Wednesday, 29 February 2012

Stories to make you laugh or cry

Stories to make you laugh or cry


Wednesday 29 February 2012

It was a night for passions at the Tabernacle on Wednesday evening. The passion for storytelling, the passion for poetry, and the passion for individuality of voice were celebrated in this very special event organised by Intelligence² in support of First Story. William Fiennes, Founding Director of First Story, kicked the event off with a very personal account of the origins of the charity and how he was blown away by the creative energy he found in an unexpected place. Salena Godden moved between the bittersweet and downright hilarious in her account of growing up black in the harsh terrain of her Northern comprehensive. Then the actor, Sam West, supplied a little RSC magic with a mesmerizing reading of Hamlet’s famous soliloquy. Lemn Sissay exposed a dark chapter in our recent history but commanded laughter along with the tears. Mark Haddon revealed how he breaks from his writing pattern to enjoy a Thames dip three times a week, but when it came to flying he was a fish out of water. The evening culminated with First Story student Mohamed Mardadi’s hypnotic performance of two of his own works, including ‘I Remember’, an account of his first years in England after moving from Africa and the hostility towards the Islamic faith he has encountered since September 11th. His extraordinary rhyming energy earned a rapturous applause. A star is born.
It was a tremendous night for First Story and we would like to thank everyone who supported the event and we hope they took away as many fond memories as we did.

First Story - Stories To Make You Laugh or Cry

'Hyde Park on Hudson': New Stills of Bill Murray as Franklin Roosevelt Hit the Web

'Hyde Park on Hudson': New Stills of Bill Murray as Franklin Roosevelt Hit the Web (Photo)

The actor plays the legendary president in Focus Features' upcoming film.



Bill Murray Hyde Park - H 2012
Once occupied by busting ghosts, Bill Murray is now bringing history to life.
Focus Features revealed new photos from Hyde Park on Hudson, the upcoming film in which the Golden Globe winner takes on the role of President Franklin Roosevelt. The Roger Michell-directed film focuses on the president's close friendship -- and rumored affair -- with distant cousin Margaret "Daisy" Suckley, who is being played by Laura Linney. The film is based on the BBC Radio play of the same name by Richard Nelson, who wrote the movie adaptation, as well.
PHOTOS: 20 Top Grossing Movies of 2011
Set during the weekend in 1939 in which Britain's King George VI -- the same one played by Colin Firth in The King's Speech, here played by Samuel West -- and wife, Queen Elizabeth (Olivia Colman), visited his estate on the Hudson River in New York.
Murray has a busy 2012; he'll also appear in Wes Anderson's Moonrise Kingdom and Roman Coppola's A Glimpse Inside the Mind of Charles Swan III. Dan Aykroyd just confirmed that Murray will not be appearing in Ghostbusters 3, should the film get made.


http://www.hollywoodreporter.com/risky-business/hyde-park-hudson-new-stills-296075

Cast revealed for new play

Cast revealed for new play

CASTING has been announced for Alan Plater’s Close The Coalhouse Door, which is being revived by Northern Stage and Live Theatre in Newcastle.
Directed by Samuel West, with additional material by Lee Hall, the production will open at Northern Stage on Wednesday, April 28, with previews from Friday, April 13, and will tour the UK until June 2012.
Adam Barlow (Coronation Street) will play the Vicar, Chris Connel (The Pitmen Painters) will play Jackie, Louisa Farrant (The Glass Slipper, Northern Stage) will play Ruth and Jane Holman (film of Billy Elliot) will play Mary.
Other cast members include David Nellist (Billy Elliot) who will play Geordie, and Paul Woodson (Eternal Law) who will play John.
Samuel West said: “When I began casting Close the Coalhouse Door, I was apprehensive. Finding people to populate a play with a strong sense of place and music at its heart was always going to involve a big search.
“The shopping list of skills we need is long: native or convincing Geordies who can sing, move, tour and play at least one musical instrument and preferably two, and who have the talent and wit to serve Alan Plater and Sid Chaplin’s words.
“I needn’t have worried. At the very first casting session in Newcastle I realised the incredible depth of talent in the North East.”
Close The Coalhouse Door, based on the stories of Sid Chaplin with songs by Alex Glasgow, is a musical play written and first performed in Newcastle in 1968, charting major strikes, victories and disappointments in British mining history from the formation of the first unions in 1831.
The story is structured around music by Alex Glasgow, inspired by north eastern folk songs.
Alan Plater CBE, who died last year, was one of the greatest writers of the golden age of British television drama.


Read More http://www.chroniclelive.co.uk/entertainment-in-newcastle/music/2012/02/29/cast-revealed-for-new-play-72703-30425903/#ixzz1nt1uzB1u

Sunday, 26 February 2012

Stories to make you laugh or cry: an evening of charity storytelling

Wednesday February 29th, 2012
The Tabernacle

 

Intelligence² are staging an event in aid of First Story, a charity founded by William Fiennes and Katie Waldegrave which sends authors into state schools in deprived areas to encourage creative writing amongst the young. Poets, novelists and an actor will take to the stage, each with 15 minutes to make us laugh or cry or both.

The event will take place at The Tabernacle in Notting Hill, where the seating is cabaret style so you can enjoy the evening over a glass of wine and a plate of charcuterie. Tickets are £35 each including a glass of wine, and you can book a table for eight.

Tuesday, 21 February 2012

Eternal Law Axed After Just One Series

Eternal Law Axed After Just One Series

February 21, 2012 by   
ITV’s Eternal Law- which featured angelic lawyers – has been axed after one series, according to star Samuel West.
West played Zak Gist on the show and broke the news of its cancellation on social networking site, Twitter.
Speaking to his 9, 195 followers, West said: “Alas there will be no more Eternal Law,” he confirmed.
“Not enough people watched it. A thousand thanks to those of you who did, and said such kind things.”
He added: “I’ll miss Zak and the gang enormously, but I’m very proud of the work we did. And we’ll always have York. Onward!”
Despite showing a strong start with 5.43m viewers tuning in when it premiered on ITV1 in January, that figure dropped to a less-than-heavenly 2.9m by the final episode.
The show also starred Orla Brady, Ukweli Roach and Tobias Menzies – not that it matters anymore.

Friday, 17 February 2012

West & Hall Collaborate on New Version of Plater's Coalhouse

 West & Hall Collaborate on New Version of Plater's Coalhouse
Samuel West in Enron (2009)

Date: 9 January 2012

Samuel West will direct a new touring production of Alan Plater’s Close the Coalhouse Door later this year, produced by Northern Stage and Live Theatre in Newcastle and featuring additional material by Billy Elliot and Pitmen Painters writer Lee Hall.

The production will premiere at Northern Stage on 18 April 2012 (previews from 13 April) before touring the UK until June.

Plater’s ‘play with songs’, which was written and first performed in Newcastle in 1968, charts the major strikes, victories and disappointments in British mining history from the formation of the first unions in 1831. The music, by Alex Glasgow, is inspired by north eastern folk songs of each period.

Lee Hall, who is writing a new ending and an additional song for the new production, said: “This is a very important play. Live Theatre and Northern Stage are two of the most exciting theatres in the country. Sam’s involvement ensures that this will be an explosive and thrilling piece of theatre. I can’t wait for it to start.”

Samuel West added: “Coalhouse is set at a Golden Wedding - so of course it's a party to honour 50 years of love and family life. But it's also a celebration of a community - of the North East miners, the stories and the songs that inspired them and commemorated their lives and losses, their victories and their struggle ... It's an honour to be working in this great city on the work of one of our best-loved writers.”

Alan Plater, who died last year, wrote numerous plays including Sweet Sorrow, Shooting the Legend, All Credit to the Lads, I Thought I Heard a Rustling, Peggy for You (a tribute to his former literary agent Peggy Ramsay), Only a Matter of Time and The Blonde Bombshells Of 1943 (a prequel to the 2000 TV series starring Judi Dench). He was also a leading writer of television drama, with credits including Z-Cars, Fortunes of War and A Very British Coup.


Close the Coalhouse Door will visit Richmond Theatre (9-12 May), The Lowry, Salford (15-19 May), Lawrence Batley Theatre, Huddersfield (23-26 May), Yvonne Arnaud Theatre, Guildford (29 May-2 June), Gala, Durham (12-16 June), Oxford Playhouse (19-23 June) and Theatre Royal, York (26-30 June).

Whats On Stage - West & Hall Collaborate

Thursday, 16 February 2012

Malin, Dogger, North Utsire? Bliss

Malin, Dogger, North Utsire? Bliss

The actor Samuel West explains his lifelong addiction to the poetry of Radio 4’s Shipping Forecast.

By
16 Feb 2012

German Bight: one of Mark Power’s series of photographs taken at the marine areas featured in the UK’s shipping forecast

 "Attention All Shipping.” Is there an announcement more dramatic? Even if you don’t consider yourself Shipping, you listen. It might be important.

I’ve been addicted to the shipping forecast for as long as I can remember. When I started as an actor, I had three ambitions: to play Hamlet, to be in Doctor Who and to read the shipping forecast. I’ve done the first two, and I’ve sort of done the third – as the announcer in Fin Kennedy’s play How to Disappear Completely and Never be Found (the last words of the play are “Showers. Good.”). But on this Saturday’s Archive Hour on Radio 4, I got to read a whole forecast.
And I started to wonder quite what it is that makes it so beautiful. We all, I imagine, think of tiny boats lost in choppy seas in far flung areas we’ll never visit and can’t spell (North Utsire, anyone?). The shipping forecast has all the qualities of the sea itself – deep, unknowable, lulling and able to shock (think how rarely you hear “Violent Storm 11” – it’s a collector’s item, although not one you’d ever want to collect). It has its own poetry, its own power. Carol Ann Duffy wrote:
“Darkness outside. Inside, the radio’s prayer – Rockall. Malin. Dogger. Finisterre.”
That last now acts as a commemoration, because it was renamed FitzRoy in 2002, thus ending one of the forecast’s loveliest, loneliest echoes – Finisterre literally means “the end of the earth”.

The shipping forecast acquires its beauty by stealth – it’s beautiful, because it’s not trying to be. In fact, it’s not trying to be anything. It just is. And that’s very unusual. We live in an age where information is no longer given for its own sake. It’s sold, or packaged, or spun. On one of the new trains on the Victoria line, I recently heard the recorded announcement: “THIS (dramatic pause) is OXFORD CIRCUS!” What’s all that about? Why are you trying to sell me the station?
It’s something I meet when narrating documentaries. I have, I’ve come to realise, a fairly serious voice (my friend Victoria Coren says: “Heard you on telly last night: ‘Millions Died’.” Whenever it’s “Millions Died”, she says, it’s always me). It’s true, but when reading the voice-over for programmes such as The Nazis: a Warning from History, I try to remember that it’s not my job to feel, just to inform.
There aren’t many jobs that need this neutrality nowadays, but the shipping forecast is one of them. Even Sailing By, the piece of music that comes before the forecast, is more function than form: its regular waltz rhythm was chosen as an aid to tuning-in. (Before you could listen to radio online, I had an English friend abroad who worked out the time difference so she could call me at 00.45 and listen to Sailing By down the phone. It made her feel less homesick.)
Because the boats you’re talking to are only ever in one sea area at a time, the bit that concerns them is very specific. So if a phrase comes up repeatedly (“moderate or good; occasionally poor”), you give it the same stress each time. You may want to inflect it differently to give it interest, but if you do, you’ll crash and burn. This mantra of repeated stress – going towards and away from the same word, the same wave-crest – reminds me of Pinter, and tickles my ears in the same way: “Why don’t you buy a dog? You’re a dog cook. Honest. You think you’re cooking for a lot of dogs.”
Where else would you find a nine-minute jargonfest that grips even if you don’t understand it? If we hear “Occasional rain. Good.” those of us who don’t speak fluent Forecast might ask: “Is that good? I have no idea. It must be good for somebody.” So we keep listening, engrossed by the fact that this matters, even though much of it is incomprehensible. It’s a deeply unfashionable position. The idea that everything broadcast should be immediately understandable to everyone, no matter what their age, background or specialist knowledge, leads to some fairly anodyne programming. But Radio 4 is the last bastion of the thing you didn’t know you were interested in. Start with the shipping forecast at 05.22 and listen through to the final one at 00.48 and you’ll hear a whole day of surprising things you didn’t know you liked.
And guess what? Reading it is really hard. I wouldn’t dream of taking the place of the Radio 4 continuity announcer, that professional the hem of whose garment I am not fit to touch.
The fear of a fluff, the temptation to embellish, the hypnosis of the repetition put you into a trance. It sort of reads you. Which is how it should be, I suppose.
'Archive on 4: Attention All Shipping' is on Radio 4 on Saturday 18 February at 8.00pm

Sam West, Star of Eternal Law – We’ve Lost the Link Between Effort & Reward

Sam West, Star of Eternal Law – We’ve Lost the Link Between Effort & Reward By Alison Jane Reid

by Alison Jane Reid on February 16, 2012

Just who is actor Sam West? In a galaxy of one dimensional, pretty boy actors, West is hard to define or to pigeonhole. He acts, directs, tinkers with politics and goes off to Palestine to conduct The London Choir in the Magic Flute. To that you can add that he is an un-repenting atheist, ‘and doesn’t care who knows it’. Yet he is currently, and very happily, playing an angel, in ITV’s bold new drama – Eternal Law – with a delicious mix of charm, cynicism and masculine vulnerability; oh and a pair of wings to lust after – which have a tendency to ‘pop out at very awkward moments – like an unwanted erection’, explains Sam. The latest offering from Ashley Pharoah and Matthew Graham – the writers on Life on Mars – Eternal Law is whacky, whimsical and makes very good television. I am sure it will be a hit, and that it will deliver Sam West many new admirers, most of them I suspect – women.

The truth is Samuel Alexander Joseph West belongs to the great, British, swashbuckling, politically incorrect and imperfectly talented tradition of Oliver Reed, Richard Harris and Richard Burton. He thinks and worries far too much about the human condition: about beauty, politics, the death of British manufacturing, sex – lots and lots of sex, lest he miss out! – And yes, bird watching (Of which more later) and the peerless, incomparable beauty of the steam engine. He also uses the word ‘fecund’ a lot.
West is clearly talented, so why isn’t he a first-degree Hollywood star? He was very good as Anthony Blunt in Cambridge Spies and his performance in Hamlet for the Royal Shakespeare Company garnered an award for Best Shakespearean Performance. My guess is that it’s because he doesn’t really care to be; he has too many other facets to his life that he enjoys more. Nor does he have the soft, bland, conformist perfection that Hollywood currently craves for its leading men.
Somehow, his features just seem wrong, if not a little outré. Take that mop of unruly, chorister boy curls, and those strong, aquiline features that can make him sometimes look rather fierce and cross on screen. Remember him as Julia Robert’s cold, gossipy, patrician leading man in Notting Hill? What he does possess is animal magnetism – you only have to look on film forums to see how he inspires such devotion in his female fans.
Now back to Eternal Law. In a piece of inspired casting and a superb, madcap, silly, affirming homage to Powell and Pressburger’s delicious A matter of Life and Death – West is finally cast as a leading man, and he doesn’t disappoint. He acts everyone else off the screen as JAK GIST, a deliciously cynical, wise-cracking, world-weary lawyer who has another secret life as an angel, dispatched to earth to clean up the lives of messy humans, when his own life is just as complex, and he can’t be with the woman he is mad for. At last, West has never looked more appealing or quite so fallible; hanging out on the very telegenic pinnacles of York Minster, be-suited, cigar and whisky in hand, and flexing a fine pair of lusciously downy, anatomically correct wings, complete with all the primary feathers – forget vampires! The angelic life is hot.
And so I predict is Sam West. Soon we will have the fascinating opportunity to compare West’s portrait of George V1, with Colin Firth’s Oscar-winning turn in the King’s Speech. West is taking on the shy monarch with a life-long stutter, for his role in Hyde Park on Hudson in the film about the love affair between Franklin D Roosevelt and his distant cousin directed by Roger Mitchell.
When we meet for the launch of Eternal Law, Sam has forty minutes to spare before dashing into town to put the finishing touches to a paper he has written ‘ attacking the Coalition government on the cuts to arts funding’. I detect he rather relishes all this. Then, in a few days time he is off to Newcastle to take a boat trip down the Tyne in preparation to direct Close the Coalhouse Door, a play about the HISTORY OF THE DURHAM MINERS, by Alan Plater.
Sam West
‘ I’m going up for a little meeting about the play next week, and one of the first things I am going to do is take a boat down the Tyne. There are huge piles of coals on the Tyne – coals to Newcastle – but they are Romanian. So we have exported the union problems and the unpaid labour, and the danger to Russia and Columbia. Meanwhile, there are public sector workers who have just had a pay frieze, lots of ex-miners, and seventy five percent of the coal is still in the ground, and nobody is making anything; it does feel wrong.’
Somehow, I can’t imagine the new pretty boy pack of Brit actors even knowing about the miners strike, or caring; let alone being interested in anything other than the name of their dermatologist and the size of their next pay cheque.
West is complex, interesting, and has lovely manners, and speaks in a tone of mellifluous, rather beautiful, received English. He is also full of fascinating contradictions. He is the son of actors Timothy West and Prunella Scales. In fact he tells me “ I do know The Lady Magazine well. My mother has advertised in the magazine for nannies and housekeepers since before I was born.’
He was educated at Alleyn’s, a private school in Dulwich, and he went on to Lady Margaret Hall Oxford, where he read English Literature. When he broke the news to his parents that he wanted to act, they suggested that becoming a plumber might be a better career. He didn’t listen. On screen he frequently plays, toffs, aristocrats and royalty with ease and aplomb, and yet, he is no Tory. In his twenties, he was briefly a member of the Socialist Workers Party, and he maintains a life long passion and interest in politics and socialism.
Twice a year, since he was seventeen years old, Sam takes the sleeper, around midnight from Paddington to Penzance, ‘a whisky in hand until Reading, at which point he retires to his bunk’. He adds that if he times things just right, ‘ I wake to the view of St Michael’s Mount.’ He then spends a very happy, contented few days cooking, washing up piles of dishes and generally grafting behind the scenes at the International Musicians Seminar in Prussia Cove.
Why, I ask him does he feel the need to do that?
For the first time in the interview, he grows very quiet, and almost becomes tongue-tied.
Is it the contrast between thinking and physical grafting?
‘Yes, it is partly that. I just like washing up… actually I don’t like washing up. But if you have a team of five washing up together, and you get to the end, it is enormously satisfying.’
I said West is complicated.
Sam West ad Ukweli Roach
West’s trips to Penzance, also, happily coincide with the main spring and autumn migration patterns. Originally, he was inspired to study the birds, after a trip to Kenya in his teens to visit his uncle who was a solider working for the British liaison force out in Africa.
‘ I went out on safari, and looked into their garden, and I just loved the fact that birds were either four inches long and bright blue, or seven feet tall and couldn’t fly. It wasn’t too difficult to get the mixed up. I’ve also subsequently discovered that Nairobi is the most fecund city in the world for birds.’
But the years went buy, and he didn’t seriously take up twitching until he took over from Michael Grandage as artistic director of the Sheffield Theatres, a job he candidly describes as ‘reasonably stressful’.
‘ I lived eight miles from the middle of a grouse moor. So at six in the morning, I could just bomb west, and go for a walk before breakfast. And although the birdlife on a moor isn’t amazing, it was the first time I had lived anywhere near the country, as I grew up in south London; and it took me out of myself in a way I found completely captivating.
‘There is also the slightly nerdy, boyish need to catalogue things, to list things. I used to be a train spotter, and very proud one too. My dad had a great interest in trains around the same age. There is something enormously beautiful about steam trains, and the fact that we made them. I do worry very much that we’ve lost the connection between effort and reward that comes from making things. I also think we don’t know how things are made, if we don’t make them ourselves. David Nobbs, who I follow on twitter, said something very funny recently. He said, ‘ a lot of middleclass people regret the loss of menial jobs they wouldn’t last ten minutes in’, which I am sure is true.
‘ Nevertheless,’ he argues, Sheffield is a very good example of this decline. ‘It used to be a city that made things; now it is a city that sells things. And it’s losing its memory. It may be a very nice city; it is certainly cleaner, and there are more fountains. But there is something about the satisfaction of producing things with your hands, the sense of achievement, and pride and indeed all of that.’
West is certainly complicated but the one thing he isn’t is a hypocrite. When he says there is satisfaction in using your hands he means it.
When he isn’t washing up, he goes bird watching. ‘ There’s this valley near Land’s End. It ‘s called Cop Valley – and it must be the most beautiful setting in Britain. It’s like Rivendale. It’s this incredibly damp, warm valley, and the birds are amazing. The chances of seeing a real rarity are quite high, and even if they aren’t, you get lots of black caps and white caps, and spring and autumn migrants, singing, and the weather is wonderful.
Sam West
‘Going birding gives me a completely different attitude to the year. Now I see the seasons as heralding different, migratory birds. Instead of November and it’s freezing, I think it’s November and the geese have arrived. Migration is one of the great mysteries of nature.’
Several days after interviewing Sam West, I stumbled across this quote from him on his entry for IMDB – the leading information site for filmmakers and actors.
‘Oliver Reed regretted not sleeping with every woman in the world, and Betjeman said he wished he’d had more sex. It doesn’t matter how much sex I have, I’ll be of Olli Reed’s mind when it comes down to it. And so will anybody who is honest.’
I would say that Sam West is a man who frets and thinks and lusts after life – keen to fill up everyday with meaning, purpose and experience – and what’s wrong with that?
Eternal Law is on ITV every Thursday at 9pm. It is repeated on www.itv.com
Close the Coalhouse Door Opens in April to book – www. northernstage.co.uk
Alison Jane Reid – Copyright January 2012
Download PDF of this Sam West Interview for The Lady Magazine Published February 2012

Wednesday, 15 February 2012

Interview: Actor Sam West on Close the Coalhouse Door

Interview: Actor Sam West on Close the Coalhouse Door

15/02/2012


As a new production of Close the Coalhouse Door starts to take shape, actor-director Sam West talks to BARBARA HODGSON about his role in reviving a Northern classic

IN 1962 when Close the Coalhouse Door made its debut in Newcastle local people turned out in their droves, ensuring an instant sell-out.
What for many was a rare night at the theatre stirred regional pride.
At the heart of Alan Plater’s musical play – based on stories by Sid Chaplin – were working class heroes, miners and their families.
Knitted into the story of a couple’s golden wedding party were threads of mining history, flashbacks to hopes and disappointments with plenty of laughter along the way, while pulsating through it all were the vibrant songs of socialist songwriter Alex Glasgow.
It was political, pickaxe-rattling stuff long before the decimation of the coal mining industry in the 1980s really got the blood flowing.
After the warmth of its welcome in Newcastle, its transfer to London’s West End met with a reception that could be described at best as tepid.
But that was then, and we’ve since seen modern Northern classics such as Lee Hall’s Billy Elliot and The Pitmen Painters seduce Southern audiences with their spirit and charm.
Now even Sting is getting in on the act with his plans for a Wallsend shipyards-inspired musical called The Last Ship.
It will be interesting to see how a revival of Close the Coalhouse Door – opening in April on the site of its debut at the former Newcastle Playhouse, now Northern Stage – will be received this time when it goes on tour.
“It didn’t do particularly well then in London. It should have done!” says Sam West who’s directing the new production, a collaboration between Northern Stage and Live Theatre, which is based on Newcastle Quayside.
The London-based actor director – nominated for a BAFTA for his role in 1992 Merchant Ivory film Howards End and star of the just ended ITV1 series Eternal Law – is fully aware of his responsibility in taking over a Northern classic, whose creators are now all dead. “That’s one of the slight pressures of doing it here,” admits the 45-year-old when I catch up with him at Northern Stage, “but it’s a nice pressure.”
West remains best known for his stage, TV and film roles, but recent years – including his spell as artistic director of Sheffield Theatres – have seen him make his name as a director. He’s also recently directed his first radio play.
Hearing his enthusiasm for his new project, which will see Lee Hall write new material to bring the story up to date, assures us it’s in a safe pair of hands.
West has done his homework. He makes passing reference to visiting Woodhorn, the former colliery-turned museum in Northumberland, and when I mention the work of local photographer Keith Pattison, who covered the 1984-85 miners’ strike in Easington, he already knows it.
The background of the play is something West can connect with, regardless of what his own growing up as the son of famous acting parents Timothy West and Prunella Scales, might have been like.
At university he joined the Socialist Workers Party and was briefly a member of the Socialist Alliance. He mentions he’s a member of the council of Equity, the actors’ union, and while he’s not talking about himself when he says “sometimes you need a terrier to fight your corner”, you get the impression he could.
As an 18-year-old, West was in Western Australia, where his mother was directing his father in Uncle Vanya, at the time Alex Glasgow emigrated there with his family and he muses he could have passed the late singer-songwriter in the street.
As it happens, his connection with the play came about by chance.
He recalls that after Plater’s death he’d read an obituary praising the brilliance of Close the Coalhouse Door. Then he met Michael Chaplin – writer son of Sid – at a wedding and brought up the subject.
“I said, ‘I wonder who will revive the play’ and he said ‘why don’t you revive it’? I thought ‘that’s not going to happen’.” However, there followed talks involving Max Roberts, artistic director of Live Theatre and also Plater’s son-in-law, and Erica Whyman, chief executive of Northern Stage, and the seeds of a collaboration took root.
“And that was that,” says West. “They asked me, I was free and it’s very exciting.”
Previous revivals of the play don’t seem to have had the buzz of this one, which has Hall incorporating the 1984-85 Miners’ Strike.
He and West, who changed their mind about the initial idea of including a new song, have been deep in discussion about it in the capital (Hall’s home is just around the corner from West’s) ahead of Newcastle rehearsals which are soon to start.
On the day I meet West, cast details have been finalised but not yet released.


Having just spoken of a conversation with a North East taxi driver who’d seen Billy Elliot in London and remarked that the actors didn’t have proper Easington accents, West says: “You have to get it right and that’s something we’re going to try to do.
“The actors will be native to the North East or very convincing Geordies.”
West intends to tread carefully with the play, striking just the right note to bridge the time gap and connect with those too young to have a memory of the 1980s strike let alone the play’s 1960s context.
“One of the things I’m trying to do with Lee is to get back to that ‘68 version and to open it out in ways that are more about being true to the 68 version.”
In terms of framework, Plater’s play will sit in the middle rather than be part of an updated whole.
“We’re trying to preserve the piece,” says West. “I don’t want to say too much about it. We want it be a nice surprise.
“It will be good, it will be subtle and hard hitting.”
He adds: “We’re certainly intending to use all Alex’s original music. The play has beautiful songs and beautiful writing.
“One of the very interesting things about talking to Michael about his dad was how Sid’s style had come out in this play.”
Those rich stories, convincingly brought to life on stage, become important memories, he suggests, “when you destroy an industry like Margaret Thatcher did”.
“Culture nowadays is becoming about dressing up in the evenings for posh people and we have to remind ourselves that stories belong to the people.”
He’s looking forward to working in Newcastle, where in the past he has starred in RSC productions of Richard ll and (his award-winning) Hamlet.
West is glad, he says, that he doesn’t have to make his living as a director: “I find it much more difficult that acting.
“When actors say no to me, and they might for all sorts of reasons, I tend to take it terribly personally, but I can say no for the same reasons!” Ideally, he’d like to keep his hand in with directing once or twice a year, alongside his acting and also radio work.
He’s incredibly busy.
“I did Enron, which ran for almost a year, and last year I did a TV series and a film,” he says.
He recently starred alongside his father in Caryl Churchill’s two-hander A Number, a play about cloning which revisits the nature versus nurture debate.
It took them to Cape Town where his father “did a great performance– at 77!” He laughs: “My dad is just like a 25-year-old, if he’s unemployed for six weeks he gets really antsy.”
West’s mother, the former Fawlty Towers star, works “not so much”, he says, although they have just worked together on readings picked by Nicholas Parsons for the radio show, With Great Pleasure.
He’s just waiting to hear whether there’s to be another series of Eternal Law, where he loved being pitched in, student accommodation-like, and being able to walk to work in the beautiful city of York.
“I very much hope there will be. It was one of the happiest jobs I’ve ever done, and others enjoyed it.
“Whether they enjoyed it enough is another question.”
He hopes to be directing again towards the end of the year, and he also has a film coming out: Hyde Park On Hudson, about the royal visit George Vl made to President Roosevelt in 1939, in which he plays the king opposite Bill Murray’s President.
Following the meeting of the men who each struggled with a physical challenge – the king his stammer and Roosevelt with polio – George Vl returned with a renewed confidence, says West, in his role.
“I’m a republican but I think you have to recognise a job well done,” he adds.
Close the Coalhouse Door is at Northern Stage from April 13 until May 5 before heading off on a national tour which also takes in Gala Theatre in Durham from June 12-16. Visit www.northernstage.co.uk or call 0191 230 5151.


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British actor Sam West: “We have solidarity with you”

British actor Sam West: “We have solidarity with you”

Samuel West addressed the Belarusian in the framework of the Global artistic campaign of solidarity with Belarus.


Sam West is a winner of ten British national and international awards, including three nominations for Oliver Award given by the Society of London Theatre. He played over 30 roles at the Royal Shakespeare Company, the Royal National Theatre, the Royal Court Theatre.
Howards End James by Ivory was the start of Sam West’s career as a film actor followed by not less successful Jane Eyre by Franco Zeffirelli, Notting Hill by Roger Michell, Van Helsing by Stephen Sommers; he also voiced 101 Dalmatians animated film.


In summer 2010, Sam West along with Tom Stoppard and other British theatre workers held a picket in front of the Belarusian Embassy protesting against Alyaksandr Lukashenka’s policy. During the picket, Sam West read out extracts from Mikalai Khalezin’s play Generation Jeans.
Samuel West as Zak Gist in Eternal Law

Eternal Law Interview : Samuel West

December 15th, 2011

In new ITV1, York based drama, Eternal Law, Samuel plays veteran angel Zak Gist.
With a career spanning over 20 years, Samuel West has established himself as a respected stage, film, and television actor, and theatre director. His television and film credits range from playing King Caspian in the BBC’s The Chronicles of Narnia: Prince Caspian and the Voyage of the Dawn Treader in 1989, to more recently, starring in Any Human Heart, Poirot, and Law & Order:UK. He is also in the upcoming feature film Hyde Park on Hudson, directed by Roger Michell, playing King George VI.
Here Samuel explains how he took on the challenge of playing a guardian angel, Zak’s emotional struggle against his love for Hannah and what it was like working with newcomer Ukweli Roach.

What drew you to Eternal Law?
Ashley and Matt have an extraordinary track record. I was very excited by Life on Mars and I thought anything they were writing, even though it sounded like a high concept drama, was likely to be deep as well as exciting.

How would you describe Eternal Law?
Angels who are also lawyers, it sounds like two different series crashing head on, but it doesn’t feel like that. If you say that there are angels on earth and they all do lots of other jobs – there are angel taxi drivers, angel lawyers and angel doctors – then it makes more sense.
I think the structure works in two ways, it allows you to say very interesting things about another species, a species that is sort of human but not quite, but most importantly it allows you say important things about humanity and to have big arguments about things that matter, like love and hate, death and war, and right and wrong. Whether you believe angels exist and they’re keeping an eye on you, or whether you think they’ve been invented to remind us of the best things of ourselves, there is a reason why they run through the literature for hundreds, in fact thousands of years. It’s pretty exciting I think.

Zak is a guardian angel. How did you approach playing this role?
I’m an atheist and I don’t mind who knows it. I think of it more in terms as a different species – I’m a very keen bird watcher and when I meet a new species of bird I look at it and think, ‘your behaviour is a bit like another species I know well but it’s not it’s your own’. So playing an angel – even one in human form – I’m really tapping into something which is quite alien. It’s meant to put you in touch with feelings, abilities, qualities of wisdom and long service and goodness.
I went back to Christmas carols as they’re full of references to angels. In The Little Town of Bethlehem there is a verse, ‘while mortals sleep the angels keep their watch of wondering love’. ‘Wondering love’ is a brilliant way to describe how the angels are depicted in this series, and through history in terms of their attitude towards humanity; they are loving, a sort of all loving. The extraordinary thing that angels learn when they look at humans, is that having been born the only thing we know is that we’re going to die; yet we continue to want to love and reproduce and make the best of our time and every time we get knocked down we get back up again. When you put that into a series it teaches us about our best qualities as a race. The way we love, that desperate fast way we love. The angels look at humans and say, ‘wow – they’re incredible and I want this, I know I only get a few years of it but I want it because it’s just so incredible’. There’s something about playing an angel and admiring this race that’s really quite inspiring.

How would you describe Zak?
He’s a grumpy angel. He is meant to have access to reserves of calmness, wisdom, bravery and hold a balanced view, and he also cares deeply about making a success of things. He’s a bit like a tough uncompromising cop who isn’t afraid to break the rules; and it would be no fun having an angel who was just a goody goody.
Tom is a very wet behind the ears angel who has literally just come out of the choir and as Richard says “they’re sending me altos”. Although Tom turns out to be a wonderful angel and somebody we learn a lot from. But Zak is not like that.

How does he view Tom?
Absolutely as a nuisance to start with! Tom is a complete rookie, he’s useless, he doesn’t even know how to eat a banana! He’s read all the books but book learning is no substitute for experience of the world and in some cases he’s absolutely dangerous, he’s always charging off into battle and titling at windmills, doing things for the right reasons at the wrong time. But despite all these misgivings I think Zak turns out to be very fond of him.

Did you enjoy working with Ukweli Roach and the other cast?
Although Ukweli is only just out of drama school he’s enormously experienced for his age and he went to a fine school, he’s really top. I knew Hattie and Tobias previously from the theatre. It’s a really fine cast, and the supporting cast is without exception incredible.

Can you describe Zak’s relationship with Hannah, played by Hattie Morahan?
Zak’s feelings for Hannah run through everything, his whole being. We learn that he knew Hannah in the past. He was in love with her to the extent that he was almost prepared to give up his wings and become mortal until Mr. Mountjoy persuaded him otherwise. Because there is a sense, although it’s only an undertone, that the world is reaching a bit of a breaking point and that the number of angels has reached a dangerously low point. Zak has to think of the bigger picture, humanity en mass. So Mr. Mountjoy persuades him that in order to love Hannah best he has to go back to the earth and make it beautiful for her and save it. When he arrives he meets Hannah immediately and thinks Mr. Mountjoy is testing him.
The great thing about playing an angel is that you’re sort of a spy, you’re undercover. If anybody knows you exist you’ve failed. Hannah doesn’t know who Zak is. Their relationship is not like a classical love story in that you think, ‘If only she knew that he was really the same person then it would all be alright’, because of course it wouldn’t. It would completely mess her mind up, blow Zak’s cover and jeopardise the safety of the whole project and ultimately the whole earth. So you’re playing a love scene and you think, ‘what’s at stake?’ Ultimately the whole planet – no pressure!

Did you enjoy filming in York?
Filming in York was such a pleasure. York is an incredibly welcoming city. It can be very disruptive to do a major series in the middle of a city that small, but we felt very welcome and it was beautiful in every sense. The city is a major character in the drama.

Thursday, 9 February 2012

West & Hall Collaborate on New Version of Plater's Coalhouse

West & Hall Collaborate on New Version of Plater's Coalhouse
Samuel West in Enron (2009)

Date: 9 January 2012

Samuel West will direct a new touring production of Alan Plater’s Close the Coalhouse Door  later this year, produced by Northern Stage and Live Theatre in Newcastle and featuring additional material by Billy Elliot and Pitmen Painters writer Lee Hall.
The production will premiere at Northern Stage on 18 April 2012 (previews from 13 April) before touring the UK until June.

Plater’s ‘play with songs’, which was written and first performed in Newcastle in 1968, charts the major strikes, victories and disappointments in British mining history from the formation of the first unions in 1831. The music, by Alex Glasgow, is inspired by north eastern folk songs of each period.

Lee Hall, who is writing a new ending and an additional song for the new production, said: “This is a very important play. Live Theatre and Northern Stage are two of the most exciting theatres in the country. Sam’s involvement ensures that this will be an explosive and thrilling piece of theatre. I can’t wait for it to start.”

Samuel West added: “Coalhouse is set at a Golden Wedding - so of course it's a party to honour 50 years of love and family life. But it's also a celebration of a community - of the North East miners, the stories and the songs that inspired them and commemorated their lives and losses, their victories and their struggle ... It's an honour to be working in this great city on the work of one of our best-loved writers.”

Alan Plater, who died last year, wrote numerous plays including Sweet Sorrow, Shooting the Legend, All Credit to the Lads, I Thought I Heard a Rustling, Peggy for You (a tribute to his former literary agent Peggy Ramsay), Only a Matter of Time and The Blonde Bombshells Of 1943 (a prequel to the 2000 TV series starring Judi Dench). He was also a leading writer of television drama, with credits including Z-Cars, Fortunes of War and A Very British Coup.





Close the Coalhouse Door will visit Richmond Theatre (9-12 May), The Lowry, Salford (15-19 May), Lawrence Batley Theatre, Huddersfield (23-26 May), Yvonne Arnaud Theatre, Guildford (29 May-2 June), Gala, Durham (12-16 June), Oxford Playhouse (19-23 June) and Theatre Royal, York (26-30 June).

Wednesday, 8 February 2012

CD Love Letters

CD Love Letters

Love Letters cover
If you order more than 1 copy of this 2 CD pack, postage and packing are free!
The Love Letters of the title date from 1940: World War II, the year of Dunkirk, the Battle of Britain and the Moonlight Sonata raid on Coventry at the height of the Midlands blitz.
The musical repertoire, a mixture of classical, jazz , swing and popular song, dates from performances and broadcasts of the time and has been specially arranged for English Serenata. For tracks, see Love Letters: music and artists.
From April 1940, delightful and witty flirtation and sharp comment on the progress of the war flew in the post between Coventry and Stourbridge, a town to the west of Birmingham. The young couple, John and Muriel, exchanged weekly letters until November, when postal and telephone services were disrupted by bombing and neither knew if the other had survived.
The letters were found more than sixty years later, with the pencil-written Dunkirk diary of a member of the Worcestershire Regiment, still tied up in their original bundles with wartime tape.
All the actors have appeared with the Royal Shakespeare Company. John and Muriel are played by Sam Alexander and Hannah Barrie. Samuel West portrays Muriel’s soldier brother Ernest and BBC Newsreader Alvar Liddell. Jeffery Dench is the rich voice of Winston Churchill.

Tuesday, 7 February 2012

Roach 'over the moon' about TV role

Roach 'over the moon' about TV role
 
Ukweli Roach still can't believe he was cast in Eternal Law
Eternal Law actor Ukweli Roach has admitted being cast in the show still feels "a bit surreal".
The rising star got his big break when he was cast as angelic lawyer Tom shortly after drama school but confessed he is still getting used to it.
He said: "Obviously, I feel like any young actor would feel at this point - I was over the moon when I got the part. It's a brilliant opportunity for me.
"To this day, it feels a bit surreal. I feel like I'm going to wake up and think it was a dream. It's brilliant. Nothing can prepare you for it."
Ukweli has picked up lots of tips from his co-stars, who include Orla Brady and Samuel West.
"More than anything, I've learnt by watching people, how they operate around the camera while doing a scene," he said. "Or sometimes when they're doing a scene, I just watch and see little things that might be useful to me."
Ukweli was previously in StreetDance 3D but said he thinks of himself as an actor rather than a dancer.
He said: "Dancing was always a hobby for me - acting was always what I wanted to do. I happened to fall into professional work with dancing first, I liked doing it and happened to be quite good at it. It's something that will always be fun to me, and I'd rather keep it that way."

:: Ukweli Roach stars in the final episode of Eternal Law on Thursday, February 9, on ITV1 at 9pm.
Copyright © 2012 The Press Association. All rights reserved.

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