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Select a production | Press quotes about Theatre Alba's work - ...Theatre Alba is doing a braw job of promoting Scottish plays, amusing, entertaining and educating in equal measure. Long may it continue. ...stunning visual and musical imagery It is the stuff of which theatrical legends are made ...it sends shivers up your spine, it opens your ears to the grace and elegance of the old Scots tongue, your eyes to the infinite mysteries of the world and it sends you out of the theatre as if you were walking on air....above all it's a triumph for Scottish theatre It’s not only that the place is physically close to so many of the settings for this story, ... it’s also the richness of the trees, the effect of the gathering darkness, the sight of the full moon rising over the loch, and sailing between the branches. |
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Macbeth | ||||||||||||||||||||||
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Thenew | ||||||||||||||||||||||
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JOSEF CHARLES EDWARD STUART |
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Shakespeare at the Sheraton The Thrie Sisters Tamlane |
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www.one4review.com * * * * *
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British Theatre Guide Mary Rose
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Edinburgh Evening News |
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Muckle helping of Scots hilarity TOM MAXWELL The Lass wi the Muckie Moo * * * *
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2007 THREE WEEKS This hilarious Scots play is great fun, and staged in a breathtakingly beautiful venue. Arthur's Seat lies behind the audience, while the performance is backed by a gently wooded slope leading down to the shore of Duddingston Loch. Performed outdoors in this spectacular locale, at sunset, the performance is lent an appropriately magical air, as the legendary Thomas the Rhymer returns from Elf Land to write his last great ballad. |
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2006 |
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The Tempest | |
Edinburgh Evening News 04/09/2006 The Tempest *** KENNETH Branagh made Shakespeare sexy again. So much so that more and more companies have dared to tackle his difficult and great works with confidence and even gusto. For the most part, Theatre Alba pulled it off with style and aplomb. True, there were a few weak performances: Emma Laidlaw's Miranda needed a little more subtlety to fully realise the duality of her character and Robert Williamson's grotesque Caliban teetered precariously on the cartoony, but the rest of the cast helped to keep them afloat with the buoyancy of their own performance.
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The Death of Arthur | |
The Scotsman 22/08/2006 The Death of Arthur CLAIRE BLACK SCOTTISH STORYTELLING CENTRE (VENUE 30) WATCHING this production is like being transported back in time, not only to the days of King Arthur, but also to a time when theatre productions could succeed as simple, dramatic presentations of text. There's no frivolous, postmodern trickery here, just a plot, an ensemble cast and a guitarist onstage to provide some musical atmosphere. Whether it entertains you or not will depend on whether you like labyrinthine historical plots. As it stands the hour-and-a-half running time is fairly demanding of both cast and audience. Donald Smith's script is steeped in mysticism and magic, as well as the complex machinations of the Round Table.
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Fringe 2004 |
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The Magic Quest (children's show) | |
EdinburghGuide.com The Magic Quest. This fun packed garden adventure is ideal for a sunny day. It will have the children singing and skipping and the adults laughing. The beauty of Duddingston Kirk Manse Garden seems magical in itself, but the nearby loch and the view of Arthur’s Seat make this a truly exquisite experience.
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The Scotsman 07/08/2004 The Magic Quest Jane Ellis DUDDINGSTON KIRK MANSE (Venue 121) ONCE again Theatre Alba have created a small slice of fairyland on the edge of Duddingston Loch. Where Arthur’s Seat slopes into the water behind Duddingston Kirk there is an enchanting garden, the real star of this production. An environmental theme dominates the story: heartless goblins want to dig up the garden and drain the loch in search of gold. The resident elves feel threatened. They need help and commandeer the children in the audience to join a quest to find the dragon. Leading us on a cheery rampage round the trees and flowerbeds, they reveal clues and weird characters, including a talking trout, a wicked witch and an ogre.
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Fringe 2003 | |
The Burning | |
EdinburghGuide.com The Burning Once again, Theatre Alba takes drama right back to its roots, transforming the beautiful surroundings of Duddingston Kirk Manse Garden into a verdant amphitheatre - and what better setting for Stewart Conn's provocative exploration of witchcraft and materialism?Sixteenth-century Scotland, a nation riven with religious differences, is ruled by the Protestant King James VI. A weak, paranoid monarch, he sees dark Satanic forces at work in the most mundane of occurrences. Conversely, the more popular James Bothwell, 'The Black Earl', is a self-assured materialist, scornful of James's authority and adept at manipulating his suggestible mind. It is a conflict of outlook that resonates to disastrous effect in the lives of more lowly people, as well.
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The Scotsman 20/08/2003 Joyce McMillan DUDDINGSTON KIRK MANSE GARDEN (VENUE 121) IT’S many years now since Charles Nowosielski’s Theatre Alba began to present Festival shows in the Manse Garden on the shores of Duddingston Loch; but I’ve never seen that beautiful, slightly eerie setting put up a finer performance than it does as the backdrop for this revival of Stewart Conn’s The Burning, first seen in Edinburgh in 1971. It’s not only that the place is physically close to so many of the settings for this story, set in the late 1580s, about the young King James VI’s cruel vendetta against what he saw as a growing cult of witchcraft in the land; it’s also the richness of the trees, the effect of the gathering darkness, the sight of the full moon rising over the loch, and sailing between the branches.
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Fringe 2002 |
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Macbeth | |
EdinburghGuide.com Venue Duddingston Kirk Manse Garden If it hadn't rained…... But it did, so the audience suffered for their art last night (Friday 9th) at Duddingston Kirkyard but not as much as the players of Theatre Alba. They gamely threw themselves down on wet grass as required. Some had the shelter of an army great coat; the witches - great witches – did not but they still played their parts with effect and stamina. Sinister and tangibly potent, they blended well with Richard Chern’s strong, performance enhancing soundscape which created a wonderful atmosphere. This adaptation is spoken in the Scots dialect and the players are dressed as Balkan-style irregulars with machine guns as well as the required "dirk" with which to "dae tha deed" on Duncan. There are also some very young people in the cast who had a great time - clearly thought themselves totally cool! |
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"Thenew" | |
The Herald 21/11/01
Thenew/Netherbow Theatre, Edinburgh BEYOND the Celtic twilight are a sea of stories Here we find goddesses of the old religion casting |
Watched over by her future spirit, her getting of With Kirstin Smith a pale and wan Tennoch, this is |
Edinburgh Evening News Story of a saint could be stuff of legends Thenew Netherbow **** The story is that of Tennoch, a Celtic princess who was niece of King Arthur and daughter of the less powerful King Lot, of the Gododdin tribe at Traprain Law in East Lothian. As a princess, Tennoch was subject to the prevailing politics of the fifth century. She was sent off as a hostage to Arthur's court, where she caught Christianity with all the fervour of a young teenager - and swore to enter a convent. Not, it must be said, a very astute move - as her pagan father had a rather more earthly husband in mind for her. When she was 14 he paid the ransom and betrothed her to the son of another Scottish king, in a flagrant attempt at empire building. The play, by Margaret McSeveney, is the opening part of a longer programme of events at the Netherbow looking at the influence of Arthur on early Scottish history. |
As the play slowly unfolds, rather too slowly in the first half, Smith creates a convincing if not always likeable, character. Besides telling an important part of Scottish history - Tennoch was St Enoch, mother of St Mungo, the founder of Some of it is a bit clunky in the way it is introduced, but there are enough strong actors in the cast to carry the plot forward. Ann Lannan and Eliza Langland are particularly good, but it is Kirstin Smith, who you look forward to seeing in further parts of this proposed trilogy. ... Thom Dibdin |
Edinburghguide.com http://www.edinburghguide.com/ Reviewer - Thelma Good Interesting but problematic play Kristin Smith radiates as Tennoch, later called Thenew, giving a real sense of the power of this character's innocence and certainty in this interesting but problematic play. |
Better realised are Tennoch's scenes with Old Thenew, played with wisdom by Eliza Langland. The more natural scenes where we see Tennoch with the two young men, Deni and Ewan are very engaging. James A Tennant is moving as Deni the mute Swineherd communicating so much depth with Tennoch using only his grunts and gestures. Ewan is the suitor her parents want her to take and Sean Kane gives him an attractive playful air which works well in their first encounter as children. Less successful are the scenes where disputes arise, between Tennoch and her parents as well as Ewan. Like toddlers with few words to their command, these scenes too often end histrionically. The play raises a tantalising glimpse to a time and a language we have neglected and near forgot. Directed with skillful use of the Netherbow's interesting spaces by Charles Nowosielski, it ends with a memorable scene where the waters of the Forth take Tennoch off to become Thenew, whose name survives as St Enoch. *The playwright herself says in a programme note that at the time inhabitants of the area we now call the Lothians would have been speaking Old Welsh. |
Fringe 2000
The Stage (24 Aug)
Josef |
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If you make the well trodden journey from the Assembly
Rooms to the Pleasance, the chances are you will walk post this modest
theatre without noticing it. You would be missing out on this excellent
play if you did - it is easily as good as much of the drama in those larger
well established venues
The action is set mainly in Scotland during the early
eighties, where the elderly character of the title is being cross-examined
by two policemen for a seemingly innocuous case of shoplifting. Ross, though
unravels a haunting and tightly constructed story that flashes back to
Auschwitz and the Second World War 40 years previously.
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As Charles Nowosielski's production progresses these
two narrative threads reveal related concerns about power, memory and the
preservation of historical truths, constantly shifting out of the wider
and close-up picture.
It is superbly realised, with solid performances from Jeffrey Daunton, Douglas Russell and David Murray Combining taut interrogation scenes, dream sequences and multimedia visuals this is theatre that maximises the possibilities of its craft. Andrew Aldridge |
Edinburghguide.com
http://www.edinburghguide.com/ Reviewer Colin Donati Josef New Scottish writing on this year's Fringe includes
the premiere of 'Josef', an intense and moving new play by Raymond Ross.
The time is Scotland in the 1980's and Josef is a Polish émigré resident here since World War 2. We meet him as he is being held for questioning
on suspicion of shoplifting, an old man at the local Police Station adamant
to maintain his dignity.
A series of flashback memories and dream sequences take us back through incidents in Josef's life over forty years. We are launched back to the Nazi occupation of Poland and the story of his narrow escape from prison camp. We meet deceased members of his family, including his wife Bridget who, he says, still watches over him. |
And we slowly piece together the significance of the story of the attack in his shop in the 1970s that almost left him dead. Why does he refuse all offers to re-open the case? Theatre Alba' s studio production employs archive footage and music which make the full context of issues clear. The parallelism between present and past stories is subtle and entirely eschews cheap polemics. The impact is not immediate. Allow time for the full resonance of this play to sink in. Its overriding strength is that it hinges first and foremost upon the psychology and dignity of an old man who, against a history of infinite misunderstandings, has preserved to the last a genuine affection and love for life and humanity. As a warm and closely observed portrait of this time of life alone, the play is a great success. But the way in which it eventually shows us how the old 'codger' uses a relatively minor incident towards the end of his life to achieve a deep-seated and appropriate retribution for an enormous weight of injustice, makes it an immensely powerful one. |
The Scotsman
Josef |
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PLAYWRIGHT Raymond Ross is one of many children of Polish-Scottish
marriages living in Scotland today. Refugees from Nazi-occupied Poland
fled to Scotland in exile and fell in love.
Set in both Poland and Scotland over an epic sweep of time, Ross's two-and-a-half-hour celebration of his father's life is massive and momentous in the way we expect Slavic art to be. The script moves the Glasgow police force symbolically
into the role of Gestapo when Josef is arrested late in life, in widowerhood,
for shoplifting.
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Jeffrey Daunton's Josef is inspired; he is believable,
proud and touching. Director Charles Nowosielski, also of Polish-Scottish
heritage, makes the most of the script's potential for the dramatic, using
the whole venue space to stage flashbacks of the war and appearances of
Josef's dead wife in waking dreams............
Bonnie Lee
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Lothian Times
Josef |
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BASED loosely on - or perhaps inspired by - the real-life
experiences of author Raymond Ross's. late Polish father, the eponymous
Josef takes us through his war-time interrogations and beatings at the
hands of the Nazis, his assisted escape to the UK and his later years here
as a naturalised British citizen.
It's strong stuff. Josef has been detained by the police and, in his fractured English, is strenuously denying a shoplifting charge. He's subjected to a nice cop/nasty cop interview but the session soon deteriorates into a battle of wills. But somewhere along the line of questioning we suspect there's a deep secret lurking, a something that goes far beyond the accusation of petty theft. But nobody's telling. Not yet, anyway. Sadly, Josef's brush with the law serves only to rekindle
traumatic, personal memories. Grainy images of concentration camp victims
flit across a back projection screen in a never-ending black and white
nightmare.
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The narrative goes into flashback: families, including
his, wiped out. Josef weeps for a once proud nation systematically being
ground into dust.
Josef, now hospitalised and back to reality, confides his secret to his young lady doctor. The police - nasty cop in particular- are anxious to close the case, but will the old man blow it wide open again? Forgiveness was never his forte. Josef, presented by Theatre Alba/MPR and directed by Charles Nowosielski, sees excellent performances from it's cast of six, with Jeffrey Daunton impressive in the title role; likewise Anne Lannan as Mrs. J. ........ by Kerr McKinlay
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CHARLES EDWARD STUART: A Prince Without a Realm
The Herald
Charles Edward Stuart |
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LOCATION, they say, is everything - though still not
enough for Theatre Alba it would seem. Not content with the picture-postcard
backdrop of Duddingston Loch for their reworking of the Bonnie Prince Charlie
story, they throw in some fine performances and an intelligent script taken
from the writings of the late Donald Mackenzie.
For those familiar with Scotland's history, it is arguably the most radical of versions under the direction of Charles Nowosielski. Flora Macdonald merits only a passing reference, there are no Highland pursuits, the prince's Bonnie Boat has sped. |
There are plenty of bearded men in plaid but this
is no battle reconstruction society event either.
Rather, it is a thoughtful study about politics and personalities and the danger in volatile instances of both coming together The first act deals with events up to Culloden, the second, the long years of exile in France:. too many years perhaps - there is a degree of cramming, but John Sampson's gorgeous film-score music makes it both sturdy and stirring. Robert Thomson |
The Scotsman
Charles Edward Stewart:
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SET in Duddingston Kirk's beautifully unmanicured
gardens, A Prince Without a Realm is a reworking of the unfinished play
by the late Donald Mackenzie.
The first half tells the story of Charles Edward Stewart from his arrival in Scotland to raise the Jacobite standard at Glenfinnan in 1745 to the disastrous Battle of Culloden. The second half tells of his exile in France from 1748 to 1752. The focus is the Prince's character, seen initially during the march of the Jacobite campaign and, later, against his deteriorating relationship with Clementina Walkinshaw. A thoughtful balance is maintained between the personal and the public, the intimate and the historico-political, so the play does not descend, as many do, into arid, pompous epic. |
Charles - portrayed with style and sensitivity by Keith Hutcheon - emerges initially as a man with many virtues, then later as a man in decline. As always with Theatre Alba, music, in this case specially composed by John Sampson, plays a significant role. There were lumps in many throats at the end, as a little girl planted in the ground a standard bearing the Saltire, and the moon, just on the wane, appeared above the musicians' tent. Joy Hendry
Tuesday, 22nd August 2000
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Edinburghguide.com
Reviewer Colin Donati |
Back to Top |
This open air production takes a broad sweep across the
events of the Jacobite rising of the 1740s. The first part carries us from
the landing of the Prince and his wooing of Scotland through to Culloden.
The script does not make the mistake of shadowing the atmosphere of the
moment with the hindsight of the savage post-Culloden oppression. The picture
painted is one of optimism and cheer, even almost festival on the eve of
the famed march south. There is an intriguing insight into what might have
contributed to the decision to abort this march at Derby. Not until we
reach Culloden are the protagonists struck by the final recognition of
how seriously the tables have been turned.
Similarly the second part does not dwell overly on the
well-known horrors, but focusses on the subsequent history of the Prince
back in Europe and his entourage of followers.
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They continue to live in hope for some eventual realisation
of their ideal. This episode traces their gradual disillusionment as the
man upon whom all these hopes have been pinned eventually disintegrates
in character.
It is an often told and painful story, but this production- by focussing on some of the less familiar aspects without lingering on any one - by virtue of its breezy approach, goes some way towards making it seem fresh. The outdoor setting adds to the spirit. Make sure you dress warm. Hot tea and biscuits are available at the interval. All in all, an atmospheric and entertaining couple of hours. |
Edinburgh International Festival Fringe '99
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Read Edwin Stiven's nostalgic account of the first production of Tamlane in 1981. Click Here |
The List -13th August
1998
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The Scotsman -18th August
1998
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Thirteenth Century hero, Protector of Scotland, William
Wallace was a real ladies man. The first night of Theatre Alba's latest
new production brings a deservedly full house. The play - which proves
that behind every good man there's at least one great woman - is a dynamic
masterpiece of Scottish Theatre, simultaneously tragic, comic and downright
dirty.
Wallace's Women: even those uninspired by Braveheart will be examining their ancestry in search of Scottish roots Nicky Agate East Lothian News Wallace's Women- and a broad
and bawdy lot they are- spirit us back to a 13th century Scotland where
Sir William is the country's uncrowned king and national hero.
Three Weeks This production is reminiscent of The Bondagers, in that it deals with women's concerns in a mystical, surrealistic way. Scottish tradition and history are both brought beautifully to life in this piece. It presents clearly the meaningful and touching range of the emotions of women who loved and respected the guardian angel of Scotland. The cast is uniformly good, and the script is both sensitive and poetic as it displays the lives of women from a far-off time. The mood and setting of this piece are well handled to produce a saga of Celtic ritual, romance and tragedy that is not to be missed. |
"As a woman I have no country" Virginia Woolf once
said, ruminating on nationalism. While Woolf would have been terrified
by this production - women speak in earthy Scots banter, swear, drink strange
potions and indulge in pagan rituals - her words could easily serve as
a prologue to the show.
It's a case of Braveheart meets Girl Power. Symbolic female figures (mother, lover, healer, stranger, nun) surround the women in William Wallace's life: Lady Wallace, his bride Marion and his baby daughter. But this is no dry history lesson. Facing adversity with courage, sauciness and resourcefulness, these women bring history to life in ways the official versions never do. Best of all are the excellent performances. The small cast work brilliantly together to produce real emotion and great humour throughout. It's a mix of "Spice World" and "The Steamie" against unimaginable hardship, brought home as Marion cries "where are all the men?" at the play's climax. There's some fabulous writing too. The Beltaine festivities are near farce, as the women fail to find a virgin in the entire village ("well, there's a war on") and Marion dances with her priapic, hessian-sack May King. "Wallace's Women" is a delight both for individual lines ("Magic mushrooms, Mother Superior?") and for it's glorious feisty spirit. Elisabeth Mahoney The Stage * * * * William Wallace, the 13th century defender of Scottish liberty famed in Braveheart, is given fresh perspectives in this strongly patriotic play by Margaret McSeveney and Elizabeth Roberts. The action focuses on the life and prophetic visions of
Marion Bradefute of Lamington, reputedly his wife. In an atmosphere heavy
with Celtic mysticism four female spirits of ancient Scotland visit her,
revealing her calling lies not within convent walls but as the wife of
one destined to be a national hero.
Theatre Alba's all female cast excels in this vivid production characterised by rapid mood changes, as rumbustious comedy and lively movement give way suddenly to echoes of heroism or visions of tragedy in cinematic style. Sarah Gudgeon strikes just the right note as a happy yet apprehensive Marion Brian G. Cooper |
It is the stuff of which theatrical
legends are made |
THE EVENING NEWS |
the power, grace and moving spirituality....building
into a final scene of such uplifting eloquence and fierce free feeling
that one leaves the theatre rallied to the cause of truth, beauty and
pure theatre. |
THE SCOTSMAN |
stunning visual and musical imagery
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GLASGOW HERALD |