Tag: National Theatre of Scotland

  • NEWS: Jack Lowden and Martin Freeman, The Fifth Step

    NEWS: Jack Lowden and Martin Freeman, The Fifth Step

    Neal Street Productions, Playful Productions and National Theatre of Scotland present The Fifth Step By David Ireland

    Starring Jack Lowden and Martin Freeman

    For our review – go here

    • STAR OF THE HIT TV SERIES SLOW HORSES, OLIVIER AWARD WINNER JACK LOWDEN WILL REPRISE HIS ACCLAIMED PERFORMANCE IN DAVID IRELAND’S NEW PLAY THE FIFTH STEP

    • HE IS JOINED BY EMMY, BAFTA AND SAG AWARD-WINNING MARTIN FREEMAN IN THE NATIONAL THEATRE OF SCOTLAND PRODUCTION WHICH PREMIERED AT THE EDINBURGH INTERNATIONAL FESTIVAL IN 2024

    • THE PRODUCTION, DIRECTED BY FINN DEN HERTOG, WILL OPEN IN THE INTIMATE @sohoplace IN THE WEST END FOR A STRICTLY LIMITED 11 WEEK SEASON, PREVIEWING FROM 10 MAY 2025 RUNNING UNTIL 26 JULY 2025

    • PRESS NIGHT WILL BE ON 19 MAY 2025 AND TICKETS ARE ON SALE FROM WWW.THEFIFTHSTEP.CO.UK FROM 10AM ON 23 JANUARY 2025

    • 15% OF ALL TICKETS WILL BE PRICED AT £25

    Neal Street Productions, Playful Productions and National Theatre of Scotland (NTS) are delighted to announce that David Ireland’s acclaimed new play The Fifth Step will transfer to London’s West End for a strictly limited season from 10 May until 26 July 2025.

    Originally performed as part of the Edinburgh International Festival 2024, this NTS production has been further developed for this West End premiere and the new opportunities for restaging that @sohoplace offers. Directed by rising star Finn den Hertog, associate artist at NTS, it will be a rare chance to see two of the UK’s most exciting acting talents in the intimacy of the in-the-round space @sohoplace. Jack Lowden reprises his performance as Luka and Martin Freeman will play the role of James in David Ireland’s funny and unflinchingly honest drama about addiction, masculinity and faith. 

     

    Step 1: honesty.

    Step 2: faith.

    Step 3: surrender.

    Step 4: self-examination.

     

    After many years in the 12-step programme of Alcoholics Anonymous, James agrees to become the sponsor of newcomer Luka.

    On the journey to sobriety, the pair bond over black coffee, trade stories, and build a fragile friendship out of their shared experiences.

    On the cusp of Step 5, their conversations must turn to confessionals, with progress hinging on Luka revealing secrets that could lead back to alcohol. But it’s clear that James also has dangerous truths in his past, truths that threaten the trust on which both their recoveries depend.

    Jack Lowden said: “To just be in the room again with David and Finn – two dangerously talented individuals – is a gift in itself. But to now add Martin to the mix, an actor of black belt level skill and a hero of mine, just tops it. I can’t wait for more people to experience The Fifth Step.”

    Martin Freeman said: “I’m really looking forward to performing this brilliantly funny, unsettling, unexpected play. David Ireland is something quite special and Jack Lowden is an actor I have tremendous respect for and am looking forward to working with him.

    David Ireland said: “I’m really happy that The Fifth Step is coming to the West End. Jack Lowden and Martin Freeman are,for my money, two of the best actors in the country so I feel very blessed to have them both in this play. I hope audiences in London will find the play as thrilling and funny and thought-provoking as audiences in Scotland have.”

    Finn Den Hertog said: “After a relatively short run with the National Theatre of Scotland last year, having an opportunity to revisit and re-imagine this play for the West End is hugely exciting. I know audiences are in for something genuinely special. 

    David has always been one of my favourite theatre artists – truly a master of his craft – and his trademark caustic wit, irreverence and subversiveness are out in full force in The Fifth Step.

    Having recently spent time with Martin and Jack together, I can already see how electric their chemistry will be. These are elite actors working with an elite script…which hopefully makes my job very easy!” 

    Nica Burns, Founder @sohoplace says: We are so excited to be welcoming David Ireland’s fantastic play performed by two outstanding actors.The production will thrill in the intense intimacy of the @sohoplace auditorium. It is a perfect fit.

    4000 tickets or 15% of all available tickets will be priced at £25.


    The Fifth Step
    is produced by Neal Street Productions, Playful Productions and National Theatre of Scotland in association with Nica Burns. It will open at @sohoplace on 10 May in previews with a press night on 19 May and will run for 11 weeks only with a final performance on 26 July 2025.

     

    Neal Street Productions, Playful Productions and National Theatre of Scotland 

    present

    The Fifth Step

    By David Ireland

    @sohoplace 

    4 Soho Pl, Charing Cross Rd, London W1D 3BG

    10 May-26 July

    Mon-Sat at 7.30pm                              

    Thu and Sat at 2.30pm

    Tickets from £25 (plus fees)

    www.thefifthstep.co.uk 

     

    Directed by Finn den Hertog

    Set and Costume Design by Milla Clarke

    Lighting Design by Lizzie Powell

    Sound Design by Mark Melville

    Movement by Jenny Ogilvie

    Casting by Stuart Burt CDG

    Age recommendation: 16+

    Contains strong language, comments on religion and sexual theme

    Martin Freeman and Jack Lowden in The Fifth Step (Photo: Phil Fisk)
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  • REVIEW: Black Watch, Barbican (2008)

    REVIEW: Black Watch, Barbican (2008)

    This play about the Scottish Regiment the Black Watch is my choice of best play of the 2000s

    “I hope the government knows what it’s got us into!”
    The Officer


    Cast (Photo: Manuel Harlan)

    I had heard of course from those who had seen it at the Edinburgh Festival in 2006 that Black Watch was a rather special theatre event. I was blown away by the direction and staging of this story of the 800 men of the Scottish regiment sent out to Iraq, to replace 4000 American Marines in the area around Fallujah.  We Londoners have waited impatiently, almost two years, to see Black Watch while it toured the world to the greatest acclaim and even now the impossibly short run, as a part of the Barbican BITE season, was sold out before it opened.

    From the second scene where two soldiers make the most surprising entrance that heard me gasp aloud, I was enthralled.  The language is authentic and needs to carry a warning for those who might object to a realistic reflection of the swearing of real soldiers.

    Gregory Burke’s play is fascinating because it opens with the men being interviewed by a journalist, cuts to Iraq and back, placing these men of Fife and Tayside in their Scottish regimental heritage by telling us something of the history of the regimental engagements.  We are brought up to date by the playing of a film of Alex Salmond of the Scottish Nationalist Party condemning the Government cuts merging some Scottish regiments including the Black Watch.  These cutbacks are insensitively announced while the men are on service in Iraq and after the deaths of three of them have been reported in Scotland.

    The play opens with some yobbish lads using sexual language and pelvic thrusting at the thought of bonking the female journalist researcher, and ends with a feeling of tremendous respect for the traditions, training, discipline and bravery of these men.  This isn’t achieved by resorting to some sort of nationalistic fervour but by staging different events in their lives which illustrate their humanity.  We know that employment opportunities for these Scotsmen have largely disappeared.  The great shipbuilding firms have closed down.  Margaret Thatcher saw off the coal mines.  The army represents an employment opportunity of which there are precious few.  We see the brutality too, as Cammy says, “Bullying’s the fucking job. That’s what you have a fucking army for!”

    Burke also gives us plenty of humour: the rookies studying their battlefield skills which stress the importance of carrying a blank piece of paper to wave at anyone demanding anything.  Apparently no-one ever looks at what the piece of paper says. The older hands cool themselves in the Iraqi heat by sitting in their underpants with their “trewsies” round their ankles.  They tell the Sergeant they are conserving hydration and spinning their readiness for action to compare themselves with firemen who can leap into boots and trousers in one go!  

    On the new experience in this war of embedded journalists, the impending arrival of the hopelessly patronising Gavin, the advice is “Do not commit deviant sexual acts in front of embedded journalists!” as the porn pictures on their wagon are taken down for fear of offending the Iraqis. But it is John Tiffany’s direction which provides the sheer emotion of the play.

    Letters from home to the gentle piano music spoken in the silence of synchronised sign language, are beautiful, evocative and moving.  There is a group of men showing themselves to be touched and involved.  The illustrated history of the regiment from before the Battle of Culloden in 1745 through the American Revolution, the Napoleonic Wars, the Crimea, the Boer War, the First World War, Palestine, Syria, Mesopotamia in 1919 (now modern day Iraq), the Second World War, Korea, the Mau Mau in Kenya, Northern Ireland up to the present day, is played out.  This is cleverly achieved by taking one soldier, holding him sometimes horizontally, and dressing him in the uniform of each period of history from the Black Watch tartan kilt and throw, with red check leg covers and the redcoat jacket through to a bonnet of black feathers to a khaki kilt, explaining how George III gave them the “red hackle” in their tam o’shanters.  This depiction of history informs and affects and instils the tradition that these men carry through.

    There are choreographed fight scenes where men throw punches and half roll interspersed with scenes playing billiards.  The terrible deaths of three at a car checkpoint are staged impressively and distressingly as their bodies fly upwards, blood mixed with dust looking pale pink rather than red, and we hear the army code for those hurt in action which has just been explained to us, two letters from their surname, followed by their number, then P1 for walking wounded through, P2 and P3 to P4 for life extinct.  This shocking tragedy takes place with a plainsong lament in Gaelic. When the journalist interviews some soldiers in their leisure club, others listen holding their billiard cues like rifles and leaning forward in symmetry and alertness to catch the words.  Black Watch is stuffed full of powerful, dramatic visual memories, snapshots of these men in action.

    There is music too. Traditional Scots Songs about the achievements of the Forty Twa.  Twa is Scots for Two and the Black Watch were the Forty Second Regiment.   At the end of the play, the Piper’s Lament is played by one actor on bagpipes as a tribute to the dead.

    Set on a traverse stage with the audience raised at either side, there are explosions and flashes of light forcing the men to fall to the ground, the rookies falling every time anything goes off, the experienced men fall only when they know it’s dangerous so they tumble in stages.  When we get to Iraq, the lights are turned up so that it feels hot as the desert and the sun glares.  A billiard table imaginatively becomes an armoured transport vehicle with six men in it.

    The finale sees the company of men lining up for marching using their arms to judge the distance apart, forming battle lines, falling, rising and coming back for more, again and again and again.  This is an ensemble piece of highly proficient actors, beautifully choreographed and delivering acting perfection.  The National Theatre of Scotland deserves a medal for this play.

    Production Notes

    Black Watch
    Written by Gregory Burke

    Directed by John Tiffany

    Cast

    Starring:

    David Colvin

    Paul James Corrigan

    Ali Craig

    Emun Elliott

    Jack Fortune

    Jonathan Holt

    Michael Nardone

    Henry Pettigrew

    Paul Rattray

    Nabil Stuart

    William Barlow

    Creatives

    Director: John Tiffany

    Set Designer: Laura Hopkins

    Costume Design: Jessica Brettle

    Lighting Designer: Colin Grenfell

    Sound Designer: Gareth Fry

    Video Design: Mark Grimmer and Leo Warner for Fifty Nine Productions Ltd.

    Associate Director (Movement): Steven Hoggett

    Associate Director (Music): Davey Anderson

     

    Information

    Running Time: One hour 50 minutes without an interval

    Closed at the Barbican on 26th July 2008, returned December 2010 closing on 22nd January 2011

     

    Theatre:

    Barbican Theatre

    Barbican Centre

    Silk Street

    Islington

    London EC2Y 8DS

    Websites: nationaltheatreofscotland.com

    barbican.org.uk

    Tube: Barbican/Moorgate

     

    Reviewed by Lizzie Loveridge at the Barbican on 5th July 2008

    Black Watch Continues To Draw Audiences

    Jack Lowden as Cammy

     

    Since it premiered at the Edinburgh Fringe Festival in 2006, National Theatre of Scotland’s dynamic production of Gregory Burke’s Black Watch has become a global phenomenon. It made two stops at New York’s St. Ann’s Warehouse. Its return to the Barbican two years on may feature a new cast but the visceral impact of John Tiffany’s show remains the same.

    Part verbatim drama, based on Burke’s interviews with soldiers who had served with the Scottish Black Watch regiment in the second Iraq war, and part physical theatre, with choreographed movement from Frantic Assembly’s Steven Hoggett, the play gives a stunningly powerful feeling of what it is like to fight in a war zone. Now that British troops are no longer involved in frontline combat in Iraq (and indeed for only a few more years in Afghanistan), the immediacy of the scenario may have faded slightly, but the essential theme of ordinary young men doing their best to survive in extraordinarily challenging circumstances remains very strong.

    There may be an implied condemnation of the invasion of Iraq in Burke’s text, but the play is not so much anti-war as pro-soldier. Moving back and forth between a journalist talking to former soldiers in a Glasgow pub and re-creating the scarring experiences they have in Iraq, it shows how courage, skill, comradeship and black humour keep them going in extremity. There is also a potent sense of pride in being part of a unit whose roots go back to the early eighteenth century, so that the Black Watch’s incorporation into the Royal Regiment of Scotland in 2006 (which prompted the play’s commission) gives the play an elegiac feel. Tiffany’s well-drilled cast (four of whom have antecedents who served in the Black Watch) do sterling ensemble work, including Keith Fleming doubling as the truth-seeking journalist and hard-bitten Sergeant, Ian Pirie as the posh, English-accented Officer and kilted, sword-waving recruiter Lord Elgin, and Jack Lowden as the blunt-talking, disillusioned Cammy who decides to leave. But the success of the show is due to the inspired combination of acting, direction, choreography, design, music, sound, lighting and video to achieve a vision of total theatre. Black Watch

    The Current Cast: Jack Lowden, Richard Rankin, Ross Anderson, Chris Starkie, Cameron Barnes, Stuart Martin, Keith Fleming, Jamie Quinn, Scott Fletcher, Ian Pirie
    Booking to 22 January 2011
    Reviewed by Neil Dowden based on December 3rd performance at the Barbican Theatre, Silk Street, EC2Y 8DS 

     

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