Iris by Alison Carr
Newcastle People’s Theatre
Tuesday 10 – Saturday 14 September 2019
The new Season at the
People’s Theatre kicks off next month with darkly comic family drama Iris by
North-East playwright Alison Carr.
The play sees estranged
sisters Julie and Ruby reunited after the death of their mother, a woman who
continues to dominate their lives from beyond the grave. On the night of the
funeral, Julie gets off with crime scene cleaner Gerry. Maybe that’ll help? It
doesn’t.
The
North East Theatre Guide reviewed its premiere at Newcastle’s Live Theatre in
2016 and described it as “Whilst the
play has adult situations and language, it doesn’t go out of its way to shock
the audience for the sake of it. There are no cheap shots in this enjoyable
drama. The production is laced with humour and gives a perspective of the human
condition. Iris is a fascinating drama that we’d like to see much more
of. The rollercoaster of emotions that underpins even the most dysfunctional of
relationships, and fabulous acting, results in a cracking drama.”
17-year-old Sarah
Mulgrew plays Ruby, a young woman with a potty mouth who is struggling to come
to terms with her mam’s death and all of the upheaval it’s bringing with it. This
is Sarah’s second play at the People’s having previously appeared in Animal
Farm a couple of years ago. Sarah describes Ruby as “grieving, broken and
outrageous” and comments “you don’t get often get to play characters like Ruby,
there aren’t a lot of roles like this for girls”. Sarah, who hopes to pursue a career in
theatre and the arts, was recently accepted to be part of the Junior
Conservatoire at the prestigious Royal Conservatoire of Scotland and will
head up to Glasgow to start the course as soon as Iris ends.
Alongside Sarah is Emma
Weetch as Ruby’s older sister Julie who reluctantly finds herself back in the
house she grew up in. Emma, who joined
the People’s last year, says “Iris is unlike anything I’ve ever done
before. Julie has this hard exterior but there’s so much vulnerability and hurt
underneath, it’s really interesting to play”.
Completing the trio is
Stephen Sharkey as the hapless Gerry, Julie’s one-night stand who keeps coming
back. Stephen has previously performed in the People’s new Studio Theatre, but
for Emma and Sarah this is their first time in this intimate new space. Sarah
says “the smaller space works so well for the play, it will really feel like
the audience are in our house experiencing everything with us”.
For director Sarah
Davison, who has previously helmed mostly large cast plays, Iris is a different
kind of challenge. But a cast of three means there is time in rehearsals to really explore the
characters and their relationships. Sarah
adds “I love the richness in the writing - they are ordinary people and the
humour especially feels very real, and possibly very Northern! But there is
lyricism and sorrow and a huge heart at the centre of it too. It has been a
real treat to work with such brilliant material.”
The play won Alison the
Journal Culture Writer of the Year Award and we are delighted to be
bringing it back to the region. Alison’s quirky wit and black humour ensures
that for all Iris’s darkness as it explores knotty family dynamics, loss and
grief there’s plenty of laughs to be had too. And one or two surprises!
Tickets: £14
(Concessions £11.50)
Box Office: 0191 265 5020 or online at www.peoplestheatre.co.uk
Box Office: 0191 265 5020 or online at www.peoplestheatre.co.uk
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: only a member of this blog may post a comment.