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A talented North East cast and creative team assembled for
the World Premiere of Harriet Martineau Dreams of Dancing, a new play
set in Tynemouth 1844 at Live Theatre, Newcastle
A Live Theatre Production. World Premiere
Harriet Martineau Dreams of Dancing
Newcastle Live Theatre
Thursday 10th November to Saturday
3rd December 2016
Written by Shelagh Stephenson
Directed by Max Roberts
Designed by Alison Ashton
Music by The Unthanks
Choreography by Lee Proud
Harriet
Martineau Dreams of Dancing, a new
play set in Tynemouth 1844 written by Olivier Award-winning writer Shelagh
Stephenson has its World Premiere at Live Theatre, Newcastle from Thursday 10 November
to Saturday 3 December 2016.
The play, which is based on the time spent in Tynemouth in the 1840s of real life radical thinker, feminist and
anti-slavery campaigner Harriet Martineau, draws together a talented and
experienced cast and creative team from across the region.
Playwright Shelagh
Stephenson, was born in Whitley Bay, and has previously brought to life another historical
figure Homer Winslow and his time with the artists’ community in Cullercoats in
her previous play at Live Theatre, A Northern Odyssey. Shelagh has also
written extensively for stage, film and TV including The Memory of
Water for
which she won an Olivier Award in 2000 for Best New Comedy, Five Kinds of Silence, and How
Does That Make You Feel for BBC Radio 4’s Woman’s Hour.
Music is provided Northumbrian folk group The Unthanks, who have re-arranged songs from their Mount the Air album.
Tyneside
based sisters Rachel and Becky Unthank also provided music for A Northern
Odyssey and for Songs from the Shipyards, and were Mercury Music Prize nominees
in 2008 and the only British folk representation in The Guardian and Uncut’s
best Album of the decade.
The play stars long-time Live Theatre collaborator Deka Walmsley who started his career
in the Wallsend People’s Theatre also has appeared in Live Theatre’s The
Pitmen Painters and A Northern Odyssey. Also re-united from A
Northern Odyssey cast are actors Lizzy McInnerny and Amy McAllister. They are joined by Newcastle born Kate Okello originally from Gosforth
who made her Live Theatre debut in The Savage earlier this year, Matt Jamie who has appeared in Lee
Hall’s Live Screenplays, and Laura Jane Matthewson originally from
Sunderland, attended Newcastle College’s Musical Theatre course and won the
2014 Evening Standard Award for Best Emerging Talent and Living North’s Promise
and Potential Award 2015.
The
play is directed by Live Theatre’s Artistic Director Max Roberts, who said:“I am
delighted to welcome Shelagh Stephenson back to Live Theatre and thrilled that
she has created another play set in Tynemouth where she
grew up. Harriet Martineau Dreams of
Dancing is a superbly witty and engaging story underpinned with a
sharply focused feminist tract. Although the action of the play is set in
Tynemouth, 1844, the
plays relevance to today’s post-Brexit Britain is remarkably
salient. As with A Northern Odyssey the production includes music and dance
inspired by the traditions of Northumberland.”
In the play Harriet Martineau seeks refuge from the
claustrophobic demands of London society, with her needlepoint and a telescope in an attic room on
Front
Street, Tynemouth. Instead of escape, Harriet finds an unequal world in need
of her attention. This is a world of racial intolerance and gender imbalance,
of eccentric scientific practices such as mesmerism and phrenology. A world where
a negligent husband may die from a pig falling on his head in the street.
Following on from the
critically acclaimed 2010 production of A Northern Odyssey (The Guardian), Harriet Martineau Dreams of Dancing
is the second in Shelagh Stephenson’s trilogy of plays at Live Theatre
exploring the contemporary relevance of Tyneside’s political and cultural
heritage.
A series
of free talks accompany the play, in Meet
the Writer after the 2pm
performance on Saturday 12 November writer Shelagh Stephenson discusses the
making of the play. Phrenology, mesmersism and other Victorian beliefs
mentioned in the play are discussed by researchers and academics from Newcastle University and Sunderland University in Harriet Martineau and Victorian Pseudoscience
after the 4pm
show on Sunday 20 November. And in Harriet
Martineau In and Beyond Tynemouth after the performance at 7.30pm on Tuesday 22
November, Dr Joe Hardwick, lecturer in History at Northumbria University and organiser
of the Mapping Radical Tyneside website talks about Martineau’s significance
for Victorian radicalism and the emergence of the professional woman writer.
The talks are free but must be pre-booked.
Tickets:
Harriet Martineau Dreams of Dancing is at Live Theatre from Thursday
10 November to Saturday 3 December 2016. For more information and tickets which cost between
£12-£26, concs from £10 ring Live Theatre’s box office on (0191) 232 1232 or see www.live.org.uk.
DURATION: 2hrs 20mins, incl. an
interval
SUITABILITY: 10+
PREVIEWS: Thurs 10 Nov, 7.30pm, Fri 11 Nov, 7.30pm, Sat 12 Nov, 2pm & 7.30pm
2PM
MATINEES: Sat 12
Nov, Thurs 17 Nov, Sat 19 Nov, Thurs 24 Nov, Sat 26 Nov, Thurs 1 Dec & Sat
3 Dec.
4PM
MATINEES: Sun 20
Nov & Sun 27 Nov
FRIENDS
241: Thurs 10
Nov, 7.30pm & Sat 12 Nov, 2pm,
ASSISTED
PERFORMANCES:
BSL Wed 30 Nov, 7.30pm
Touch
Tour Thurs 1
Dec, 6pm
Audio
Described Thurs 1
Dec, 7.30pm
Captioned Sat 3 Dec, 2pm
FREE POST SHOW TALKS (Free booking essential):
Meet the Writer
Saturday 12 November (after the 2pm show)
Meet the Writer
Saturday 12 November (after the 2pm show)
Shelagh Stephenson discusses the writing of the play.
Harriet Martineau and
Victorian Pseudoscience
Sunday 20 November (after
the 4pm show so approx 6.30pm)
Harriet Martineau and
Victorian beliefs in practices such as mesmerism and phrenology, are discussed
by Dr Ella Dzelzainis,
Lecturer in Nineteenth-Century Literature at Newcastle University and co-author
of Harriet Martineau: Authorship, Society and Empire (2010), Pat Beesley, PhD candidate in English Literature at
Newcastle University and recent convener of The Pseudo/Sciences of the
Long Nineteenth Century Research Group and Patrick Low, PhD student of History
at Sunderland University researching Capital Punishment in the North East of
England (1752-1878).
Harriet Martineau In and Beyond Tynemouth
Tuesday 22 November (after 7.30pm show so approx 10pm)
Tuesday 22 November (after 7.30pm show so approx 10pm)
Dr. Joe Hardwick, lecturer in History at Northumbria University and organiser of the Mapping Radical
Tyneside website talks about Martineau’s significance for Victorian radicalism
and the emergence of the professional woman writer. The talk connects her
domestic life in Tynemouth with the powerful voice that she developed
on issues as wide ranging as slavery, empire, politics, economics and the
rights of women.
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