Difference between revisions of "The Fire Raisers (2008)"

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[[Image:FireRaisersPoster.jpg|thumb|300px|Poster by [[Poster designer]]]]
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[[Image:FireRaisersPoster.jpg|thumb|250px|Poster by [[Alex Robinson]]]]
  
 
by [[Max Frisch]]
 
by [[Max Frisch]]
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Performances:  Tue 15th - Sat 19th April [[2008]], [[Prompt Corner]]
 
Performances:  Tue 15th - Sat 19th April [[2008]], [[Prompt Corner]]
  
==Auditions==
 
  
''Pre-audition read-through: Sunday 16th December, 6-8pm ([[Rehearsal Room]])''
 
 
*Monday 17th December, 8-10pm ([[Prompt Corner]])
 
*Tuesday 18th December, 8-10pm ([[Bell Theatre]])
 
*Wednesday 19th December, 8-10pm ([[Prompt Corner]])
 
  
 
== Introduction ==
 
== Introduction ==
A spate of arson attacks is terrorising the country.  The arsonists insinuate themselves into respectable people’s homes to use as a base for starting the fires which are wreaking havoc. 
 
  
Capitalist Herr Biedermann is forthright in his condemnation of those responsible, happy to hold forth on the subject with little prompting. So, how does Herr Biedermann react when a strange man shows up at his home seeking food and shelter?  
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Swiss-German writer, Max Frisch's most famous play is very black, very funny and quite weird. The play, published in 1958, and set in an unspecific modern European city, is about bourgeois reaction and fear, and the insidiousness of radical urban terror. Or you might just see it as a grotesque domestic comedy of manners.  
  
Swiss writer Max Frisch’s most famous play was written in the late 1950s, and is a black comedy of the most grotesque kind. It appears to have resonances with fears of terrorism in Britain in recent times.  It is also a tremendously funny play about how very middle-class, small-minded people might deal with the direct threat of "others".
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Subversive arsonists are setting off a succession of fires, terrorising cities. Middle class, reactionary capitalist, Gotlieb Biedermann, is visited by two suspicious characters whom he allows to stay in his attic, and who may or may not be fire raisers... During the action, a Greek chorus of firemen comment on the story, and at times interact with the characters.  
 
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I would like to bring out the stylised nature of the play in the staging, whilst also retaining the essential humanity in the reactions to the awfulness of the story unfolding.
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== Cast ==
 
== Cast ==
Gottlieb Biedermann - Reginald Stewart,
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*Gottlieb Biedermann - [[Reginald Stewart]]
Babette Biedermann - Annabel Entress,
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*Babette Biedermann - [[Annabel Entress]]
Anna, the maid - Pilar Nalwimba,
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*Anna, the maid - [[Venetia Twigg]]
Schmitz - Antonio Silvestri,
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*Schmitz - [[Antonio Silvestri]]
Eisenring - James Watson,
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*Eisenring - [[James Watson]]
Chorus leader, fire officer / PhD - Jamie Scott-Clapperton,
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*Chorus leader, fire officer / PhD - [[Jamie Scott-Clapperton]]
Chorus 2, fire officer / WPC - Caroline Sloan,
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*Chorus 2, fire officer / WPC - [[Jenny Mortier]]
Chorus 3, fire officer / Widow Knechtling - Silvia Anton.
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*Chorus 3, fire officer / Widow Knechtling - [[Charlotte Vaight]]
  
 
== Crew ==
 
== Crew ==
Stage Manager - Mark Ireson,
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*Stage Manager - [[Mark Ireson]]
Assistant Stage Manager / Production Assistant - David Redford-Green,
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*Assistant Stage Manager / Production Assistant - [[David Redford-Green]]
Assistant Stage Manager - Kavina Kamat,
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*Assistant Stage Manager - [[Kavina Kamat]]
Sound Design - Bob Callender,
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*Sound Design - [[Bob Callender]]
Lighting Design: Anna York/Induja Bandara,
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*Lighting Design - [[Induja Bandara]],[[Anna York]]
Special set and props work - Hans Mudlamootoo, Michael Wilson, Alex Robinson,
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*Special set and props work - [[Hans Mudlamootoo]], [[Michael Wilson]], [[Alex Robinson]]
Costume - Lisa Thomas,
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*Costume - [[Lisa Thomas]]
Photography - Mark Davies,
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*Photography - [[Mark Davies]]
Poster Design - Alex Robinson.
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*Poster Design - [[Alex Robinson]]
 
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For more details, please contact Richard Watkins, Director: richardathome3@googlemail.com
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== Reviews ==
 
== Reviews ==
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== Gallery ==
 
== Gallery ==
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Production photos by [[Mark Davies]]
  
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<gallery widths="250px" heights="250px" perrow="5">
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Image:Fireraisers 001.jpg
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Image:Fireraisers 013.jpg
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Image:Fireraisers 014.jpg
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Image:Fireraisers 024.jpg
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Image:Fireraisers 026.jpg
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Image:Fireraisers 029.jpg
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Image:Fireraisers 031.jpg
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Image:Fireraisers 034.jpg
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Image:Fireraisers 035.jpg
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Image:Fireraisers 037.jpg
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Image:Fireraisers 038.jpg
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Image:Fireraisers 044.jpg
  
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</gallery>
  
 
== Reminiscences and Anecdotes ==
 
== Reminiscences and Anecdotes ==
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[[Category:Productions|Fire Raisers, The]]
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[[Category:Productions|Fire Raisers (2008), The]]
[[Category:Prompt Corner Productions|Fire Raisers, The]]
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[[Category:Prompt Corner Productions|Fire Raisers (2008), The]]

Latest revision as of 12:45, 3 March 2017

Poster by Alex Robinson

by Max Frisch

Directed by Richard Watkins

Performances: Tue 15th - Sat 19th April 2008, Prompt Corner


Introduction

Swiss-German writer, Max Frisch's most famous play is very black, very funny and quite weird. The play, published in 1958, and set in an unspecific modern European city, is about bourgeois reaction and fear, and the insidiousness of radical urban terror. Or you might just see it as a grotesque domestic comedy of manners.

Subversive arsonists are setting off a succession of fires, terrorising cities. Middle class, reactionary capitalist, Gotlieb Biedermann, is visited by two suspicious characters whom he allows to stay in his attic, and who may or may not be fire raisers... During the action, a Greek chorus of firemen comment on the story, and at times interact with the characters.

Cast

Crew

Reviews

Some review quotes go here


Gallery

Production photos by Mark Davies

Reminiscences and Anecdotes

Members are encouraged to write about their experiences of working on or seeing this production. Please leave your name. Anonymous entries may be deleted.

See Also

References

<references/>

External Links