Newbury's Watermill theatre to 'rip up Mansfield Park' in new season
Artistic director Paul Hart, executive director Claire Murray and the team at Newbury’s Watermill theatre have today announced the programme from February to July 2023, a season with one major revival and four new adaptations that explores the deep joys and troubling complexities of life on our shores.
The season begins with a brand-new adaptation of Bill Bryson’s smash-hit memoir Notes from A small Island, affectionately celebrating the quirks and eccentricities of British life, adapted by Tim Whitnall – known for Morecambe on the West End and Best Possible Taste: The Kenny Everett Story on BBC4 – directed by Paul Hart, designed by Katie Lias and in association with Simon Friend Productions. It will will run from Friday, February 3 until Saturday, March 18.
The Watermill Youth Ensemble return with an adventurous reimagining of Lewis Carroll’s Alice Through the Looking Glass, adapted by writer in residence, Becca Chadder (The Poison Belt – Jermyn Street Theatre, Cabildo – Wilton’s Music Hall). The Watermill Youth Ensemble is a diverse group of talented local performers who take part in The Watermill’s weekly programme of activities for young people. Featuring captioning, audio description and integrated BSL, the production will run from Thursday, March 23 to Saturday 25.
This is followed by the first major UK revival of Barney Norris’ award-winning portrayal of learning to live and love with dementia, Visitors, set in his beloved rural Wiltshire. Also directed by Norris, Visitors will run from Friday, March 31 to Saturday, April 22.
The Suspicions of Mr Whicher, based on the best-selling novel by Kate Summerscale and adapted for the stage for the first time by playwright Alexandra Wood (Silence – Donmar, Wild Swans – Young Vic) will run from Friday, May 5 to Saturday, June 10. A dramatic tale of real-life murder that inspired the birth of modern detective fiction, The Suspicions of Mr Whicher is the original Victorian whodunnit.
The season ends with a brand-new co-production with acclaimed Zimbabwean company Two Gents, which explores connections to New World Slavery in Jane Austen’s classic novel Mansfield Park. An outdoor production, touring first to rural locations in Hampshire, Oxfordshire, Berkshire and Wiltshire, Mansfield Park - directed and adapted by Tonderai Munyevu and Arne Pohlmeier - will complete its run in The Watermill gardens, from Wednesday 28 June to Saturday 8 July.
Artistic director Paul Hart said: “In this diverse combination of work we’re reinventing how we see ourselves as we explore and celebrate the life and history of our nation.
"With Bill Bryson’s acerbic observational wit, Notes from a Small Island invites us to see the UK afresh from the viewpoint of a critical friend, while in the topsy turvey world of Through the Looking Glass the relatable young Alice finds reality in absurdity.
"We're ripping up Mansfield Park in collaboration with Two Gents Productions, uncovering buried conversations in a much-loved classic text. A brand-new production of Visitors takes on new resonance post pandemic as we assess the damage to individual lives and the impact on the care system, and domestic extremes are explored further in the first ever stage adaptation of The Suspicions of Mr Whicher which delves into a fascinating murder in Victorian England which led to a national outcry.”
Book online at www.watermill.org.uk or via the box office on 01635 46044.
Tickets go on sale to Friends of the theatre from Wednesday, October 12 at noon and will be on general sale from 12noon on Wednesday 19.