Showing posts with label Penelope Wilton. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Penelope Wilton. Show all posts

Friday, 8 April 2011

ARTS CUTS SHORT-SIGHTED, SAYS ACTOR

ARTS CUTS SHORT-SIGHTED, SAYS ACTOR

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Sir Patrick Stewart led a delegation to Downing Street to voice concern about cuts to arts funding
Friday April 8,2011
Actor and director Samuel West has called the Government's cuts to arts funding "short-sighted" after a delegation of famous faces handed a petition to Downing Street.
Sir Patrick Stewart led the group, which also included Maxine Peake and Penelope Wilton, to deliver a letter to the Government calling for a meeting to discuss their concerns.

West, who starred in the film version of EM Forster's Howard's End, warned the Arts Council's budget cuts would affect all of society and damage the industry he described as "one of the success stories".

"It's short-sighted of the Government not to notice when an industry like this is really successful," he said. "A cut to the arts doesn't just slim down bureaucracy and take out middle managers. We've lost 206 companies' funding. They're all employers, they all employ people and if you cut a theatre you cut a place that's the hub of local community.

"If a theatre closes, the restaurant next to it closes, the pub down the road takes a hit, the people who supply stuff to the theatre, maybe they go out of business as well," he said.

"It's a tiny amount of money. We're not just here to work our arses off for 50 years and then die. The whole point of arts funding is not just that it makes money for the country, it's good for people."

Sir Patrick handed over the petition, which requests an "arts summit" involving key bodies and artists to discuss a "coherent policy" for the UK's arts sector.

The actor - whose roles have ranged from Shakespeare to Star Trek - said the arts "lie at the very centre, the very fabric of the culture, the ideology and the entertainment life of this country".

The delegation's visit came just over a week after Arts Council England (ACE) announced public funding cuts which saw some bodies lose out completely. Others saw their future spending slashed although some were promised increased grants.

The Government has told ACE to cut 15% from what it gives out to arts groups by 2015, leaving it with just under £1 billion to distribute.

Friday, 18 July 2008

Wilton and West to Star in Donmar's Family Reunion

Wilton and West to Star in Donmar's Family Reunion

By Mark Shenton
18 Jul 2008
Penelope Wilton and Samuel West will star in The Family Reunion, the centerpiece production of a landmark T. S. Eliot festival being staged at the Donmar Warehouse this autumn that will offer audiences the opportunity to engage with one of the greatest literary figures of the twentieth century.
The Family Reunion, as previously reported, will open on Nov. 25 (following previews from Nov. 20), for a run to Jan. 10, 2009, under the direction of Jeremy Herrin.
Both Wilton and West have previously worked extensively at the Donmar: Wilton is in the current hit production of The Chalk Garden (running to Aug. 2), and has previously appeared there in Ibsen's John Gabriel Borkman, Lilian Hellman's The Little Foxes and Pinter's A Kind of Alaska, while West was seen Pinter's Betrayal there in 2007.
In Family Reunion West will play Harry, who returns to the ancestral home to celebrate his mother's birthday. Tormented by a dark secret, he confides in Aunt Agatha (Wilton), only to discover that the family too have its own hidden demons. The Family Reunion is described in press materials as a "poetic and powerful tale of sin and redemption" that "reveals a family haunted by the ghosts of their past."
Wilton's other recent theatre credits include Women Beware Women (RSC), The House of Bernarda Alba (National Theatre) and Afterplay (The Gate, Dublin; Charleston, USA and West End). For television, her work includes "Half Broken Things," "Dr Who," "Bob and Rose," "Victoria and Albert" and "Wives and Daughters"; and for film, "The History Boys," "Match Point," "Pride and Prejudice," "Calendar Girls" and "Iris."

West's other theatre credits include Caryl Churchill's A Number and Much Ado About Nothing(Sheffield Theatres), The Exonerated (Riverside Studios), Doctor Faustus (Minerva Theatre), and Hamlet and Richard II (RSC). His television work includes "The Long Walk to Finchley," "Cambridge Spies," "Longitude," "Edward VII" and "Persuasion"; and for film, "Van Helsing," "Iris," "Pandemonium," "Complicity," "Notting Hill," "Frankie and Johnny," "Howard's End" and "Carrington." He was the artistic director of Sheffield Theatres from 2004 to 2007. His other directing work includes the critically acclaimed revival of Dealer's Choice (Menier Chocolate Factory and Trafalgar Studios) and the forthcoming Waste at the Almeida Theatre.
The T. S. Eliot Festival will also include Katie Mitchell directing Stephen Dillane reading Four Quartets; rehearsed readings of Murder in the Cathedral and The Cocktail Party directed, respectively, by the Donmar's two associate directors, Douglas Hodge and Jamie Lloyd; and two evenings of readings of Eliot's verse produced and directed by Josephine Hart.
For tickets contact the box office at 0870 060 6624 or visit www.donmarwarehouse.com.