Charles and Rob Houchen in 

Rodgers & Hammerstein’s 

SOUTH PACIFIC 

Music by Richard Rodgers 

Lyrics by Oscar Hammerstein II 

Book by Oscar Hammerstein II and Joshua Logan 

Adapted from the Pulitzer Prize-winning novel Tales of the South Pacific by James A. Michener Directed by Daniel Evans 

5 July – 4 September 2021, live in the Festival Theatre 

Streamed as live on 4, 9, 14, 18, 21, 26, 31 August & 3 September 

Press performance: Tuesday 13 July at 7.00pm 

The full company has been confirmed for Daniel Evans’s new production of Rodgers &  Hammerstein’s South Pacific. Led by Gina Beck (Matilda, Show Boat, Wicked, Phantom of  the Opera) as Nellie, Julian Ovenden (Bridgerton, Downton Abbey, Merrily We Roll Along,  Grand Hotel, BBC Proms) as Emile, Joanna Ampil (Avenue Q, Les Misérables, Miss Saigon)  as Bloody Mary, Keir Charles (Quiz, Back To Life) as Luther Billis and Rob Houchen (Les  Misérables, The Light in the Piazza) as Cable, it also includes Iroy Abesamis, Lindsay  Atherton, Carl Au, Rosanna Bates, David Birrell, Leslie Garcia Bowman, Taylor  Bradshaw, Bobbie Chambers, Charlotte Coggin, Danny Collins, Oliver Edward, Sergio  Giacomelli, Shailan Gohil, Adrian Grove, Zack Guest, Cameron Bernard Jones, Amanda  Lindgren, Matthew Maddison, Sera Maehara (as Liat), Melissa Nettleford, Rachel Jayne  Picar, Kate Playdon, Pierce Rogan, Clancy Ryan, Charlie Waddell and James Wilkinson Jones, with children’s roles played by Lana Lakha, Kami Lieu, David Ngara O’Dwyer and  Alexander Quinlan. 

This much-loved, Tony and Pulitzer Prize-winning musical opened in 1949 to huge success,  becoming one of Broadway’s longest running hit shows. It boasts one of Rodgers &  Hammerstein’s most memorable scores, featuring songs such as Some Enchanted Evening,  I’m Gonna Wash That Man Right Outa My Hair and Bali Ha’i.

  1. On an archipelago in the South Pacific Ocean, US troops are kicking their heels amid the cacao groves while restlessly waiting for the war to reach them.

Nellie Forbush, a navy nurse from Arkansas, finds herself falling for the French plantation  owner, Emile de Becque – a man with a mysterious past. The scheming sailor Luther Billis runs  a makeshift laundry to earn a quick buck, but he’s no match for the Polynesian Bloody Mary  who’s intent on exploiting these foreigners. 

When young Princeton graduate Lieutenant Joe Cable is flown in on a dangerous  reconnaissance mission, love and fear become entwined as the island’s battle for hearts and  minds begins. 

The production is directed by Artistic Director Daniel Evans whose previous Chichester  productions include This Is My Family, Quiz and Fiddler on the Roof.  

The set and costume designer is Peter McKintosh, and the choreographer and movement  director is Ann Yee. Musical supervision is by Nigel Lilley, with musical direction by Cat  Beveridge, orchestrations by David Cullen, lighting design by Howard Harrison, sound  design by Paul Groothuis, video design by Gillian Tan, additional arrangements by Theo  Jamieson, and casting by Charlotte Sutton.  

South Pacific will be streamed as live on selected dates in August and September, visit  website for details. One performance of South Pacific each week will be socially distanced. There will be a Dementia Friendly performance on 1 September at 2.30pm, welcoming  individuals living with dementia, as well as their friends, families and carers. 

South Pacific is sponsored by R.L. Austen 

THE FLOCK 

A new play by Zoe Cooper 

Directed by Guy Jones 

6 – 28 August, Minerva Theatre 

Press night: Thursday 12 August 

The parishioners of All Hallows Church are putting on a production of Noah’s Ark, one of a  cycle of mystery plays performed by all the local parishes. The Bishop is hopeful the project will  help paper over the cracks revealed by an unfortunate incident involving an evangelical, a glass  of wine and an angry liberal. 

Rory, All Hallows’ vicar, wants to keep a low profile, and his partner Simon is happy to provide  musical accompaniment but would rather he wasn’t given any lines, thank you very much. 

The congregation, however, have other plans. For Patricia, the show is an opportunity to show  off the church’s artistic talents, while the curate, Hannah, hopes it will give her a chance to get  to know the parishioners better. Meanwhile, Fin becomes ever more infuriated at Rory’s hands off approach and teenager Erin just hopes that this is a family where she might find a home. 

Above all, Rory wants to keep the ship – and his relationship – afloat. Can this battered vessel  still offer its clergy and congregation sanctuary in the storm? 

Compassionate and funny, The Flock depicts the bumpy road to inclusion for this community,  asking how we can live and worship alongside one another when our differences are so  marked. How do we remain together when we’re so far apart?

Zoe Cooper’s plays include the award-winning Jess and Joe Forever, and Out of  Water (Orange Tree/RSC) which – directed by Guy Jones – was a Susan Smith Blackburn  Prize finalist and shortlisted for the Evening Standard Award for Most Promising Playwright. 

Selina Cadell (Patricia) makes a welcome return to Chichester, where her appearances  include The Dresser and The Government Inspector. Her theatre work also includes People and The Habit of Art (National Theatre) and Humble Boy (Orange Tree), while her extensive TV  roles include Mrs Tishell in all 10 series of Doc Martin

The Flock will be designed by Natasha Jenkins, with lighting by Zoe Spurr, sound design by  Alexandra Faye Braithwaite and casting by Charlotte Sutton. 

One performance each week will be socially distanced

The Flock is sponsored by Genesis Town Planning. 

THE BEAUTY QUEEN OF LEENANE 

By Martin McDonagh 

Directed by Rachel O’Riordan 

A co-production with Lyric Hammersmith Theatre 

3 September – 2 October, Minerva Theatre 

Press night: Thursday 9 September 

In the mountains of Connemara, County Galway, Maureen Folan – a plain, lonely woman, tied  to her manipulative and ageing mother, Mag – comes alive at her first and possibly last  prospect of a loving relationship. But Mag has other ideas; and her interference sets in motion a  train of events that leads inexorably towards the play’s breathtaking conclusion. 

Rachel O’Riordan directs a major revival of this darkly comic, award-winning play by Martin  McDonagh, whose work includes the films Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri and In  Bruges; and the plays The Cripple of Inishmaan, The Lieutenant of Inishmore and Hangmen

Ingrid Craigie plays Mag. Her many credits include Sweet Bird of Youth (CFT), The Cripple of  Inishmaan (West End/Broadway) and TV’s Roadkill. Kwaku Fortune (Line of Duty, Normal  People) makes his Chichester debut as Ray. 

Rachel O’Riordan is Artistic Director of the Lyric Hammersmith Theatre and formerly of Cardiff’s  Sherman Theatre. Her directing credits include Tanika Gupta’s adaptation of A Doll’s House (Lyric) and the Olivier Award-winning Killology (Sherman/Royal Court). 

The production will be designed by Good Teeth Theatre, with lighting designed by Kevin  Treacy, music and sound designed by Anna Clock, and casting by Sam Stevenson

Suitable for ages 14+ 

The Beauty Queen of Leenane is a co-production with Lyric Hammersmith Theatre, where it will  play immediately following its Chichester run, from 9 October – 6 November. 

At Chichester, the production is sponsored by ITD Consultants.

 THE LONG SONG 

A new adaptation by Suhayla El-Bushra 

Based on the novel by Andrea Levy 

Directed by Charlotte Gwinner 

1 – 23 October, Festival Theatre 

Press night: Thursday 7 October 

‘You do not know me yet but I am the heroine of this drama. I am told that here I must give a  taste of what is to unfold. I am to convey that this tale is set in Jamaica during the last turbulent  days of slavery and the early years of freedom. 

‘I was born a slave upon a sugar plantation named Amity. I was there when the Baptist War  raged in 1831, and when slavery was declared no more. It tells of my mama Kitty, of the  negroes enslaved, of Caroline Mortimer the woman who owned me. I am to say that it is a true  and thrilling journey through that unsettled time. 

‘Cha, I say, what fuss-fuss. Come, let them just see it for themselves.’ 

Miss July is born into slavery in Jamaica and is brutally parted from both her mother, and her  name. But what she retains is resilience, charisma and a subversive, spirited wit. This ebullient  and life-affirming play finds humanity, resistance and hope in the darkest of times.  

The Long Song is adapted from Andrea Levy’s award-winning novel by Suhayla El-Bushra,  formerly writer in residence at the National Theatre Studio and whose work includes The  Suicide (NT), Arabian Nights (Lyceum, Edinburgh), and Channel 4’s Hollyoaks and Ackley  Bridge

Director Charlotte Gwinner was Associate Director at the Bush Theatre, Liverpool Everyman  & Playhouse and Sheffield Theatres 2014-16, where her productions included Waiting for  Godot, the Sarah Kane season and The Distance. 

The production will be designed by Frankie Bradshaw, with lighting by Mark Doubleday,  musical direction, vocal arrangements and additional composition by Michael Henry, sound by  Helen Skiera, video by Dick Straker, movement by Angela Gasparetto, fights by Kev  McCurdy and casting by Charlotte Sutton with Chandra Ruegg

The Long Song is sponsored by Seaward and by Wiley. 

HOME 

By David Storey 

Directed by Josh Roche 

8 October – 6 November, Minerva Theatre 

Press night: Wednesday 13 October 

Harry and Jack. Marjorie and Kathleen. Alfred. 

In a neglected garden, small talk oscillates between the weather, the neighbours,  reminiscences of friends and family, and anecdotes of past exploits in love and war.  

But this quintet of characters, with their foibles and failings, are not what they seem to be, and  nor is their home. And overhead, the clouds are gathering. 

David Storey’s award-winning 1970 play has become a modern classic – a heartrendingly  funny, haunting and deeply humane study of hearts, minds and England: islands adrift.

Director Josh Roche won the JMK Award for his production of My Name Is Rachel Corrie at  the Young Vic with Erin Doherty in the title role. He has directed productions for Audible UK,  BBC Arts, and has worked extensively at the RSC and Shakespeare’s Globe. He is the co founder of OpenHire. 

The production designer will be Sophie Thomas, with casting by Charlotte Sutton. 

Other members of the creative team will be appointed in accordance with OpenHire’s principles  of publicly advertising freelance opportunities and a transparent recruitment process. 

Home is sponsored by Henry Adams. 

Chichester Festival Youth Theatre 

PINOCCHIO 

A new adaptation by Anna Ledwich 

Music by Tom Brady 

From the original novel The Adventures of Pinocchio by Carlo Collodi 

Directed by Dale Rooks 

18 December – 1 January, Festival Theatre 

Press night: Wednesday 22 December 

Chichester Festival Youth Theatre’s brand new version of this classic tale by Anna Ledwich had just 15 live performances in 2020 before it was streamed globally during lockdown. It  returns for Christmas 2021 again directed by Dale Rooks, who brings her trademark visual flair  and gift for storytelling to this darkly magical reinvention. 

Geppetto the boatmaker tosses aside a piece of wood; it’s only good for the fire. To his  amazement, a voice answers him back. Geppetto picks up the wood and begins to carve – and  a small wooden boy is revealed. A puppet, which he names Pinocchio. 

And that’s when the mayhem begins. Pinocchio can’t stop getting into trouble, despite the best  efforts of the Fairy and the Cricket to keep him on track. His intentions may be good – he truly  wants to go to school like real boys and girls – but the temptation to discover the wonders of  the world and make his fortune keep getting in the way.  

Pinocchio encounters a host of fascinating characters, from Punch and Judy to the wily Fox  and Cat and the strange Sea Monster, as he journeys to Wonderland and the world beneath  the sea. But he discovers that it isn’t easy hiding the truth – especially when your nose gets  longer with every lie you tell… 

The set is designed by Simon Higlett, with costumes by Ryan Dawson Laight, lighting by  James Whiteside, musical direction by Colin Billing and sound by Gregory Clarke

Recommended for ages 7+. There will be a Relaxed performance of Pinocchio on 23  December at 2pm, and a Polish-translated performance on 22 December at 2pm. 

Pinocchio is sponsored by Henry Adams and by Mercer. 

OPEN AIR WEEKEND, CRAVE, MINERVA CABARET & FESTIVAL 2021 EVENTS  Carly Bawden, Ako Mitchell and Sharon Rose are among the West End stars who’ll be  appearing at CFT’s Concerts in the Park from 3 – 6 June, part of CFT’s Open Air Weekend.  CBBC BAFTA Award-winner Emily Burnett headlines Family Fun in the Park on 4 & 5 June. 

There’s also another chance for audiences at home to experience a specially made film of the  production that defied lockdown. Directed by Tinuke Craig, Sarah Kane’s Crave was live streamed to thousands in 50 countries around the globe as the cast of four performed in  Chichester Festival Theatre’s empty auditorium. This film is a new edit of the live stream, with  remastered sound and incorporating new footage, available to watch from 18 – 29 May. 

Before we open Festival 2021, two highly acclaimed companies return for a mini Cabaret  season at the Minerva Theatre in June. Following their sold-out runs in the 2019 Spiegeltent  season, The Black Cat Cabaret presents Salon des Artistes (10-12 June) and there’s another  chance to see Barely Methodical Troupe’s Bromance (17-19 June). 

A lively programme of talks and activities will complement Festival 2021. Highlights include an  interview with Kate Mosse on her personal story of being a carer; discussions on Martin  McDonagh’s international range, and the legacy of Andrea Levy; the NT Connections 2021 South East festival; and DigitAll, our annual celebration of performances created by people  with additional needs, which moves online. 

Free Pre- and Post-Show Discussions, with the director and cast members, are held for each  production. 

TREE PLANTING AND CARBON OFF-SETTING 

CFT is currently developing a new and robust green strategy which will set a pathway for the Theatre to reach carbon net zero, led by our staff ‘Green Committee’ who champion our  sustainability agenda and develop new initiatives. 

From 2021, one of the ways in which we will reduce our impact is by supporting tree planting  projects locally and internationally. In place of traditional opening night gifts and cards, we will  plant a tree for each production to support local tree planting initiatives. We began in 2020 with  the planting of five trees in Oaklands Park, in partnership with Chichester District Council, to  celebrate our Youth Theatre production, Pinocchio

We encourage patrons and staff to minimise car travel, but recognise that driving to the theatre  may be the only available option for some. We have established a partnership with UK social  enterprise Ecologi to offer audience members the option to carbon-offset the impact of their  journey, at the point of purchasing a ticket. All contributions go directly to Ecologi to support  carbon off-setting projects and international tree-planting programmes. Carbon off-setting is just  a small part of what we’re doing, and needs to work alongside other meaningful action to cut  our carbon emissions. 

BOOKING INFORMATION 

Priority booking for Friends of Chichester Festival Theatre opens: 

Saturday 22 May (online and booking forms only) 

Tuesday 25 May (phone and in person) 

Booking for Groups and Schools opens: 

Thursday 27 May 

General booking opens: 

Saturday 29 May (online only) 

Tuesday 1 June (phone and in person) 

cft.org.uk Box Office 01243 781312 

Tickets from £10  

Prologue: £5 tickets for 16 – 30s

6,000 £5 tickets are available for 16 to 30 year-olds for all productions throughout Festival  2021; sign up for free at cft.org.uk/prologue. Members also have access to a range of  exclusive events. 

Twitter @ChichesterFT Facebook ChichesterFestivalTheatre 

Instagram ChichesterFT YouTube ChichesterTheatre 

#Festival2021  

Chichester Festival Theatre reopens with SOUTH PACIFIC and a film of CRAVE

Crave

Artistic Director Daniel Evans and Executive Director Kathy Bourne announced today that Chichester Festival Theatre will reopen its doors with its summer musical: Rodgers & Hammerstein’s SOUTH PACIFIC, running from 5 July – 4 September.

 Before then, a film of Sarah Kane’s CRAVE, created from Tinuke Craig’s acclaimed production, will be available to watch on demand in May.
 
CFT is also planning a weekend of open air concerts and family events in Oaklands Park in early June.
 
Kathy Bourne and Daniel Evans said:
 
‘Seldom can a summer have been as eagerly anticipated as this one. We are so proud and thankful to be able to say: we are re-opening, we will be producing work on our stages and digitally, and we will continue to serve our community of audiences and theatre-makers.
 
‘We know that Chichester’s summer musical is a highlight of the year for people locally, regionally and nationally. South Pacific should have been the centrepiece of Festival 2020; we couldn’t be more thrilled that it will finally open this July, with a superb cast and creative team who’ve waited a year to bring it to fruition.
 
‘We’re also delighted to offer a specially made film of our Autumn highlight, Sarah Kane’s Crave – giving audiences around the globe a second chance to see Tinuke Craig’s revelatory production.
 
‘While South Pacific will initially be booking with a reduced capacity auditorium and a dedicated socially distanced performance every week, our hope is that, later in 2021, we will see the return of non-socially distanced audiences with a renewed confidence and appetite for live performance. We’ll announce further productions for Festival 2021 later this spring.’
 
Currently, Step 4 of the government’s roadmap anticipates the removal of all legal limits on social contact and the reopening of full theatre auditoriums from 21 June, subject to successful pilot test events taking place in April and May. Accordingly, South Pacific will go on sale with a reduced capacity auditorium (approximately 900, as opposed to 1300) in order to ease congestion in the foyers and public spaces, with a view to moving to full capacity as soon as government guidelines permit. Enhanced cleaning, hand sanitising and the wearing of face coverings at all times in the Theatre will be in place.
 
In addition, there will be one specially designated socially distanced performance every week – complete with the Covid-safety measures introduced last autumn, including timed arrivals and temperature checks – for those audience members who would prefer to remain socially distanced for the foreseeable future.
 
 CRAVE
By Sarah Kane 
Streaming worldwide: opening night 18 May at 7.30pm BST, on demand from 19 – 29 May
 
A chance for audiences at home to experience a specially made film of the production that defied lockdown. Sarah Kane’s Crave was live streamed to thousands in 50 countries around the globe as the cast of four performed in an empty auditorium. This film is a new edit of the live stream, with remastered sound and incorporating new footage from filmmaker Ravi Deepres.
 
In a damaged world, four characters search for the light. This heart-rending, funny, kind and cruel meditation on the meaning of love resonated with audiences looking to reconnect after the loneliness and seclusion inflicted by a global pandemic.
 
The opening night performance will be followed by a live post-show talk with members of the company.
 
Erin DohertyAlfred Enoch, Wendy Kweh and Jonathan Slinger are the cast in Tinuke Craig’s production, which is designed byAlex Lowde, with lighting by Joshua Pharo, composition and sound by Anna Clock, film by Ravi Deepres, movement by Jenny Ogilvie and casting by Charlotte Sutton. Filmed by The Umbrella Rooms.
 
Contains strong language; suitable for ages 16+.
Crave is sponsored by Genesis.
 
 
Gina Beck, Julian Ovenden,
Joanna Ampil, Keir Charles and Rob Houchen in
 
Rodgers & Hammerstein’s
SOUTH PACIFIC
Music by Richard Rodgers
Lyrics by Oscar Hammerstein II
Book by Oscar Hammerstein II and Joshua Logan
Adapted from the Pulitzer Prize-winning novel Tales of the South Pacific by James A. Michener
 
Directed by Daniel Evans
5 July – 4 September 2021, live in the Festival Theatre
Press performance: Tuesday 13 July at 7.00pm
 
Rodgers & Hammerstein’s South Pacific will be Chichester Festival Theatre’s summer musical for 2021, running from 5 July – 4 September, with a press night on Tuesday 13 July. The production will also be streamed online, dates to be announced.
 
Daniel Evans directs an outstanding cast led by Gina Beck (Nellie Forbush), Julian Ovenden (Emile de Becque) Joanna Ampil(Bloody Mary), Keir Charles (Luther Billis) and Rob Houchen (Joe Cable), which also includes Iroy Abesamis, Carl Au, Rosanna Bates, David Birrell, Taylor Bradshaw, Bobbie Chambers, Danny Collins, Shailan Gohil, Adrian Grove, Zack Guest, Matthew Maddison, Sera Maehara (as Liat), Melissa Nettleford, Kate Playdon, Pierce Rogan and Clancy Ryan.
 
This much-loved, Tony and Pulitzer Prize-winning musical opened in 1949 to huge success, becoming one of Broadway’s longest running hit shows. It boasts one of Rodgers & Hammerstein’s most memorable scores, featuring songs such as Some Enchanted Evening, I’m Gonna Wash That Man Right Outa My Hair and Bali Ha’i.
 
1943. On an archipelago in the South Pacific Ocean, US troops are kicking their heels amid the cacao groves while restlessly waiting for the war to reach them. 
 
Nellie Forbush, a navy nurse from Arkansas, finds herself falling for the French plantation owner, Emile de Becque – a man with a mysterious past. The scheming sailor Luther Billis runs a makeshift laundry to earn a quick buck, but he’s no match for the Polynesian Bloody Mary who’s intent on exploiting these foreigners.
 
When young Princeton graduate Lieutenant Joe Cable is flown in on a dangerous reconnaissance mission, love and fear become entwined as the island’s battle for hearts and minds begins.
 
This new production of South Pacific is directed by CFT’s Artistic Director Daniel Evans whose previous Chichester productions include This Is My Family, Quiz and Fiddler on the Roof
 
Making their Chichester debuts are Gina Beck (Matilda, Show Boat, Wicked, Phantom of the Opera) as Nellie, Julian Ovenden(Merrily We Roll Along, Grand Hotel, BBC Proms, Downton Abbey) as Emile, Joanna Ampil (Avenue Q, Les Misérables, Miss Saigon) as Bloody Mary, and Rob Houchen (Les Misérables, The Light in the Piazza) as Cable. Keir Charles, who played Chris Tarrant inQuiz, returns as Luther Billis. 
 
The set and costume designer is Peter McKintosh, and the choreographer and movement director, Ann Yee. Musical direction is by Cat Beveridge, with musical supervision by Nigel Lilley, orchestrations by David Cullen, lighting design by Howard Harrison, sound design by Paul Groothuis, additional arrangements by Theo Jamieson, and casting by Charlotte Sutton.

Chichester Festival Theatre cancels Festival 2020 productions

Chichester Festival Theatre announces today that due to the unpredictable ongoing nature of Covid-19, it has made the very difficult decision to cancel all scheduled Festival 2020 productions. The Theatre had been due to reopen in July with South Pacific and The Unfriend, both of which we intend to reschedule to 2021.

Kathy Bourne and Daniel Evans, Executive and Artistic Director respectively, said:

‘We are devastated that for the only time in Chichester Festival Theatre’s history, no Festival performances will take place this year. We had been hoping to be able to produce at least some Festival 2020 shows in the summer and autumn; but all the indications from government point to social distancing being in place for many months to come, as the country continues its vital fight against coronavirus while protecting the NHS. At this unprecedented time, with the full support of the Trustees, we feel this is the most responsible course of action we can take in order to ensure the future resilience of our organisation as well as protecting our staff, artists and audiences.

‘We are currently considering a revised shorter programme of work from Autumn 2020, including Pinocchio over the Christmas period, and are working on a new schedule for 2021 which we hope will include some of the planned Festival 2020 shows, in addition to South Pacific and The Unfriend. All ticket holders will be contacted by our Box Office with the option of exchanges, credits, refunds or donations in good time.

‘We are determined to stay connected to our audiences through our Learning, Education and Participation activities and online streaming, and to continue the initiatives we have implemented which support our community (such as our partnership with the Chichester Scrub Hub, lending our accommodation to the NHS and helping UK Harvest with food deliveries). We are immensely grateful to our supporters and sponsors who have stayed with us during this hugely challenging period; and to the many people who have sent us good wishes and donations. We are living for the moment we can reopen our doors, gather together and make some theatre.’

Sir William Castell, Chairman of the Theatre, added: ‘First of all, Chichester Festival Theatre is safe. This year we will concentrate on extending our virtual LEAP activities, supporting the community and, whenever we can, our carers, nurses and doctors. Our team is in good spirits. The Board of Trustees has been working alongside the Executive to arrive at these decisions; we fully support them and are proud of the entire Theatre team for rising to the challenge. They are absolutely focused on doing all we can to support our community through this ordeal. We will maintain our team for a full reopening with Festival 2021, as we approach our 59th year of being at the heart of the Chichester community.’

Chichester Festival Theatre 2020 season announcement

Chichester Festival Theatre 2020

Chichester Festival Theatre’s Festival 2020 has today been unveiled by Artistic Director Daniel Evans and Executive Director Kathy Bourne. 

  • Five world premieres: 

THE UNFRIEND by Steven Moffat, with Amanda Abbington, Frances Barber and Reece Shearsmith, directed by Mark Gatiss THE LONG SONG, a new adaptation by Suhayla El-Bushra based on Andrea Levy’s novel, directed by Charlotte Gwinner, with Cherrelle Skeete heading the cast THE TAXIDERMIST’S DAUGHTER by Kate Mosse, adapted from her novel, directed by Jonathan Munby THE NARCISSIST by Christopher Shinn, directed by Ola Ince A new adaptation of PINOCCHIO by Anna Ledwich 

  • Two musicals: 

Daniel Evans directs Chichester’s first production of Rodgers and Hammerstein’s SOUTH PACIFIC with Gina Beck, Julian Ovenden, Joanna Ampil and Rob Houchen ASSASSINS by Stephen Sondheim and John Weidman, directed by Polly Findlay 

  • Major revivals of great modern dramas: 

Jonathan Church directs Henry Goodman in Brecht’s THE LIFE OF GALILEOtranslated by David Edgar Muriel Spark’s THE PRIME OF MISS JEAN BRODIE adapted by Jay Presson  Allen, directed by Rachel Kavanaugh Richard Coyle and Lisa Dillon in Tom Stoppard’s THE REAL THING, directed by Simon Evans THE VILLAGE BIKE by Penelope Skinner, directed by Nicole Charles Sarah Kane’s CRAVE, directed by Tinuke Craig 

  • Tickets held at 2019 prices; 20,000 tickets at £10 in the Festival Theatre and over 10,000 £5 PROLOGUE tickets for 16 – 25 year olds 

Daniel Evans and Kathy Bourne said: 

‘We are proud to have some of the UK’s most exciting artists working with us in Chichester in 2020. This year we’re achieving a 50:50 gender balance in our playwrights, and we’re thrilled to have five world premieres – which include first plays by Steven Moffat and Kate Mosse, and new work from Suhayla El-Bushra (based on Andrea Levy’s great novel), Anna Ledwich and Christopher Shinn. We’re reintroducing repertory for two productions this autumn, with Kate Mosse’s The Taxidermist’s Daughter alongside Stephen Sondheim and John Weidman’s Assassins in the Festival Theatre. Assassins also plays opposite Christopher Shinn’s The Narcissist in the Minerva: both shedding an entertaining and probing light on American politics and psyche, as the US approaches the presidential election. 

‘We extend a warm welcome to our outstanding acting company; and to our directors (seven female and five male), whether they are returning – Nicole Charles, Tinuke Craig, Rachel Kavanaugh, Jonathan Munby, Dale Rooks and, of course, former Artistic Director Jonathan Church – or working at Chichester for the first time: Simon Evans, Polly Findlay, Mark Gatiss, Charlotte Gwinner and Ola Ince. 

‘The birth of the Chichester Spiegeltent was an undoubted highlight of 2019, and we are delighted to be bringing it back this autumn. Whereas last year it housed an unforgettable production of Sing Yer Heart Out for the Lads, this year we’ll introduce Sarah Kane’s work to Chichester audiences with a new staging of Crave, before another eclectic season of music, cabaret and family entertainment, to be announced later in the year. 

‘Finally, our extensive work in the local community continues to thrive, through innovative and creative programmes ranging from work with refugees and primary children to dementia friendly initiatives. This year CFT will also be reaching audiences across the globe. Sharon D. Clarke will recreate her Olivier Award-winning performance in Caroline, Or Change in New York; Laura Wade’s The Watsons will be in the West End; James Graham’s Quiz tours the UK this autumn; David Haig’s Pressure visits Toronto; and Singin’ in the Rain splashes down in London, Japan and on a UK tour.’ 

FESTIVAL 2020 PRODUCTIONS – APRIL TO OCTOBER 

Henry Goodman in THE LIFE OF GALILEO by Bertolt Brecht Translated by David Edgar Directed by Jonathan Church 24 April – 16 May, Festival Theatre Press night: Wednesday 29 April 

  1. Galileo Galilei is a teacher of mathematics at the University of Padua. The establishment orthodoxy – which he’s been teaching to private pupils for years – is that the sun revolves round the earth, which is the centre of the universe. The theory confirms the scriptures and pays the bills. 

Now, with the help of a newly-invented telescope, Galileo is starting to look at the universe afresh. And the more he looks, the more he sees, including mountains on the moon and strange stars around Jupiter. His discoveries not only support the heretical idea that the earth moves round the sun, they give rise to urgent new questions too. What if the earth is just another star? And if the church is wrong about the heavens, might it be wrong about how things are here on earth? 

Brilliant minds have been burnt alive for asking such questions. Because though this is the age of science and discovery, it is also the age of the Inquisition. 

 Bertolt Brecht revised his epic play about the battle between scientific reason, the power of religion, and human responsibility in response to the apocalyptic events of the middle of the twentieth century. David Edgar has revised and updated his translation for this production; his adaptations also include Nicholas Nickleby and The Master Builder, both seen at CFT. 

Making welcome returns to Chichester are Director Jonathan Church, who was Artistic Director 2006–16; and Henry Goodman who plays the title role, following his appearances in Yes, Prime Minister (2010) and The Resistible Rise of Arturo Ui (2012/13). 

The Life of Galileo will be designed by Simon Higlett, with lighting by Mark Henderson, music by Matthew Scott, sound by Paul Groothuis, video by Dick Straker, movement by Jenny Arnold, casting by Juliet Horsley and children’s casting by Verity Naughton

Richard Coyle and Lisa Dillon in THE REAL THING by Tom Stoppard Directed by Simon Evans 7 May – 6 June, Minerva Theatre Press night: Wednesday 13 May 

Henry is a brilliantly clever playwright with a masterful grasp of language and a lot on his mind. His choices for Desert Island Discs, for a start. 

His actress wife, Charlotte, is appearing in his latest play alongside their friend Max, who’s also married to an actress called Annie. Charlotte’s not convinced the part does her justice and she’s not afraid of saying so. Annie, meanwhile, is campaigning to free Brodie, a soldier who’s recently been jailed for setting fire to a wreath on the cenotaph. And Brodie isn’t Annie’s only interest… 

In Henry’s world everyone is seduced by somebody or something. For some of the time at least. But are these passions more than surface deep? Are they the real thing? 

An hilarious and heartfelt exploration of love and fidelity, The Real Thing is considered one of Tom Stoppard’s finest plays. His other award-winning works include modern classics Rosencrantz and Guildenstern Are Dead and Arcadia

Richard Coyle makes his Chichester debut as Henry. He recently starred in James Graham’s Ink (Almeida/West End), while his screen credits include Coupling, Covert Affairs and The Chilling Adventures of Sabrina

Lisa Dillon returns to play Annie, following her roles as Beatrice and Rosaline in Much Ado About Nothing and Love’s Labour’s Lost (2016); her recent theatre includes Blithe Spirit (West End). 

Director Simon Evans’s theatre credits include A Day in the Death of Joe Egg (West End), and The Resistible Rise of Arturo Ui and The Silence of the Sea (Donmar Warehouse). 

The Real Thing will be designed by Grace Smart, with music and sound by Alex Baranowski and casting by Juliet Horsley

THE PRIME OF MISS JEAN BRODIE by Jay Presson Allen Adapted from the novel by Muriel Spark Directed by Rachel Kavanaugh 29 May – 20 June, Festival Theatre Press night: Wednesday 3 June 

  1. Edinburgh. Schoolmistress Jean Brodie prizes beauty, truth and art above the curriculum, reaching beyond the classroom to find lessons in galleries, theatres and the opera. For her favoured set of girls – Sandy, Jenny, Monica and Mary – she is a fascinating enigma. 

And it’s not only twelve-year-olds who are drawn to the provocative Miss Brodie. There’s Gordon Lowther, the diffident music teacher, whom she visits every Sunday, and the raffish married art teacher, Teddy Lloyd. 

But not everyone is an admirer. Brodie’s unconventional style challenges the established order at Marcia Blaine School, and a headmistress who doesn’t wish lessons to be taught in the open air and minds to be recklessly expanded. 

As the girls grow up and innocence gives way to experience, trust turns to doubt about their teacher. Soon, being a woman and an iconoclast, in a turbulent political age, becomes downright dangerous. 

Jay Presson Allen’s bold, searching and funny play, written in 1966, was adapted from the 1961 novel by Muriel Spark. A hit both in London and on Broadway, it successfully transferred to the screen in 1969. 

This new production is directed by Rachel Kavanaugh, whose many Chichester productions include Shadowlands (2019), The Winslow Boy (2018) and Half A Sixpence (2016). 

It will be designed by Robert Jones, with lighting by Howard Harrison, music by Catherine Jayes, sound by Fergus O’Hare, movement by Georgina Lamb and casting by Charlotte Sutton

THE VILLAGE BIKE by Penelope Skinner Directed by Nicole Charles 12 June – 4 July, Minerva Theatre Press night: Friday 19 June 

Becky and John have moved to a rural idyll. Their renovation is only half finished and the dodgy internal pipe-work is banging, but John loves the organic butchers and the fresh air. 

His wife is less sure. Her body is changing. She’s frustrated. She has needs: startling and urgent longings and desires, which are not being satisfied by her husband, or her nosy neighbour, or the glorious countryside. 

Thank goodness the local men-folk are friendly. Mike is a reliable plumber, and Oliver is the leading man of the local amateur players. He’s currently on stage in tight breeches as highwayman Dick Turpin. Both men are more than willing to help Becky settle in. 

Oliver even has an old bike for sale. One he’s keen to give to restless Becky, and one she’s desperate to take for a ride. Soon the cottage plumbing is not the only thing causing disturbance deep in the English countryside. 

The Village Bike spins the wheels off the old conventions around human desire. Hilarious and original, it explores impending motherhood and the need for liberation from social and gender conventions. Written by Penelope Skinner, it was a smash hit when it opened in London in 2011, winning George Devine and Evening Standard Awards. 

Nicole Charles returns to Chichester to direct, following her five-star production of Sing Yer Heart Out for the Lads (2019); her other credits include Emilia (West End). 

Becky is played by Esther Smith, whose television credits include Cuckoo, Uncle and the forthcoming Trying. Her short film Elephant was BAFTA-nominated; recent theatre includes Fairview (Young Vic). 

Please note this play contains very strong language and scenes of a sexual nature. Recommended for ages 16+. 

The Village Bike will be designed by Madeleine Girling, with lighting by Prema Mehta, sound by George Dennis and casting by Charlotte Sutton

Gina Beck, Julian Ovenden, Joanna Ampil and Rob Houchen in SOUTH PACIFIC Music by Richard Rodgers Lyrics by Oscar Hammerstein II Book by Oscar Hammerstein II and Joshua Logan Adapted from the Pulitzer Prize-winning novel Tales of the South Pacific by James A. Michener Directed by Daniel Evans 6 July – 29 August, Festival Theatre Press night: Tuesday 14 July 

  1. On an archipelago in the South Pacific Ocean, US troops are kicking their heels amid the cacao groves while restlessly waiting for the war to reach them. 

Nellie Forbush, a navy nurse from Arkansas, finds herself falling for the French plantation owner, Emile de Becque – a man with a mysterious past. The scheming sailor Luther Billis runs a makeshift laundry to earn a quick buck, but he’s no match for the Polynesian Bloody Mary who’s intent on exploiting these foreigners. 

When young Princeton graduate Lieutenant Joe Cable is flown in on a dangerous reconnaissance mission, love and fear become entwined as the island’s battle for hearts and minds begins. 

This much-loved, Tony and Pulitzer Prize-winning musical opened in 1949 to huge success, becoming one of Broadway’s longest running hit shows. It boasts one of Rodgers and Hammerstein’s most memorable scores, featuring songs such as Some Enchanted Evening, I’m Gonna Wash That Man Right Outa My Hair and Bali Ha’i

This new production is directed by Artistic Director Daniel Evans whose previous Chichester productions include This Is My Family, Quiz and Fiddler on the Roof

Making their Chichester debuts are Gina Beck (Matilda, Show Boat, Wicked, Phantom of the Opera) as Nellie, Julian Ovenden (Merrily We Roll Along, Grand Hotel, BBC Proms, Downton Abbey) as Emile, Joanna Ampil (Avenue Q, Les Misérables, Miss Saigon) as Bloody Mary, and Rob Houchen (Les Misérables, The Light in the Piazza) as Cable. 

The set and costume designer is Peter McKintosh, and the choreographer and movement director, Ann Yee. Musical supervision is by Tom Murray, musical direction by Cat Beveridge, orchestrations by David Cullen, lighting design by Howard Harrison, sound design by Paul Groothuis and casting by Charlotte Sutton

There will be a Dementia Friendly performance of South Pacific on 19 August at 2.30pm, welcoming individuals living with dementia, as well as their friends, families and carers. 

Amanda Abbington, Frances Barber and Reece Shearsmith in THE UNFRIEND A new play by Steven Moffat Directed by Mark Gatiss 17 July – 22 August, Minerva Theatre Press night: Wednesday 22 July 

After twenty years of marriage, Peter and Debbie are enjoying a cruise as a break from their annoying teenagers. Peter can’t resist exchanging views on Donald Trump with an American fellow passenger. There’s something slightly unsettling about the eagerly friendly Elsa Jean Krakowski – but there’s no point in rocking the boat when you’re about to get off it. 

Back home, an email arrives from Elsa, followed by Elsa herself. And when Debbie googles their house guest and turns up some hair-raising evidence, their good nature is challenged as never before. What kind of danger have they allowed to take up residence in their spare room? And can they bring themselves to say anything about it? Sometimes, the truth is just too impolite. 

The Unfriend takes a hugely entertaining and satirical look at middle-class England’s disastrous instinct always to appear nice. Manners can be murder. 

Steven Moffat is an award-winning writer, whose hit television series include Doctor Who, Sherlock and Dracula – the latter two co-written with the actor and writer Mark Gatiss, who makes his directorial debut. 

Gatiss is also a member of the sketch comedy team The League of Gentlemen alongside Reece Shearsmith, who plays Peter. Last seen at Chichester in The Dresser, Reece’s recent work also includes Hangmen (Royal Court) and TV’s Inside No 9

Amanda Abbington, whose credits include TV’s Sherlock and Mr Selfridge, and The Son in the West End, makes her Chichester debut as Debbie. 

Frances Barber, last seen here in Uncle Vanya (1996) returns as Elsa; her extensive screen work includes Silk and Film Stars Don’t Die in Liverpool

The Unfriend will be designed by Robert Jones, with lighting by Mark Henderson and casting by Charlotte Sutton

Cherrelle Skeete in THE LONG SONG A new adaptation by Suhayla El-Bushra Based on the novel by Andrea Levy Directed by Charlotte Gwinner 28 August – 26 September, Minerva Theatre Press night: Thursday 3 September 

‘You do not know me yet but I am the heroine of this drama. I am told that here I must give a taste of what is to unfold. I am to convey that this tale is set in Jamaica during the last turbulent days of slavery and the early years of freedom. 

‘I was born a slave upon a sugar plantation named Amity. I was there when the Baptist War raged in 1831, and when slavery was declared no more. It tells of my mama Kitty, of the negroes enslaved, of Caroline Mortimer the woman who owned me. I am to say that it is a true and thrilling journey through that unsettled time. 

‘Cha, I say, what fuss-fuss. Come, let them just see it for themselves.’ 

Miss July is born into slavery in Jamaica and is brutally parted from both her mother, and her name. But what she retains is resilience, charisma and a subversive, spirited wit. This ebullient and life-affirming play finds humanity, resistance and hope in the darkest of times. 

The Long Song is adapted from Andrea Levy’s award-winning novel by Suhayla El-Bushra, formerly writer in residence at the National Theatre Studio and whose work includes The Suicide (NT), Arabian Nights (Lyceum, Edinburgh), and Channel 4’s Hollyoaks and Ackley Bridge

Cherrelle Skeete plays July; her theatre credits include Fun Home (Young Vic), Harry Potter and the Cursed Child (West End) and Three Days in the Country (National Theatre), while screen work includes the forthcoming Hanna series 2. 

The cast also includes Maggie Service, whose recent TV credits include Good Omens, Life and Quiz, as Caroline Mortimer. 

Director Charlotte Gwinner was Associate Director at the Bush Theatre, Liverpool Everyman & Playhouse and Sheffield Theatres 2014-16, where her productions included Waiting for Godot, the Sarah Kane season and The Distance

The production will be designed by Alex Lowde, with lighting by Mark Doubleday, musical direction, vocal arrangements and additional composition by Michael Henry, sound by Helen Skiera, video by Dick Straker, movement by Rachael Nanyonjo and casting by Charlotte Sutton with Chandra Ruegg

THE TAXIDERMIST’S DAUGTHER Adapted for the stage by Kate Mosse A new play based on her novel Directed by Jonathan Munby Playing in repertoire, 12 September – 30 October, Festival Theatre Press night: Friday 18 September 

  1. In the isolated Blackthorn House on Sussex’s Fishbourne Marshes, Connie Gifford lives with her father. His Museum of Avian Taxidermy was once legendary, but since its closure Gifford has become a broken man, taking refuge in the bottle. 

Robbed of her childhood memories by a mysterious accident, Connie is haunted by fitful glimpses of her past. A strange woman has been seen in the graveyard; and at Chichester’s Graylingwell Asylum, two female patients have, inexplicably, disappeared. 

As a major storm hits the Sussex landscape, old wounds are about to be opened as one woman, intent on revenge, attempts to liberate another from the horrifying crimes of the past. 

The Taxidermist’s Daughter is a thrilling Gothic mystery set in and around historic Chichester. This world premiere is written by Cicestrian Kate Mosse, based on her best-selling novel. 

Kate Mosse’s novels include The Languedoc Trilogy (Labyrinth, Sepulchre and Citadel) and her new historical series, The Burning Chambers. She is Founder Director of the Women’s Prize for Fiction and Professor in Contemporary Fiction & Creative Writing at the University of Chichester. 

Award-winning director Jonathan Munby returns to Chichester where his work includes King Lear with Ian McKellen (2017, also West End) and First Light (2016). His credits elsewhere include Frozen (West End) and Wendy and Peter Pan (RSC). 

The Taxidermist’s Daughter will be designed by Jon Bausor, with lighting by Peter Mumford, sound by Christopher Shutt, movement by Charlotte Broom, fight direction by Kate Waters and casting by Juliet Horsley

ASSASSINS Music and lyrics by Stephen Sondheim Book by John Weidman Directed by Polly Findlay Playing in repertoire, 29 September – 31 October, Festival Theatre Press night: Monday 5 October 

A surreal fairground attraction, where a motley crew of visitors gather to try their luck at winning prizes. They have one thing in common: the American dream has twisted their lives into an American nightmare. Each of them will take aim at the highest seat of power in the land. 

Some succeed, some fail. But there’s a prize for them all: a place in the history books. 

John Wilkes Booth. Lee Harvey Oswald. Leon Czolgosz. Lynette “Squeaky” Fromme. John Hinckley. Charles Guiteau. Sara Jane Moore. Giuseppe Zangara. Samuel Byck. Men and women whose fervour took them to the very edge. 

Stephen Sondheim and John Weidman’s Tony Award-winning musical takes us on a daring, darkly comic, time-bending journey through American history. 

This new production marks Sondheim’s 90th birthday year. A giant of contemporary musical theatre, celebrated for the inventive sophistication of his melodies and lyrics, his landmark works also include Company, Follies and Sweeney Todd, produced at Chichester in 2011. John Weidman’s Tony-award winning works include Contact as well two further collaborations with Sondheim, Road Show and Pacific Overtures

Director Polly Findlay makes her CFT debut. Her recent productions include A Number (Bridge Theatre), Rutherford and Son, Beginning (NT and West End) and The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie (Donmar Warehouse). 

The designer will be Lizzie Clachan, with casting by Charlotte Sutton

THE NARCISSIST A new play by Christopher Shinn Directed by Ola Ince 2 – 24 October, Minerva Theatre Press night: Thursday 8 October 

Everyone needs Jim. His mother. His best friend. His brother. His new lover. A hopeful future President. 

But can Jim really help anyone, when he isn’t sure who he is any more, or what he actually believes? An expert in electoral strategy, he’s forged a successful career by advising politicians how to communicate with voters. But following a seismic shift in the political landscape, he’s disillusioned. And his marriage is in crisis. As he juggles the demands on his life through his smartphone, will the lure of success and fame prove irresistible? 

The Narcissist is a gripping, inventive and witty take on personal and political communication in the internet age. 

Christopher Shinn is a celebrated American playwright whose work has been produced to huge acclaim on both sides of the Atlantic. His first play, Four, premiered at the Royal Court in 1998 and, in 2008, his play Dying City was a finalist for the Pulitzer Prize for Drama. 

Ola Ince directs. Winner of the 2016 Genesis Future Director Award, and currently Artistic Associate at the Royal Court, her credits include Appropriate (Donmar Warehouse) and The Convert (Young Vic). 

Please note the play contains strong language; recommended for ages 14+. 

The Narcissist was initially commissioned by Fictionhouse. The casting director is Amy Ball

CRAVE by Sarah Kane Directed by Tinuke Craig 16 – 31 October, The Spiegeltent Press night: Thursday 22 October 

In the darkness of a damaged world, four characters search for the light. 

Angry, funny, defiant, kind and cruel, Crave is a deeply personal meditation on the meaning of love. It pulses with loss and longing. 

Sarah Kane is considered to be one of the most influential playwrights of the 20th century. She came to prominence in 1995 with her seminal first play, Blasted. Over her short career she wrote five plays and a film. Crave premiered in August 1998 at the Traverse Theatre in Edinburgh. Today, her plays are performed around the world. 

Crave will be staged in the Spiegeltent, which returns to Chichester following the success of 2019’s Sing Yer Heart Out for the Lads. It will be directed by Tinuke Craig, whose production of random/generations was a highlight of Festival 2018; since then, her work includes The Color Purple (Curve Leicester), Vassa (Almeida) and the forthcoming Jitney (Headlong/Leeds Playhouse). 

Crave contains strong language; recommended for ages 16+. 

It will be designed by Alex Lowde, with sound by Anna Clock and casting by Charlotte Sutton

Chichester Festival Youth Theatre PINOCCHIO by Anna Ledwich From the original novel The Adventures of Pinocchio by Carlo Collodi Directed by Dale Rooks 12 – 31 December, Festival Theatre Press night: Wednesday 16 December 

Geppetto the boatmaker tosses aside a piece of wood; it’s only good for the fire. To his amazement, a voice answers him back. Geppetto picks up the wood and begins to carve – and a small wooden boy is revealed. A puppet, which he names Pinocchio. 

And that’s when the mayhem begins. Pinocchio can’t stop getting into trouble, despite the best efforts of the Blue Fairy and the Cricket to keep him on track. His intentions may be good – he truly wants to go to school like real boys and girls – but the temptation to discover the wonders of the world and make his fortune keep getting in the way. 

Pinocchio encounters a host of fascinating characters, from Punch and Judy to the wily Fox and Cat and the strange Sea Monster, as he journeys to Wonderland and the world beneath the sea. But he discovers that it isn’t easy hiding the truth – especially when your nose gets longer with every lie you tell… 

Chichester Festival Youth Theatre present a brand new version of this classic tale, written especially for them by CFT’s Writer-in-Residence Anna Ledwich. Her previous work at Chichester includes The Butterfly Lion (2019), Crossing Lines (2019) and Beauty and the Beast (2018). 

Director Dale Rooks, whose work at Chichester includes The Butterfly Lion, The Midnight Gang and Running Wild, will bring her trademark visual flair and gift for storytelling to this darkly magical reinvention. 

The set will be designed by Simon Higlett, with costumes by Ryan Dawson Laight, lighting by James Whiteside, music by Tom Brady, sound by Gregory Clarke and movement by Lauren Grant

Recommended for ages 7+. There will be a Relaxed performance of Pinocchio on 28 December at 4pm, and a Polish-translated performance on 21 December at 7pm. 

FESTIVAL 2020 EVENTS A lively programme of talks and activities will complement Festival 2020. Highlights include interviews with Kate Mosse, Steven Moffat and Mark Gatiss; an evening of conversation and performance with David Suchet; writers Arifa Akbar, Sara Collins and Ade Solanke discussing Andrea Levy’s legacy; and a concert with Daniel Evans to celebrate Sondheim, Sunday in the Park with Daniel

Free Pre- and Post-Show Discussions, with the director and cast members, are held for each production. 

THE SPIEGELTENT In October 2020 the Chichester Spiegeltent returns, situated next to the Festival Theatre on Oaklands Park. As well as housing Sarah Kane’s Crave, it will play host to an eclectic mix of cabaret, music, circus, theatre, comedy and family fun. The full programme will be announced later in the year at chichesterspiegeltent.com. 

BOOKING INFORMATION 

Priority booking for Friends of Chichester Festival Theatre opens: Saturday 22 February (online and booking forms only) Tuesday 25 February (phone and in person) 

Booking for Groups and Schools opens: Thursday 27 February 

General booking opens: Saturday 29 February (online only) Tuesday 3 March (phone and in person) 

cft.org.uk Box Office 01243 781312  

Tickets from £10 and 20,000 tickets at £10 

Prologue: £5 tickets for 16 – 25s Over 10,000 £5 tickets are available for 16 to 25 year-olds for all productions throughout Festival 2020; sign up for free at cft.org.uk/prologue. Members also have access to a range of exclusive events. 

Twitter @ChichesterFT Facebook ChichesterFestivalTheatre Instagram ChichesterFT YouTube ChichesterTheatre 

#Festival2020 

Festival 2020 sponsors The Life of Galileo is sponsored by Reynolds Fine Furniture The Real Thing is sponsored by Genesis Town Planning The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie is sponsored by Lancing College The Village Bike is sponsored by ITD Consultants South Pacific is sponsored by Noble Caledonia and R.L. Austen The Unfriend is sponsored by Jones & Tomlin The Long Song is sponsored by Ashling Park The Taxidermist’s Daughter is sponsored by Henry Adams and Seaward Assassins is sponsored by Oldham Seals Group The Narcissist is sponsored by Wiley Crave is sponsored by Genesis Town Planning Pinocchio is sponsored by Henry Adams and Mercer 

Festival 2020 press nights 

The Life of Galileo, Festival Theatre Wednesday 29 April, 7.00pm The Real Thing, Minerva Theatre Wednesday 13 May, 7.00pm The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie, Festival Theatre Wednesday 3 June, 7.00pm The Village Bike, Minerva Theatre Friday 19 June, 7.00pm South Pacific, Festival Theatre Tuesday 14 July, 7.00pm The Unfriend, Minerva Theatre Wednesday 22 July, 7.00pm The Long Song, Minerva Theatre Thursday 3 September, 7.00pm The Taxidermist’s Daughter, Festival Theatre Friday 18 September, 7.00pm Assassins, Festival Theatre Monday 5 October, 7.00pm The Narcissist, Minerva Theatre Thursday 8 October, 7.00pm Crave, Spiegeltent Thursday 22 October, 7.00pm

Daniel Evans hosts… A Charity Concert at Chichester Festival Theatre

Daniel Evans Photo Credit: Seamus Ryan
Daniel Evans Photo Credit: Seamus Ryan

Daniel Evans Photo Credit: Seamus Ryan

Artistic Director Daniel Evans will host an evening of music and song at Chichester Festival Theatre on Sunday 27 October, joined by some special friends and West End stars – including Amara Okereke, Jenna Russell, Giles Terera and Rebecca Trehearn – and members of Chichester Festival Youth Theatre.

Giles Terera won the 2018 Olivier Award for Best Actor in a Musical for his role as Aaron Burr in the original London cast of Hamilton; his many other musical credits include Avenue Q and The Book of Mormon.

Rebecca Trehearn’s many West End appearances include Show Boat (Olivier Award for Best Supporting Actress in a Musical), City of Angels and Ghost; she’s also frequently a guest on BBC Radio 2’s Friday Night is Music Night.

Jenna Russell starred opposite Daniel Evans in Sunday in the Park with George in London and on Broadway, for which they both won Olivier Awards and were nominated for Tonys. They will sing a duet from the show in the Chichester concert. Jenna’s many other musical credits include Guys and Dolls, Merrily We Roll Along, Fun Home and most recently The Bridges of Madison CountyDaniel’s acting credits also include Candide (National Theatre) and Merrily We Roll Along (Olivier Award, Donmar Warehouse).

Amara Okereke returns to Chichester where she played Laurey in Oklahoma! earlier in Festival 2019; she won The Stage Debut Award for Best Actress in a Musical for her role as Cosette in Les Misérables.

Chichester Festival Youth Theatre members will also take part in the concert.

All proceeds from this unique evening will fund CFT’s Young Carers Days this Christmas and other work with vulnerable people in the community. With the majority of young carers taking on caring duties every day and almost half of them also getting up during the night, young carers are far more likely than their peers to miss school and suffer from social isolation and mental health pressures. CFT’s Young Carers Days offer some welcome respite and an opportunity to have fun with other young people who share similar experiences.

Tickets are £30: to book, visit https://www.cft.org.uk/whats-on/event/daniel-evans-hosts

or phone the Box Office on 01243 781312.

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All Hail Regional Theatre

Pi with Tiger (sky and stars)

My new year’s resolution was to visit theatres outside of London more.
It is true that there has never been a better time to check out theatre outside the London bubble.
In fact, my show of the year – *so far* – is Life of Pi at Crucible in Sheffield; it was as above average as theatre goes. This  production was extraordinary and the creative team so completely at the top of their game. A 2020 London transfer is guaranteed.

 Life of Pi

Life of Pi

Recently on the subject of Life of Pi, Baz Bamigboye praised theatre beyond the M25: “Interesting that the best work these days is not being done in our national houses, but in regional theatres and off West End sites.”
It is impossible to disagree with Baz, he’s 100% right, of course. But the era of subsidy as we knew it has run its course – contrary to years of austerity cuts it appears that regional theatre is in rude health. The best theatre is happening right now and outside of London – despite a chilly funding landscape.

In this regard, ending austerity needs to happen and whatever the form Brexit eventually takes, we can only hope that there will be more public spending and provision for culture.

I won’t hold my breath, though.

Unfortunately, Nicky Morgan has become the Culture Secretary following a cabinet reshuffle by new UK Prime Minister Boris Johnson; Morgan has previously expressed support for the EBacc and once claimed that studying the arts is not “useful” for many careers. Oh dear.

Perhaps understandably then, in recent times some regional theatres booked tribute acts and programmed cripplingly predictable safe work. You hope for better, obviously, from publicly funded organisations. It’s tough out there, though.

Oklahoma!

Oklahoma!

Anyway, over the summer I have managed to catch Birmingham Hippodrome and Curve Leicester’s bold production of The Color Purple, witness the first actor-musician version of Kiss Me Kate at Watermill Theatre, Newbury, admire a fresh minted West Side Story in Manchester, and savour Chichester Festival Theatre’s mighty summer revival of Oklahoma!

These organisations are crucial to the ecology of UK theatre and they rarely fail to deliver the goods. Most impressively, they avoid a race to the commercial-driven bottom.

Kiss Me Kate

Kiss Me Kate

In his column for the Stage this week, Daniel Evans said: “London is welcoming a surge of work from the UK’s subsidised regional houses. Look at the current wave: Bristol Old Vic, Edinburgh’s Royal Lyceum and Northampton’s Royal and Derngate collaborated with Fuel to bring their adaptation of Touching the Void to the Duke of York’s and Sheffield Theatres’ Everybody’s Talking About Jamie continues to uplift audiences at the Apollo.”

He’s right, too – regional theatres that are succeeding best create “I-was-there” moments for an audience. They are also engaging with their communities.

I’m thinking of Mark Gattiss in The Madness of George III at Nottingham Playhouse, The Grinning Man at Bristol Old Vic, Flowers For Mrs Harris, anything with Maxine Peake at Royal Exchange in Manchester, Kneehigh‘s ‘Ubu Karaoke’ at the Asylum in Cornwall, Sweeney Todd at Liverpool Everyman, Richard Hawley and Chris Bush’s musical Standing at the Sky’s Edge, and so on.

So, I encourage you to step out of your immediate theatre-going zone, support it and explore the riches of British theatre, whether it is the Midlands, Scotland or Wales.

You won’t regret it.  

 

Chichester Festival Theatre FESTIVAL 2019 announcement

Daniel Evans

Chichester Festival Theatre’s Festival 2019 has been announced today by Artistic Director Daniel Evans, offering the colourful variety of work for which Chichester is renowned. New for 2019 is The Spiegeltent, a unique venue for an eclectic range of events.

  • Festival 2019 includes powerful world premieres, two musicals, Shakespeare, pertinent revivals of 20th and 21st century classics and brand new family shows
  • Headline actors include Hugh Bonneville, Clare Burt, Nancy Carroll, Hadley Fraser, Sheila Hancock, Dervla Kirwan, Gerald Kyd, Josie Lawrence, James Nesbitt, Hyoie O’Grady, Amara Okereke, John Simm and Rachael Stirling
  • Directors new to the Festival are Nicole Charles, Paul Foster, Paul Miller, Daniel Hill and Holly Race Roughan, alongside Lucy Betts, Daniel Evans, Richard Eyre, Kate Hewitt, Rachel Kavanaugh, Dale Rooks and Jeremy Sams
  • Major revivals of classic and contemporary dramas:

Hugh Bonneville in SHADOWLANDS by William Nicholson, directed by

Rachel Kavanaugh Kate Hewitt directs Rachael Stirling in David Hare’s PLENTY Nancy Carroll plays Hester Collyer in Rattigan’s THE DEEP BLUE SEA,

directed by Paul Foster Paul Miller directs John Simm and Dervla Kirwan in Shakespeare’s

MACBETH An immersive staging of Roy Williams’s SING YER HEART OUT FOR

THE LADS directed by Nicole Charles

  • Four new plays:

8 HOTELS by Nicholas Wright, directed by Richard Eyre HEDDA TESMAN by Cordelia Lynn, after Henrik Ibsen, directed by

Holly Race Roughan in a co-production with Headlong and The Lowry Anna Ledwich, CFT’s new Writer-in-Residence, adapts Michael Morpurgo’s THE BUTTERFLY LION, directed by Dale Rooks Anna Ledwich also writes CROSSING LINES, a promenade production

for CFYT

  • Two musicals, one modern, one classic:

Tim Firth’s THIS IS MY FAMILY, with James Nesbitt, Sheila Hancock and

Clare Burt, directed by Daniel Evans Rodgers & Hammerstein’s OKLAHOMA! with Josie Lawrence, Hyoie

O’Grady and Amara Okereke, directed by Jeremy Sams

  • Chichester Festival Youth Theatre presents THE WIZARD OF OZ in the Festival Theatre for Christmas
  • 20,000 tickets at £10 in the Festival Theatre; over 10,000 £5 PROLOGUE tickets for 16 – 25 year olds

Daniel Evans said: ‘Festival 2019 continues our aim of giving audiences the breadth of work they expect and relish. We’re premiering four plays: two by our new Writer-in-Residence, Anna Ledwich, including a brand new adaptation of one of Michael Morpurgo’s own favourite books, The Butterfly Lion; Nicholas Wright’s fascinating 8 Hotels, which examines the political repercussions of private passions; and we’re delighted to be partnering with Headlong and The Lowry on Cordelia Lynn’s Hedda Tesman.

‘These, and our array of revivals and musicals, will be brought to life by an outstanding company of actors. Our directors include Nicole Charles, Kate Hewitt and Holly Race Roughan, all bright stars at the start of their careers, alongside the welcome Chichester debuts of Paul Foster and Paul Miller.

‘October will see the installation of The Spiegeltent, providing an immersive setting for Roy Williams’s Sing Yer Heart Out for the Lads, as well as an exciting range of events for all tastes. Chichester Festival Youth Theatre promenade a new play by Anna Ledwich through the streets of Chichester; and our ongoing Ageless campaign aims to ensure that theatre and live art remain at the heart of people’s lives, whatever their age and circumstance.

‘Our new Executive Director, Kathy Bourne, joins us in May; we both look forward to welcoming audiences to Festival 2019.’

FESTIVAL 2019 PRODUCTIONS – APRIL TO OCTOBER

THIS IS MY FAMILY A musical by Tim Firth Directed by Daniel Evans 20 April – 15 June, Minerva Theatre Press night: Monday 29 April

Imagine you’re a spirited 13-year-old and you’ve won – actually won – a magazine competition to describe your family. The prize is a dream holiday for the lot of you, anywhere in the world.

Except… Nicky’s family isn’t the blissfully happy bunch she’s described. More like the contestants in a gladiatorial arena, in fact. Where on earth can she take them that might make her wishful thinking a reality?

Winner of the 2013 UK Theatre Award for Best Musical, this hilarious musical comedy, which moves seamlessly between speech and song, is a celebration of the lifelong adventure that is family love.

Book, lyrics and music are by Tim Firth, the award-winning writer of many celebrated hits including Calendar Girls and Neville’s Island at Chichester. This is My Family is his first original solo musical. The production is directed by Artistic Director Daniel Evans whose previous work at Chichester includes Me and My Girl and Flowers for Mrs Harris (2018), Fiddler on the Roof and Quiz (2017).

James Nesbitt (Cold Feet, The Missing) makes his Chichester debut whilst Sheila Hancock makes a welcome return; her more recent work includes Sister Act in the West End. Clare Burt also returns to Chichester following her acclaimed performance in Flowers for Mrs Harris (2018). They are joined by Kirsty MacLaren, Rachel Lumberg and Scott Folan.

This Is My Family will be designed by Richard Kent, with musical supervision, musical direction and orchestrations by Caroline Humphris, lighting by David Plater, sound by Paul Arditti and movement by Carrie-Anne Ingrouille.

SHADOWLANDS by William Nicholson Directed by Rachel Kavanaugh 26 April – 25 May, Festival Theatre Press night: Thursday 2 May

Celebrated writer C.S. Lewis, author of The Chronicles of Narnia, splits his time between an ordered domestic routine at home with his brother, Warnie, and the academic rigour of his dispassionate, all-male Oxford college.

His evenings are spent replying to his many correspondents. One stands out: vivid, expressive, New York poet Joy Gresham. When she arrives in England with her young son, Douglas, everything Lewis believed to be true about life and love is thrown into question. And a relationship begins which will take them both to the extremities of pain and joy.

William Nicholson’s much-loved play premiered in the West End in 1989, winning the Evening Standard Award for Best Play and being nominated for a Tony Award on its subsequent Broadway run. Originally a 1985 television drama, it became a feature film in 1993.

Hugh Bonneville returns to Chichester to play Lewis, following his acclaimed performance in An Enemy of the People (2016). His many television and film appearances include Downton Abbey, W1A and Paddington.

Director Rachel Kavanaugh also returns to Chichester where her many productions include Single Spies and Half A Sixpence (2016) and The Winslow Boy (2017).

Shadowlands will be designed by Peter McKintosh, with lighting by Howard Harrison, music by Catherine Jayes and sound by Fergus O’Hare.

PLENTY by David Hare Directed by Kate Hewitt 7 – 29 June, Festival Theatre Press night: Thursday 13 June

Susan Traherne is a former secret agent. Her heroic work with the Special Operations Executive in Nazi-occupied France brought her extremes of danger, as well as adventures and romance.

Twenty years on she is living a very different existence in London, as the wealthy wife of a diplomat. Her strained marriage and altered circumstances have threatened her identity and trapped her in a destructive nostalgia for her wartime idealism.

In a post-war land of plenty, Susan battles for her own body and mind, as Britain loses its role in the world.

Using a non-linear structure, the drama dips backwards and forwards in time to explore how the past and present coexist.

On its first appearance at the National Theatre in 1978, David Hare’s play caused a furore and is now accepted as a modern classic. His previous plays for Chichester include South Downs (2011) and Young Chekhov (2015).

Kate Hewitt directs, following her acclaimed production of Cock (Festival 2018). Her productions also include Frost/Nixon at Sheffield and Jesus Hopped the ‘A’ Train at the Young Vic.

Rachael Stirling plays Susan Traherne; her recent work includes Medea (Headlong) and The Winter’s Tale (Sam Wanamaker Playhouse), and The Bletchley Circle and Detectorists on television.

Plenty will be designed by Georgia Lowe.

THE DEEP BLUE SEA by Terence Rattigan Directed by Paul Foster 21 June – 27 July, Minerva Theatre Press night: Friday 28 June

  1. In a shabby Ladbroke Grove flat, Hester Collyer’s neighbours find her unconscious; she has taken an overdose in front of the gas fire. Their only option is to notify her husband – a pillar of the establishment.

But Hester left her husband the previous year to embark upon a passionate love affair with dashing ex-RAF pilot, Freddie Page. What has happened in her life to make her want to end it? And can she bring herself to go on living?

This searing play takes place over the course of one day, in one room, and offers a devastating examination of the adverse forces of love and solitude. Rattigan based the play in part on the tragic outcome of his own clandestine love affair and created one of the twentieth century’s finest leading roles for a woman.

Paul Foster’s recent directing credits include A Little Night Music at the Watermill and Kiss Me, Kate at Sheffield’s Crucible Theatre.

Nancy Carroll (Hester Collyer) received the Olivier and Evening Standard Awards for Best Actress for Rattigan’s After the Dance at the National Theatre; her recent work includes The Moderate Soprano (West End), Closer (Donmar Warehouse) and Father Brown on television.

Hadley Fraser (Freddie Page) last appeared at Chichester in The Pajama Game (2013); his recent stage credits include Saint Joan (Donmar Warehouse). Gerald Kyd (Sir William Collyer) appeared at Chichester in The Meeting (2018); his National Theatre work includes Three Winters.

The Deep Blue Sea will be designed by Peter McKintosh with lighting by Natasha Chivers, music by Debbie Wiseman and sound by George Dennis.

OKLAHOMA! Music by Richard Rodgers Book & Lyrics by Oscar Hammerstein II Based on the play Green Grow the Lilacs by Lynn Riggs Original choreography by Agnes de Mille Directed by Jeremy Sams 15 July – 7 September, Festival Theatre Press night: Monday 22 July

Handsome cowboy Curly McLain is head over spurs for local farm owner Laurey Williams. But lonely ranch-hand Jud Fry has his sinister sights set on her too.

And Laurey’s not the only girl with cowboy problems. Ado Annie’s beau Will Parker is back from chasing steers in Kansas City, where he won the fifty dollars her father insists Will must have to marry her. But this irrepressible farm girl won’t be bought quite so easily.

Luckily for this love-struck crew of spirited ranchers and bronco busters, wise Aunt Eller is riding ahead of the herd.

With its glorious score and spirit of exuberant optimism, Oklahoma! is the American musical by which all others are judged. Rodgers and Hammerstein broke new ground in perfectly integrating music and dance to tell a story whose darker undercurrents never overwhelm its rapturous vitality. Among the unforgettable songs are Oh, What A Beautiful Mornin’, The Surrey With The Fringe On Top and the show-stopper Oklahoma.

Jeremy Sams returns to Chichester to direct; his award-winning productions in London and New York include The Wizard of Oz, The Sound of Music, Noises Off and Spend, Spend, Spend. Set designs are by Robert Jones whose extensive work at Chichester includes Mack & Mabel and Kiss Me, Kate. Choreography is by Matt Cole whose recent work includes Fiddler on the Roof at the Menier Chocolate Factory and in the West End.

Josie Lawrence, whose stage work ranges from Shakespeare at the RSC and Globe to The King and I in the West End, plays Aunt Eller. Her extensive television credits include Whose Line Is It Anyway?, Humans and Outside Edge, and she makes regular appearances at the Comedy Store.

Hyoie O’Grady plays Curly; he recently played Enroljas in Les Misérables in the West End, having graduated from London’s Mountview Academy of Arts last year.

Also making her Chichester debut, as Laurey, is Amara Okereke, winner of the 2018 Stage Debut Award for Best Actress in a Musical for her role as Cosette in Les Misérables.

Costume designs are by Brigitte Reiffenstuel, with musical supervision, musical direction and dance arrangements by Nigel Lilley, orchestrations by David Cullen, lighting by Mark Henderson and sound by Paul Groothuis.

There will be a Relaxed performance of Oklahoma! on 29 August at 2.30pm, especially suitable for individuals, groups and families with children on the autism spectrum, sensory and communication disorders or anyone who would benefit from a more relaxed theatre environment.

8 HOTELS A new play by Nicholas Wright Directed by Richard Eyre 1 – 24 August, Minerva Theatre Press night: Wednesday 7 August

  1. America. Celebrated actor, singer and political campaigner Paul Robeson – forever associated with ‘Ol’ Man River’ – is touring the country as the eponymous hero in Shakespeare’s Othello. His Desdemona is the brilliant young actress Uta Hagen. Her husband, the Broadway star José Ferrer, plays Iago.

All the actors are friends. But in mid-century American society, they are not all equals.

As the tour goes on, the boundaries between the onstage passions and their offstage lives begin to blur. Soon the chemistry between Robeson and Hagen and the rivalry between Robeson and Ferrer is every bit as dangerous as that between their famous characters. Revenge takes many forms and in post-war America it isn’t always purely personal – it can be disturbingly political too.

Nicholas Wright’s new play is based on true events involving some of the twentieth century’s most influential American artists. His original plays include Rattigan’s Nijinsky (Festival 2011) and, for the National Theatre, Mrs Klein, Vincent in Brixton (Olivier Award for Best New Play) and The Reporter, both directed by Richard Eyre.

Director Richard Eyre makes a welcome return to Chichester, following The Stepmother (2017). A former Director of the National Theatre, his recent films include King Lear and The Children Act.

The production will be designed by Rob Howell, with lighting by Peter Mumford and sound by John Leonard.

Chichester Festival Youth Theatre CROSSING LINES A new play by Anna Ledwich Directed by Daniel Hill August, Promenade

  1. A West Sussex city. A celebration of a war hard won. A community dances, drinks and gives thanks for a narrow escape.
  2. Under the shadow of invasion, the city’s young are offered up once more to a conflict on foreign soil.
  3. The same city and a new threat is looming. Borders are collapsing. Communities uprooted. People are on the move. There is only one route to safety and only one means of communication, via the airwaves… but can they be trusted?

Three stories connect across time and across technologies as history haunts the present and secrets are unearthed by a community in turmoil. Using digital technology and live action, this promenade performance through the streets of Chichester asks: can an individual alter history by changing the channel?

Chichester Festival Youth Theatre’s renowned biennial outdoor productions include Grimm Tales (2017) and the award-winning Running Wild (2015).

CFT’s new Writer-in-Residence, Anna Ledwich adapted Beauty and the Beast for CFYT in 2017 and was co-Artistic Director of Theatre on the Fly at Chichester in 2012. Director Daniel Hill has devised and directed over 40 productions for young people, including promenade productions of Alice’s Adventures and Wind in the Willows.

Recommended for ages 7+. Performance dates will be announced in May.

Crossing Lines will be designed by Ryan Dawson Laight, with sound and music by David Lewington and movement by Zoie Golding.

HEDDA TESMAN By Cordelia Lynn After Henrik Ibsen Directed by Holly Race Roughan A co-production with Headlong and The Lowry 30 August – 28 September, Minerva Theatre Press night: Thursday 5 September

A doting husband. A troubled writer. A loaded gun. It’s 2019 and Hedda Tesman returns to a life she can’t seem to escape.

After thirty years of playing wife, Hedda is bitter and bored. When her estranged daughter, Thea, suddenly reappears asking for help, the present begins to echo the past and Hedda embarks on a path of destruction.

Cordelia Lynn’s Hedda Tesman breathes new life into Ibsen’s Hedda Gabler, asking what we inherit, what we endure and how we carry our history. Holly Race Roughan directs this vital exploration of motherhood, power and sabotage.

Cordelia Lynn was the recipient of the 2017 Harold Pinter Commission. Her works includes One for Sorrow and Lela and Co for the Royal Court and the libretto for Miranda at the Opéra Comique, Paris. Her plays Best Served Cold (Vaults Festival) and Believers Anonymous (Rosemary Branch) were both directed by Holly Race Roughan.

Hedda Tesman will be designed by Anna Fleischle.

This Headlong co-production will play at The Lowry, Salford for three weeks, immediately following the Chichester run.

MACBETH by William Shakespeare Directed by Paul Miller 21 September – 26 October, Festival Theatre Press night: Friday 27 September

Much celebrated for his forthright bravery, Macbeth is a state hero. After the bloody defeat of a rebel army, he encounters a trio of strangers who predict that one day he will be King. Having delivered their ambiguous message, they vanish, leaving a mind cracked open.

Fearing that her husband lacks the vital drive to take charge of his fate, Lady Macbeth invokes her stronger nature to fulfil their destiny. The plan she hatches will trigger an uncontrollable train of events, hurtling two corrupted souls to the heart of darkness.

In this contemporary production, Shakespeare’s great tragedy shows ambition falling headlong into tyranny and chaos. As appearances increasingly deceive, the nature of reality itself comes into question.

Paul Miller is Artistic Director of the Orange Tree Theatre, Richmond. He was previously Associate Director at Sheffield Theatres, where his productions included John Simm’s Hamlet.

John Simm makes his Chichester debut in the title role. Among his extensive screen and stage work, recent credits include Strangers, Collateral and Doctor Who on television, and Pinter at the Pinter: Six (West End).

Dervla Kirwan plays Lady Macbeth. Her stage work includes Goneril in King Lear (2017), Frankie and Johnny (2014) and Uncle Vanya (2012) at Chichester and, most recently, Jesus Hopped the ‘A’ Train (Young Vic). She also appeared in Strangers alongside John Simm.

Macbeth will be designed by Simon Daw, with lighting by Mark Doubleday.

SING YER HEART OUT FOR THE LADS by Roy Williams Directed by Nicole Charles 5 October – 2 November, The Spiegeltent Press night: Thursday 10 October

Saturday 7 October. Gina, landlady of The King George pub, has a lot on her plate. The England vs Germany World Cup qualifying match is about to start, the pub football team is about to charge in and the TV’s on the blink.

Over the next few hours, national defeat looms and xenophobic tensions rise, fuelled by the inarticulate fury of the pub team captain, Lawrie, and the insidious propaganda of right-wing extremist Alan. And while policeman Lee struggles to keep the peace, disillusioned squaddie Mark and Gina’s bullied son Glen are fighting their own demons.

Premiered at the National Theatre in 2002, Roy Williams’s ferocious, funny and disturbing play takes aim at what it means to be black, white and English in twenty-first century Britain. Scoring high on foul language, threat and vulgar humour, Sing Yer Heart Out for the Lads is definitely not for the faint of heart.

Roy Williams’s award-winning plays have also been staged at the RSC and the Royal Court. Nicole Charles’s recent work includes Emilia at Shakespeare’s Globe and in the West End.

Sing Yer Heart Out for the Lads will be performed in The Spiegeltent, which will be transformed into a pub setting to create an immersive theatrical experience.

Please note this play contains extremely strong language that some people may find upsetting. Recommended for ages 16+

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THE BUTTERFLY LION By Michael Morpurgo A new adaptation by Anna Ledwich Directed by Dale Rooks 5 October – 9 November, Minerva Theatre Press night: Monday 14 October

When Bertie is sent away from the African farm of his childhood to school in England, he leaves behind not only his beloved mother and the beautiful land, swarming with wildlife, but also his best friend – a white lion he rescued as a cub.

Bertie’s struggle to adjust to his new life in harsh, grey England is alleviated only by a chance friendship with the equally lonely Millie and his dreams of his treasured lion, now trapped in a French circus. But their remarkable journey is only just beginning, and the pair are destined to meet again.

The Butterfly Lion combines music, design and puppetry to bring a magical adventure to life: celebrating nature, friendship and the triumph of love.

Based on Michael Morpurgo’s best-selling novel, which won the Smarties Prize and the Writers’ Guild Award, this new stage adaptation is written by CFT’s Writer-in-Residence Anna Ledwich and directed by Dale Rooks whose many Chichester productions include The Midnight Gang (2018) and Running Wild (2015).

Recommended for ages 7+.

The Butterfly Lion will be designed by Simon Higlett, with music by Tom Brady, movement by Naomi Said, puppetry by Nick Barnes and additional music by Luyanda Lennox Jezile.

Chichester Festival Youth Theatre THE WIZARD OF OZ by L. Frank Baum With Music and Lyrics of the MGM motion picture score by Harold Arlen and E. Y. Harburg Background music by Herbert Stothart Dance and vocal arrangements by Peter Howard Adapted by John Kane from the motion picture screenplay Directed by Lucy Betts 14 – 29 December, Festival Theatre

When Dorothy runs away from her home in Kansas with her faithful dog Toto, she’s caught up in a terrifying cyclone and finds herself in the strange and magical land of Oz.

There she encounters a host of curious and enchanting characters. Accompanied by a Scarecrow, a Tin Man and a Cowardly Lion, can Dorothy escape the Wicked Witch of the West, reach the Emerald City and find the mysterious Wizard of Oz?

Don your ruby slippers and join Chichester Festival Youth Theatre as they journey along the yellow brick road in a wonderful adventure for all the family.

This faithful adaptation of L. Frank Baum’s classic novel was originally commissioned by the Royal Shakespeare Company and features all the beloved songs from the 1939 classic film, including Over the Rainbow, If I Only Had a Brain and We’re Off To See The Wizard.

Lucy Betts, who directed 2018’s Sleeping Beauty, takes the reins again for another stunning festive production from the remarkable CFYT.

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Recommended for ages 7+. There will be a Relaxed performance of The Wizard of Oz on 27 December at 2pm.

The set will be designed by Simon Higlett, with costumes by Ryan Dawson Laight, lighting by James Whiteside and sound by Gregory Clarke.

FESTIVAL 2019 EVENTS A programme of talks and activities will offer extra insight into Festival 2019. Highlights include talks with Tim Firth, Sheila Hancock and Roy Williams; a centenary celebration of Iris Murdoch; and a literary lunch with Daniel Rosenthal discussing his collection of letters from the National Theatre archive. Sweatbox: A Prison Van in Motion is an immersive theatre experience offering a unique insight into the criminal justice system, performed by members of Clean Break.

Family friendly events range from Michael Morpurgo and Virginia McKenna reading extracts from The Butterfly Lion to community singalong Oh What A Beautiful Mornin’, and workshops for young people inspired by C.S. Lewis and Macbeth.

Kate Mosse hosts a full programme of Pre- and Post-Show Discussions on each production.

THE SPIEGELTENT In October 2019, a Spiegeltent will be installed next to the Festival Theatre on Oaklands Park – a unique venue with its own personality, style and atmosphere. As well as providing an immersive experience for Roy Williams’s Sing Yer Heart Out for the Lads, it will play host to an eclectic mix of cabaret, music and special events: from a comedy club and drag night, to a quiz, a Prologue scratch night and the annual Fun Palaces celebration on 6 October. The full programme will be announced in May.

Ends

BOOKING INFORMATION

Priority booking for Friends of Chichester Festival Theatre opens: Saturday 23 February (online and booking forms only) Wednesday 27 February (phone and in person)

Booking for Groups and Schools opens: Thursday 28 February

General booking opens: Saturday 2 March (online only) Tuesday 5 March (phone and in person)

Booking for Sing Yer Heart Out for the Lads and Crossing Lines opens: Friends and Supporters: Friday 31 May General: Saturday 1 June Full details to be announced.

cft.org.uk Box Office 01243 781312 Tickets from £10

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Prologue: £5 tickets for 16 – 25s Over 10,000 £5 tickets are available for 16 to 25 year-olds for all productions throughout Festival 2019; sign up for free at cft.org.uk/prologue. Members also have access to a range of exclusive events.

Twitter @ChichesterFT Facebook ChichesterFestivalTheatre Instagram ChichesterFT YouTube ChichesterTheatre

#Festival2019

Festival 2019 sponsors This Is My Family is sponsored by Genesis Town Planning and Reynolds Fine Furniture Shadowlands is sponsored by Oldham Seals Group Plenty is sponsored by Lancing College The Deep Blue Sea is sponsored by ITD Consultants Oklahoma! is sponsored by Conquest Bespoke Furniture and Henry Adams 8 Hotels is sponsored by University of Chichester Crossing Lines is sponsored by Seaward Properties Hedda Tesman is sponsored by Wiley Macbeth is sponsored by Harwoods Group Sing Yer Heart Out for the Lads is sponsored by Genesis Town Planning The Butterfly Lion is sponsored by Covers Timber & Builders Merchants The Wizard of Oz is sponsored by James Todd & Co

Festival 2019 press nights

This Is My Family, Minerva Theatre Monday 29 April, 7.00pm Shadowlands, Festival Theatre Thursday 2 May, 7.00pm Plenty, Festival Theatre Thursday 13 June, 7.00pm The Deep Blue Sea, Minerva Theatre Friday 28 June, 7.00pm Oklahoma!, Festival Theatre Monday 22 July, 7.00pm 8 Hotels, Minerva Theatre Wednesday 7 August, 7.00pm Hedda Tesman, Minerva Theatre Thursday 5 September, 7.00pm Macbeth, Festival Theatre Friday 27 September, 7.00pm Sing Yer Heart Out for the Lads, Spiegeltent Thursday 10 October, 7.00pm The Butterfly Lion, Minerva Theatre Monday 14 October, 7.00pm

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Daniel Evans: “I don’t draw the distinctions between musicals and plays, I think they both have equal value. I’m not going to rip up that rule book.” 

Daniel Evans
Right then. There’s a Daniel Evans interview below. Daniel is a very obliging man so he answered all my questions, and some other ones too.
Here’s how our chat went.

To kick things off, just as Jonathan Church and Alan Finch shared leadership of Chichester Festival Theatre, Evans, 43, is sharing leadership of the Theatre alongside Rachel Tackley who has also just started as Executive Director.

Daniel Evans

Daniel Evans

 

Born in South Wales he trained as an actor, has two Olivier Awards and a Tony nomination. Previously he was Artistic Director of Sheffield Theatres where his programming included acclaimed seasons of plays by David Hare, Brian Friel, Michael Frayn and Sarah Kane.

We are talking in his office in Chichester. In post for just three months, Evans naturally and energetically fits into this environment, where he barely has time to draw breath between meetings. “Great! I’ve been bowled over, I have to say, by how friendly and welcoming people have been.” He tells me cheerfully. “Not just staff, but also, people who live and work in the region. The audiences here are incredibly passionate about this place and their theatre and it’s a privilege to be here.”

Sheffield Theatres dominated the 2016 UK Theatre Awards recently, winning five awards. Productions of Flowers For Mrs Harris and Show Boat, both directed by Evans, shared the award for best musical production. “I’m really proud of the outcome.” He nods. “The ceremony was on the same day we were all celebrating Jonathan and Alan’s tenure at CFT, so I couldn’t be at the ceremony. Part of me was sad to not be with my now ex-colleagues, but at the same time it felt right to be here to say goodbye to two gents who have done an amazing job. If we can have half the fun and success they’ve had then I’m sure our time here will be good.”

Certainly, Evans is busy cooking up his first season to be announced in February 2017. I ask for a clue about his inaugural season. “No.” He says. “Lots of people are asking for details now, but I can’t tell you or them. You want to make an impact when you do announce, but also, I get superstitious.” He pauses. “I am like that as an actor too. I never quite believe things are going to happen until you are actually there doing it.”

But, will we be fortunate enough to see him grace the stage in West Sussex? “I do miss performing –  I haven’t stopped being an actor – I hope it’s something I’ll do here.” He smiles. “I only managed to do it twice in 7.5 years in Sheffield. Let’s see!”

In the case of Jonathan Church at Chichester’s helm saw hugely successful West End transfers and tours, including the recent Chichester Festival Theatre production of Half a Sixpence which opens in the West End later this month. During his time at Sheffield, Evans mixed plays and musicals with similar success. Presumably he will stick to that tried and tested formula? “I think musicals have become a strong spine of CFT seasons. It’s an opportunity for the theatre to appeal to a very broad range of people and that’s to be celebrated.”

5-charlie-stemp-as-arthur-kipps-in-chichester-festival-theatres-half-a-sixpence-photo-by-manuel-harlan-132

Half A Sixpence, Chichester Festival Theatre. 2016. By Manuel Harlen. Click on the image to book your tickets.

He elaborates. “I don’t draw the distinctions between musicals and plays, I think they both have equal value. I’m not going to rip up that rule book.”

Evans recently wrote an article for The Stage in which he stressed the importance of taking a chance on people to give them a leg-up in this industry. “Lots of people responded to that article, which suggests there is a ceiling for people.” He says. “The Arts Council, our main funder is, rightly I think, making sure the Arts are democratic and accessible which is something that really chimes with me. If you believe in equality and democracy – even if democracy can be complicated at times (- note: the referendum result)  – then you have to care about those tenets. It’s something I believe in strongly. So, as one of the major arts organisations in this region, we also have a responsibility to offer our audiences as wide a range of work as possible. Work from seasoned artists as well as young artists. So what I’ve been doing is meeting people from this area and getting out and exploring this place. It was wonderful to see Paines Plough in the Show Room recently, for example.”

We talk about mental health. He says that, “I think openness generally is a good thing. If something is ubiquitous like mental health why wouldn’t we talk about it? When you think one in four of us will be affected by mental health and the greatest killer for men under 45 is suicide, then it has to be a really important issue. Particularly working in the arts, we are looking at what it is to be a human being – e.g. the complexity of having a mind and body – those existential questions are something that theatre can explore better than any other art form because you are in the room collectively as it is happening. There has been a reluctance in the past to acknowledge these important issues.”

The Boys In The Band

The Boys In The Band

What was the last show he went to see? “Last night, I saw Adam Penford’s production of The Boys in The Band at the Park Theatre. I liked it very much. I’ve seen the play twice before: it feels to me like a seminal piece of writing about gay men. It was interesting to be in an audience of predominantly older gay men; some of those people who lived through legalisation of homosexuality, the Wolfenden report, NY Riots, Stonewall then AIDS and- gay marriage. It was a very moving play and production. I came away thinking it was sad that some of the issues in the play are still with us. While I was glad that time has passed and things have moved on, it still felt very resonant.”

We talk about the recent imposing of a standardised system for measuring artistic quality by Arts Council England on National Portfolio Organisations. Nevertheless, despite a muted sector response and warnings that it will require a “quantum change” in organisational attitudes to data.

He shrugs when I suggest that the scenario is not exactly ideal, so I ask how he would respond using only emojis? He laughs. “I’d use the forward facing emoji and those two big eye emojis, because at the moment we are all still finding out what the scheme requires, what they mean and how they will be used. In principle, there’s a good idea in there which is about wanting to make sure the qualities of people’s experience is top notch… Maybe they’ll ask us to respond in emojis?”

It’s clear that Daniel Evans has a lot to offer and I leave thinking that he is completely brilliant. A man of many talents that Chichester is very lucky to have. Evans is in the right place.