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Stoke on Trent Repertory Theatre
Leek Road, Stoke-on-Trent, ST4 2TR

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84th Season 2004-5
85th Season 2005-6
86th Season 2006-7
87th Season 2007-8
88th Season 2008-9
89th Season 2009-10

 

 
The Rep programme 2007 - 2008

This season the Rep features plays by local writers Paul Forrester O'Neill and Christopher Salisbury, Frank Marcus, Alan Ayckbourn, Mike Poulton, Ray Cooney, Friedrich Schiller, J.P. Miller and Terence Rattigan.
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27th - 29th September 2007 at 8pm
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Find the answers to love and life itself in "WOULD LIKE TO MEET", a brand new play by local writers Paul Forrester O'Neill and Christopher Salisbury.

Attractive single brunette age 30(?) WLTM fun-loving sensitive audience with SOH for evening of theatrical fun and games&ldots;

What is the "Pompidou Suite"? Is it "all about confidence"? Should you still be playing football at 48? And does anyone know what post-modern means? Find out the answers to these and other more complex questions about the search for love and for life itself in this exciting new play by local authors, Paul Forrester O'Neill and Chris Salisbury.

Great cast. Initially looking to share experiences of dating. Could lead to thoughts of companionship, even romance. Prepare to laugh and, perhaps, cry a little at this original REP STUDIO production.
(All performances only £6 per ticket)

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22nd - 27th October 2007 at 7.30pm
(Matinee performance Sat. 27th October at 2.30pm)
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When cosy BBC soap 'Applehurst' loses its most popular character, alter ego June Buckridge loses everything important to her in the Frank Marcus comedy, "THE KILLING OF SISTER GEORGE".

'They're going to murder me'...The Killing of Sister George

With its village green, ducks on the pond, friendly yokels and cheery district nurse, Sister George, the BBC's fictional village of Applehurst is a rosy tinted, nostalgic portrayal of traditional country life. And that's the problem. When 'the powers that be' decide that Applehurst needs a more contemporary edge, the formidable Mrs Mercy Croft is dispatched from Broadcasting House to inform the actress playing Sister George that her character is to be sacrificed upon the altar of ratings.

However, the real Miss June Buckridge is about as far removed from the cosy Sister George as it is possible to get, and as things progress, it becomes apparent that her fictional character is not the only thing which June is about to lose.

-----------------------------Barry Cryer
21st November 2007 at 7.30pm
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A special for Radio 4 listeners:
BARRY CRYER: 'STILL ALIVE'

And he is – in a completely new, organically grown show, old Baz recalls, reminisces, recounts and other words beginning with ‘R’, on a trip down memory lane, pausing only for tea and macaroons at the Stannah Stairlift Café.

What memories - if only he can remember them. Jokes, songs, stories and on certain nights, Pole Vaulting, if his friend Vaclev from Warsaw turns up. Currently 72, a third of his life has already passed and he invites you to join him in a decorous orgy of nostalgia. And this show is proactive! You have the chance to shout out a page number from one of his books and he will relate the story thereon.

Join Baz, in a gala evening featuring Colin Sell, as he wanders through his life - and yours. Two hours of chuckle therapy - all patients seen immediately.

Ticket Price: £20

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3rd - 8th December 2007 at 7.30pm
(Matinee performance Sat. 8th December at 2.30pm)
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A new play by Alan Ayckbourn, one could condemn it as an "IMPROBABLE FICTION"! Six aspiring writers collaborate to comic effect in their differing genres.

Writers in circles...

Improbable FictionSix aspiring authors meet on a winter's evening to discuss their work. Among them are writers of historical romances and children's literature who are finding it difficult to get started and a crime writer who can't stop. A creator of extremely complicated science fiction, a librettist without a musical partner and affable Arnold Hassock, the Writers' Circle chairman, who produces instruction booklets, make up the rest of the team.

Arnold's suggestion that the team collaborate on a piece of writing is received without enthusiasm. However, as the meeting wraps up there is a clap of thunder, a black-out and then the collaboration takes place before his very eyes.

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28th January - 2nd February 2008 at 7.30pm
(Matinee performance Sat. 2nd February at 2.30pm)
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In Friedrich Schiller's classic, "DON CARLOS", intrigue, sexual jealousy and treachery explode into civil war in sixteenth century Spain. A new version by Mike Poulton.

A family portrait in a royal household...

Don CarlosDon Carlos is passionately in love with Elizabeth, the French princess to whom he was once betrothed. Carlos' tyrannical father, King Philip II of Spain, decides to marry Elizabeth himself. The young prince's hatred for his cold and distant parent knows no bounds and he enlists his oldest friend, the Marquis of Posa, to act as a go-between, but Posa decides to convert Carlos and Elizabeth's youthful passion into a full-scale rebellion against King Philip's oppressive and bloody regime.

Near incestuous passion, sexual jealousy and intrigue are all played out against the backdrop of the Spanish Inquisition.

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10th - 15th March 2008 at 7.30pm
(Matinee performance Sat. 15th March at 2.30pm)
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Adapted by Owen McCafferty from the screen classic. Two Belfast émigrés in Sixties London find their love for each other shattered by their love for the bottle in J.P. Miller's "DAYS OF WINE AND ROSES".

'We were like movie stars - I used to imagine we didn't walk, we glided - now all we do is stumble - it wasn't meant to be like this'...

Donal and Mona meet at Belfast Airport. Both headed for London and sharing similar big city dreams in the swinging sixties, they fall in love with life, each other and drink. An exciting whirlwind of discovery starts to spiral out of control as alcohol takes its grip before they are eventually forced to choose - each other or the bottle?

Based on the 1962 screenplay by J.P. Miller, famously filmed with Jack Lemmon and Lee Remick, this new version won author Owen McCafferty the Evening Standard Award for New Playwriting.

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Monday 28th April - Saturday 3rd May 2008
Stoke Repertory Players present:
Out of Order! by Ray Cooney.
Performances at 7.30pm. Sat. 3rd May at 2.30pm and 7.30pm)
Out of Order
When Richard Willey, a Government Junior Minister, plans to spend the evening with Jane Worthington, secretary to the Leader of the Opposition, things go disastrously wrong - beginning with the discovery of a "body" trapped in the hotel's only reliable sash window.

Desperately trying to get out of a sticky situation, Richard calls for his PPS, George Pigden. However, with a conniving waiter, a suspicious hotel manager, an alert private detective, an angry wife, a furious husband, a bungling secretary, an unconscious nurse and an intermittently dead body to deal with, nothing is going to go as Richard planned.

Actor, playwright and director Ray Cooney, sometimes known as "the master of farce", is one of Britain’s most successful playwrights. He has had 17 plays staged in the West End including "Run For Your Wife", "Caught in the Net" and "Funny Money". His work has been translated into more than 40 languages and his plays have been staged all around the world. He was awarded an OBE in 2005.

Out of Order! is directed by Martin Alcock.
Tickets £8.00 - Students £4.50
1st Night and Saturday Matinee, all tickets £6.00 (no concessions)

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16th - 21st June 2008 at 7.30pm
(Matinee performance Sat. 21st June at 2.30pm)
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In "SEPARATE TABLES" by Terence Rattigan, the permanent residents of the Beauregard Hotel, Bournemouth, come to terms with their past disappointments and put the world to rights.

Bournemouth beaus and belles...

The two plays which comprise 'Separate Tables' are set in the slightly run-down Beauregard Hotel, Bournemouth. It is 'off-season, so only the permanent guests are in residence, all of whom lay claim to their allocated seats at rather stark separate tables in the dining room or hold court in the hotel lounge.

In the first play one of the inhabitants finds that his secret affair is compromised when a figure from his past arrives unexpectedly and re-opens some emotional wounds. Eighteen months later, in play two, one of the most ebullient guests faces disgrace and ostracism when his inappropriate behaviour is revealed in the local press and he is forced to confront not only the other guests, but himself.

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Wednesday 9th - Saturday 12th July 2008 at 7.30pm
The Young Rep present:
Dracula, by Michael Theodorou

The Young Rep have gone for something completely different with this dramasisation of Bram Stoker's classic gothic tale, DraculaDracula.

Jonathan Harker is summoned to Transylvania by a mysterious count who wishes to buy a house in London. experiences during Jonathan's stay unnerve him to the point of illness; a terrible forewarning of events which follow Dracula's arrival at Whitby, and the ensuing battle between good and evil, as the enegmatic Dr Van Helsing fights to save the souls of the count's victims.

Tickets £5.50 - Students £4.50
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