Arvon

arvon table.jpg

Next week, I’m co-teaching a course on Radio Drama at Totleigh Barton in North Devon with Annie Caulfield. The Arvon courses are residential, from Monday afternoon to Saturday morning. The site at Totleigh Barton is an old farm building with, I understand, no mobile phone signal nor internet access. It’s going to be cold turkey from all that but a very exciting chance to meet - as you always do at Arvon - exciting, promising, committed and talented people with a passion for writing and for radio. Students learn, live, sleep and eat on the premises so it has the quality of a monastic retreat about it, which is always conducive to writing for me.

Miniaturists

Declan Feenan, who I met when we were both on attachment at the National, is curating a Miniaturists event. The Miniaturists was set up in response to the Monsterists’ demands for a space for large-scale main-stage new writing; the Miniaturist plays are ten minutes long and performed in fringe venues. He’s asked me if I want to do one.

Stephen Sharkey set the thing up and he did asked me to do one last year but I couldn’t make the dates work. This time I’m glad to be able to say yes.

hat.jpg

Not completely sure what I want to do yet, but I have a theatre idea with the stupid but maybe fun title That’s A Nice Hat. It is a sort of theatrical game, because it asks questions about the relationship between the theatrical representation and imagined fiction. Might be too slight, might be too po-faced, not sure. I’ll write it and see.

It’s going to be part of the Miniaturists event on 12 December 2010, 5pm and 8pm at the Arcola.

Chekhov in Hell cast

readthrough.jpg

Chekhov in Hell has been cast and I couldn’t be more pleased. Simon Gregor has the title role and the ensemble company handling around 40 roles between them comprises Jonnie Broadbent, Ruth Everett, Emily Raymond, Geoffrey Lumb, and Paul Rider.

Initially I had thought - and told Simon so - that this play needed to be performed by comedy actors, maybe even comedians. I was kind of proved wrong in audition where it became clear that the parts needed some careful balancing between attraction and repulsion, between satire and sympathy, and it was always the actors who saw that.

It’s a really hefty cast of serious, funny, smart, immensely likeable people and I’m beside myself with impatience and excitement to see the thing on its feet.

Oxford Companion

oxford.jpg

Just picked up my complimentary copy of The Oxford Companion to Theatre & Performance, edited by Dennis Kennedy. I wrote several entries for the original two-volume edition, published in 2003. The new publication is an abridgement and an update of the earlier volume. I mainly wrote entries on post-war playwrights, including Osborne, Rattigan, Priestley, Fry, Sherriff, Coward, Brenton, Barker, Stoppard, Kane, Ravenhill, Greig. I also wrote pieces on the Royal Court, naturalism and the well-made play. Something like 35 entries in all. For the new edition, I’ve updated the relevant entries and added Martin Crimp, Dennis Kelly, Joe Penhall, Simon Stephens. It’s a nice-looking volume and is refreshing for its focus on performance.

Blood and Gifts platform

blood and gifts.jpg

On Wednesday 15 September, at 6.00, I’ll be interviewing J T Rogers about his play Blood and Gifts, a docudrama about the American involvement in Afghanistan in the 1980s.

Weirdly, I’ll be interviewing him on the set of Earthquakes in London. Who knows how that will work out but I’m sure it’ll be fine.

I plan to ask about political theatre, the value of documentary, the personal obsessions that lie within it, the differences between British and American politics and theatre culture and the question of research. Should be very interesting - and I’m greatly looking forward to meeting the man.