Follow North East Theatre
Guide on Twitter at https://twitter.com/NETheatreGuide
and on Facebook at www.facebook.com/NETheatreGuide
Benwell’s Most Wanted
Appears at The Customs House
The Duke
in the Cupboard
South
Shields Customs House
Until Saturday 10th
October 2015
Playwright Susan Wear digs deep into the true story of
one of the world’s greatest art theft mysteries after it is released from the
National Archives in 2012. So did a retired bus driver from Benwell steal the
latest star picture to hang in the National Gallery? And what was his
motivation?
1961 was a different time. You could retire with a
pension but the perks of old age were few and far between. No free bus passes
or cheap seats at the cinemas for the generation that fought in the wars. They
even had to pay for their TV licences. Such a concept seems to have outraged
Benwell resident Kempton Bunton so much he decides to make a stand. Despite
only watching ITV he finds himself foul of the law by not buying a TV licence.
Refusal to pay the resultant fine puts him in prison for a short time.
Unrepentant, he still wants to make a protest when he stops his incarceration.
When the government finds the £140 000 to secure a
painting of the Duke of Wellington for the nation Kempton is outraged. This
puts him on collision course with not just the police but also the British
establishment.
The play centres around Kempton and his
long suffering wife May. Both parts benefit from the superb acting of Graham
Overton and Zoe Lambert. Graham plays the cantankerous Kempton who clearly
loves his wife but has a real bee in his bonnet about what is right. Likewise
Zoe shows how strong the lady in his life had to be. Their stage chemistry was
a real highlight of the show.
Supporting Graham and Zoe is Stephen Gregory as their
son John and Tom Machell as the young reporter Bill Chester. BBC Look North’s Jeff Brown
also pops onto the tv screen to report the national news which was a nice
touch.
The change of pace as the show broke the fourth wall
at the end of the first half is a masterstroke by director Katy Weir. The entry
of Adam Donaldson and Scott Ellis lightened the mood as the interval
approached.
The Duke In The Cupboard is yet another premiere at
South Shields Customs House that captures the stories and the spirit of this
region. Their work in this regard needs to be acknowledged and the theatre
continues to play a significant role in Tyneside’s cultural scene.
The Duke is a warm, light hearted play that highlights
the frustrations of the individual battling against the system. Susan Wear
should be very proud of her first play and Executive Director Ray Spencer needs
commending for spotting the talent.
See the show before Saturday - It’d be criminal to
miss it!
This
review was written by Stephen Oliver for the North East
Theatre Guide from Jowheretogo PR (www.jowheretogo.com).
Follow Jo on twitter @jowheretogo, Stephen @panic_c_button or like Jowheretogo
on Facebook www.facebook.com/Jowheretogo
Read
the original North East Theatre Guide preview: http://nomorepanicbutton.blogspot.co.uk/2015/09/preview-duke-in-cupboard-at-south.html
Tickets:
Tickets
are available from The Customs House Box Office, South Shields, tel 0191 4541234 or buy tickets on line at http://www.customshouse.co.uk/whats-on/Theatre/1933/the-duke-in-the-cupboard
No comments:
Post a Comment