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The Lady is a Treat
The Lady in the Van
by Alan Bennett
Newcastle’s People’s Theatre
Until Saturday
19th November 2016
Visitors
to the Peoples Theatre are in for a treat this week as they deliver a fine
British drama with real quality.
The
Lady In The Van is a classic Alan Bennett tale. Like all good tales it recalls
events that actually happened. Alan indeed did allow an elderly homeless women
to park her van in front of his house. The play shows how the Alan and the lady
wound each other up. They agreed on little, and he was easily stressed out by
the arrangement. It is easy to see why
they chose to turn the tale into a film, starring Dame Maggie Smith. But do you
know what? I prefer the story as a play.
We
had previously seen a professional production of this show and happy to report
that this amateur production is as well staged and acted as that show. Anne Cater is simply superb as the titular
Lady In The Van, Miss Shepherd. She is both cantankerous and needy, willing to
talk and yet refusing to answer straight questions. The role suits Anne so
well.
The
play is interesting as it requires two Alan Bennetts. One acts as narrator, the
other is interacting with the various characters in the story. Sometimes they
discuss the situation and tend to disagree with each other. Clearly Ian Willis
and Sean Burnside have been working on their broad Bennett style Yorkshire accents. The character
is full of apparent contradictions and their delivery makes such internal
conflict appear normal.
Photo: Dianne Edwards |
Supporting
the Alans and the Lady are an ensemble that take up the various roles of people
that poke their noses into Miss Shepherd’s life. The Social Worker (Rachel
Scott) appears every few months but achieves little but words. Neighbours Rufus
(Gordon Mounsey) and Pauline (Kate Williams) talk about socialist values but
would rather it wasn’t happening on their doorstep. Meanwhile Alan’s Mam (Kath
Frazer) wonders how Miss Shepherd can cope without a proper toilet. The action flows seamlessly under Clive
Hilton’s direction.
So
ignore the building works at the front of the building and pop along for a tale
that could only happen here to a man like Alan Bennett.
Review
by Stephen
Oliver
Read
the NETG preview: http://nomorepanicbutton.blogspot.co.uk/2016/11/preview-lady-in-van-at-newcastles.html
Tickets:
Lady
In The Van comes to Newcastle’s People’s Theatre from Tuesday 15th to Saturday 19th November 2016 at 7.30pm.
Tickets cost: £13.50 (Concessions £11)
and are available by calling the box office on 0191 265 5020 on online from www.peoplestheatre.co.uk
and are available by calling the box office on 0191 265 5020 on online from www.peoplestheatre.co.uk
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