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Play Returns To Its Roots
The Filleting Machine
Thursday 25th May 2017– North Shields The Cedarwood Trust
Thursday
1st June 2017 – North Shields Low
Lights Tavern
Wednesday
7th June 2017 – North Shields The
Exchange
Friday 9th
June 2017 – Wallsend Memorial Hall
Saturday 10th June 2017 – Wallsend Memorial Hall
Friday 16th June 2017 – South Shields Customs House
Saturday 24th June 2017 – Byker & Heaton Union Club
Friday 4th -Saturday 5th August 2017 – North Shields Old Low Light Heritage Centre
A
newly formed theatre company is bringing a classic North East play back to the
housing estate near where it was written.
Blowin’
a Hooley will be touring Tom Hadaway’s classic play The Filleting Machine to
pubs, working man’s clubs, community centres, heritage venues and theatres
across Tyneside in the summer 2017, but first it’s coming home to the Meadow
Well.
Set
on The Ridges Estate (now Meadow Well Estate) in the 1980s, the play centres
around the Rutter family; Ma wants her children to aim for more than she had
and Da believes his way of life as a fish filleter is good enough. When Davy’s
new job threatens his father’s livelihood, the family’s financial survival is
uncertain and with it, Da’s conviction that he is right.
Hadaway
was born in North Shields, his play depicts the people he met and worked with
on the fish quay. Written a generation ago, The Filleting Machine is as
relevant today as it was then as it asks the questions: does further education
guarantee you a job? Is any job guaranteed? How do you help your children have
a better life than you did, and is that what they want anyway?
Performed
with kind permission from the Hadaway estate, Pauline Hadaway said of the
project; “Myself
and my brother John feel sure that Tom would be delighted to see The Filleting
Machine revived by a company committed to working locally with young local
actors. Having responsibility for our father’s literary archive, we are very
glad to see his work being acknowledged and kept alive. We are very much
looking forward to seeing the finished performance.”
Blowin’
a Hooley are dedicated to helping support young North East talent and cast Erin
Mullen and William Wyn Davies, two up and coming actors from the region.
Director
Catherine Scott said, “We’re excited to be able to bring Tom Hadaway’s play to
audiences in North and South Tyneside. Despite the fact it was
written thirty years ago, the issues it explores are still relevant today. We
were honored when the Hadaway family gave their permission for us to perform
the play, for us, it’s the perfect way to show what we’re about as a theatre
company and we’re really looking forward to seeing the audience’s reaction.”
The
show opens at the Cedarwood Trust, The Avenues, Avon Ave, North Shields NE29
7QT on Thursday 25th May at 6pm. Tickets £2 from venue.
This
production is kindly supported by The Sunday for Sammy Trust, a North East
based charity that funds performing artistes from the region at the outset of
their careers. Sunday for Sammy was
originally staged as a memorial to the late Tyneside actor Sammy Johnson, a
regular cast member in many Tom Hadaway plays.
The Sunday for Sammy Trust raises money via sales of tickets for it’s
spectacular biennial concerts and DVD’s of previous
shows. Tickets for the next Sunday for
Sammy on 18th February 2018 are available now from
the Newcastle Metro Radio Arena.
The Cast:
Blowin’
a Hooley are Micky McGregor, Harriet Ghost and Catherine Scott. The Filleting
Machine is their first production as Blowin’ a Hooley, Micky McGregor’s acting
credits include Wolf Blood and I, Daniel Blake, as well as various theatre
pieces.
Harriet
Ghost performed in theatre productions The 15 Streets, Lucky Numbers and the
film I, Daniel Blake.
Catherine
Scott is a writer, director and stand up comedian. Blowin a Hooley was set up in 2016 by them to
tell authentic North East voices and reach audiences who do not usually attend
theatre or engage in the arts.
The Creative
Tom
Hadaway was born in 1923 in North Shields, he began writing plays later in
life, drawing on his surroundings and experiences of the area and the fish
quay. He later wrote TV scripts, including God Bless Thee Jackie Maddison,
nominated for BAFTA Best short drama, 1974, and was a key writer for Live
Theatre where actors Robson Green and Tim Healy performed in his plays. In 2002
he received an Honorary Doctorate of Letters from Sunderland University.
Tour Dates:
Thursday 25th May 2017, 6pm – The Cedarwood Trust
Thursday 1st June 2017, 8pm – Low Lights Tavern
Wednesday 7th June 2017, 2.30pm & 7.30pm – The Exchange
Friday 9th June 2017, 7.30pm – Wallsend Memorial Hall
Saturday 10th June 2017, 7.30pm – Wallsend Memorial Hall
Friday 16th June 2017, 7pm – South Shields Customs House
Saturday 24th June 2017, 7.30pm – Byker & Heaton
Union Club
Friday 4th August 2017, 7.30pm – Old Low Light Heritage
Centre
Saturday 5th Aug 2017, 2.30pm & 7.30pm – Old Low Light Heritage
Centre
Tickets
are available at each venue and online at:
www.ticketsource.co.uk/event/EKKMJK
(The Exchange performances)
www.customshouse.co.uk/theatre/the-filleting-machine/
(The Customs House)
and
www.ticketsource.co.uk/blowin-a-hooley-theatre
for all other performances
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