Wednesday 12 November 2014

The Coronet Newspaper Archive


We start off with two slightly macabre accounts, I will post some more light-hearted accounts of theatre productions in future, these just happen to be the ones that peaked my interest.  There are various accounts on the internet of The Coronet being haunted by the ghost of a cashier who threw herself off the theatre balcony after caught stealing money...however perhaps Alfred Knight Clarke, the scene shifter is our ghost?

Saturday 12 January 1901
Cheltenham Chronicle

“JACK THE RIPPER” SCARE.

Either a madman or practical “joker” has been at work in the Notting Hill district, Kensington. On Wednesday Miss Winifred Hare, who is playing the part of Dick Whittington in the pantomime at the coronet Theatre Notting Hill received a letter threatening to kill her on Thursday or Friday, and all the leading actresses of London afterwards. The epistle, which was written in schoolboyish hand, was signed “Jack the Ripper,” and was embellished with crude sketches of daggers, skulls, and crossbones. The letter was immediately handed to the police, Miss Hare being not a little upset at the alarming threat. During the performances on Thursday and Friday a large number of detectives and other police officers were on duty in all parts of the theatre, especially in the vicinity of the stge. Nothing occurred, and the police regard the outrage as the work of a practical joke. The Coronet theatre is still, however, being watched, and the police are doing all in their power to trace the writer. 

Saturday 24 January 1903
Derby Daily Telegraph

Fatal Death at a Theatre
                                                                

Mr Walker Schroder held an inquest on Friday at Paddington Coroner’s Court concerning the death of Alfred Knight Clarke, aged 33, a scene shifter, who was employed at the Coronet Theatre Notting-hill-gate and lately resided at 18, Uxbridge Street, Notting-hill-gate. On Saturday last night the deceased was engaged in setting a side wing, a portion of the last scene on the pantomime of “The Forty Thieves,” and was within two or three feet of an opening through which a fountain basin was being raised by lines from the “flies,” when he fell sideways through the hole on to the concrete floor of the cellar beneath – a distance of 12 feet. Walter Turner, electrician at the theatre, who observed the occurrence, said Clarke had performed he same duties for many nights. Witnesses attributed the accident to sudden giddiness on the deceased’s part. Other evidence showed that the deceased was removed to St. Mary’s hospital, Paddington, where he died on Sunday evening from, as an autopsy revealed, the effects of a fractured skull. The jury returned a verdict of “Accidental death.”




Tuesday 21 October 2014

The Hero of The Coronet



We’ve had the likes of Ellen Terry and Basil Rathbone treading our boards, and the likes of John Gielgud and Hugh Grant sitting in our comfy chairs, but little did we know we had another big name associated with the Coronet.


A couple of weeks ago we received fan mail from a six year old addressed to Matt Hatter. We did some research into this Mr Hatter. Matt Hatter is a young superhero who lives in the Coronet and travels to different dimensions by jumping through the film screens. We haven’t seen Matt ourselves, but his presence here would make a lot of things clear - the noises we’ve associated with our ghost, and the biscuits that keep disappearing in the kitchen. We’ve left the letter on Matt Hatter’s desk, and his fans should be getting a response any day now. If anyone wants to see Matt Hatter’s adventures, they are screened on CITV this autumn. We can confirm that our renovations of the cinema do not include inter-dimensional portals.



Friday 22 August 2014

Winter (Season) is Coming

We have announced our new season! The box office phones have barely stopped ringing since we announced our autumn line-up on Tuesday. It’s lovely to hear that people are just as excited for the upcoming shows as we are. If you’ve missed the news, here’s what’s coming up at the brand new Print Room at the Coronet…



First up is an adaptation of Fyodor Dostoyevsky’s Notes From Underground, starring the wonderful Harry Lloyd (who some readers may recognise from his TV roles such as Game of Thrones and, our favourite, Doctor Who). This show was first presented in Paris earlier this year.


Due to high demand, Harry will be performing two shows a night during the week. Since it’s coming direct from Paris, there’ll be certain nights with French surtitles. To start brushing up on your language skills now, here’s a review of the Parisian performance.

Then in November, we have legend of stage and screen, Dame Janet Suzman, co-starring in a beautiful redemptive tale about post-Apartheid South Africa. Solomon and Marion is a production from the Baxter Theatre and has been an international success, so we’re thrilled to give the show its London debut. We’ve just received note that the set has arrived in the UK – all the way from its American run at the Kennedy Center!



To finish off the year in December, we’re doing one of our popular Poetry @ the Print Room evenings – with David Harsent, the poet who launched our very first poetry evening. We also have a festive treat – Clive Francis performs his much-loved version of Charles Dickens’ A Christmas Carol. Because it’s Christmas, we’re doing some special prices for children, so be sure to check those out!


In other news, it’s a Bank Holiday weekend and of course the Notting Hill Carnival is readying itself to storm the streets. Some of you may remember that last year the Print Room screened a special documentary about the history of the procession. We love the spirit of this weekend and we wish everyone a happy Carnival!

Friday 1 August 2014

Two Tickets To Broadway


Yesterday we discovered one of the old Box Offices where you bought tickets to the penny seats in the currently unused balcony of The Coronet.  A thick layer of dust had settled on both the glass window of the box office and the floor around it, and it was there, nestled into bed of jet black powder we found a cinema ticket.  A beautiful olive tickets with red printed ink, a ticket that puts any of the current cinema tickets of today to shame. 



“Two Tickets To Broadway colour by Technicolor” on one side and, “In the same programme The Racket via Robert Mitchum, Lizabeth Scott, Robert Ryan” on the other.
It seems like these two films would have been among the last to be viewed from The Coronet Balcony as it was closed off shortly afterwards.  There are so many beautiful features of this building that have been hidden away from public view, and under sixty years’ worth of dust, that are so exciting to discover and we hope desperately to be able to show to the public once more.

Each day we all fall more in love with this building and we can assure you that it is being treated the upmost compassion.

Two Tickets to Broadway



Director:
 James V. Kern
Writers:
 Sid Silvers, Hal Kanter Sammy Cahn
Stars:
 Tony Martin, Janet Leigh, Gloria DeHaven


The Racket



Director:
 John Cromwell
Writers:
 William Wister Haines (screenplay), W.R. Burnett (screenplay) Bartlett Cormack (play)
Stars:
 Robert Mitchum, Lizabeth Scott, Robert Ryan 

Friday 25 July 2014

We have officially moved in!

It’s a very exciting time for the Print Room team.  While it was a very sad goodbye to the beautiful warehouse of no. 34 Hereford Rd that has been our home for the last 5 years we can’t wait to continue our work in the historic Coronet building and to add a cinema to program.

The move started bright and early on a Tuesday morning. Coffee was brewed and muscles were flexed.  In all honesty we would have been lost without our movers, Clockwork Removals, they were fantastic (at one point one of them suggested I sit down and drink a glass of wine – it was 11am).  Perhaps our biggest challenge in moving was the grand piano. We’ve got it safe and sound – and it’s still perfectly in tune, now we just have to get it on the roof.



The amount of stuff we have accumulated over the past five years is astonishing. Some of the best items we found in the old building were…

-          An Underwood typewriter
-          A complete works of Charles Dickens
-          A Native American headdress

We have brought all these and much more to our new home. Question is now, where will it all go?
The offices are nearly finished with their renovations, and we have begun to nest in the top of the building. We have a beautiful view of Notting Hill, and all the local shops have been very friendly. We’ve eaten in nearly every establishment on Notting Hill Gate – research, of course, for our future audience.

We are also all now experts in Ikea. We’ve all had a go at assembling something, from lamps to shelves to tables.  I am now fluent in diagram instructions.





We’re nearly ready to announce our new season and it’s a very exciting package of shows we have lined up for you. Make sure you’re signed up to our mailing list to get the news as it is released.

Friday 4 July 2014

A Brief History of The Coronet

The Coronet Cinema is a twin screen cinema that has been at the heart of the Notting Hill area for over 100 years. Originally designed as a theatre by W.G.R. Sprague, a designer of many London’s West End theatres, it was built for the then grand sum of £25,000. The building first opened it's doors in 1898 and was regularly frequented by King Edward VII. Many of the biggest stars of the day including Ellen Terry and Sara Bernhardt trod its boards. Films first made an appearance as part of the variety bills at the theatre in 1916. The building became a full time cinema in 1923 and has been in operation as such continuously ever since.
The ghost of a female cashier reputedly haunts the cinema. Legend has it that when she was caught fiddling the box office receipts and confronted by the manager, she dashed out of his office, ran upstairs, then threw herself from the balcony.

In 1923, when the building went over to full time films, it was renamed The Coronet Cinema. A new projection box was installed in the former dress circle bar and the capacity was reduced from 1,143 to 1,010. Sound arrived in 1930 when a ticket would cost you 6d. (about 2p) The cinema was taken over by Gaumont/Provincial Cinematography Theatres in 1931 when the theatre boxes were removed, although the rest of the elaborate auditorium was retained.
The new owners upgraded the sound and doubled the price of a ticket to 1/-. (5p) In 1950 the cinema was renamed The Gaumont and the gallery was closed. By the 1960s the cinema was running second run, off-release, moving over films from other local first run cinemas.
Late in 1972, The Rank Organisation who operated the cinema put in plans to demolish the building. The plan was to build shops and offices on the site, but a huge outcry and a petition, which included the support of film star Deborah Kerr, thwarted this. The local Council stepped in and declared the immediate area a conservation area and the supporters won the fight. Rank relented and refurbished the cinema, but in 1977 sold it to an independent operator Panton Films, who changed the name back to The Coronet.
In recent years the cinema has featured in many films, TV programmes and adverts. Famously, the cinema featured in Notting Hill, starring Julia Roberts and Hugh Grant. The cinema was also the last cinema in London to allow smoking in its auditorium, a practise now discontinued.
When the cinema was put up for sale in 2004, the sale attracted a lot of controversy and media attention. Various schemes were put forward including one from Stelios Haji-Ioannou, the founder of EasyJet, to turn the cinema into London’s first EasyCinema. Hollywood stars Joseph Fiennes, and Gillian Anderson got involved in a petition along with filmmaker Bernardo Bertolucci. Once all the dust died down the cinema was bought by a local church, The Kensington Temple.
The new owners closed the cinema for a week on 12th May 2004, and there were fears that it would be converted into a church. However, a week later The Coronet re-opened. The new owners gave assurances that The Coronet would continue as a cinema, and they were plans for a detailed restoration of this historic building. True to their word, the church has invested, mainly behind the scenes, a large amount of money into the cinema. Screen two has had its sound upgraded and both cinemas have had new screens and projection lenses. The toilets have been completely remodelled, and the foyer has received attention with the addition of a new kiosk and box office.


In 2014 a local theatre called The Print Room took over the building – the staff are all very, very excited...

Friday 27 June 2014

The Announcement

For those who struggle with Mondays, The Print Room foyer was not the place for you, as our team sat glued to laptops passing around press releases and making extensive use of the espresso machine.  Just five minutes after the announcement went live – It's official!  The Print Room will move to The Coronet - on the Evening Standard website our Twitter and Emails were inundated with congratulation messages.  We can’t thank you enough, the support has been overwhelming and we can’t wait to invite you into our new building.

Catch up on what is being said:

Evening Standard            BBC Online            The Stage           Notting Hill Post

Work has begun at The Coronet - and looking around again on Wednesday, I was reminded of just how beautiful the building is.  The possibilities and potential The Coronet offers The Print Room are endless.  I hope you’re as excited as I am. And just look at this view!



Oh, and of course I couldn't help myself from taking centre stage in front of the cinema screen.


We will be blogging each friday to keep people updated with our progress and to get even more information for this incredble move make sure you are as social with us as possible.

Facebook                              Twitter                            Mailing List


Wednesday 28 May 2014

These are a few of our favourite threes...

10. Three Musketeers


9. The Deathly Hallows


8. The Godfather Movies


7. BLT


6. The Little Shop of Horrors Back Up Singers


5. The First Wives Club


4. A Star Is Born.. 


Again.. 


And Again


3. The Bronte Sisters


2. The Sanderson Sisters


1. Triptych






Production Images Triptych






Absent Voices & Impossible Speech in Triptych

by Thom Andrewes
Assistant Director on TRIPTYCH

For more of Thom's writing: thebitingpoint.wordpress.com


After months of preparation, devising and rehearsal, it has been very gratifying to take a step back from the ‘finished product’ of the opera – the composers’ scores, the design, the Company’s treatment – and tease out the various themes and motifs that run through these three pieces, so different in narrative and musical style. Gavin Turk’s set design determines a lot of these motifs, by effectively preventing each piece from sitting comfortably in its own world. Just as Turk’s ‘fake’ art gallery of ‘fake fakes’ ironically reverts, at several points in the piece, to the ‘real’ location of the singers who remain onstage for the entire opera, so representation, mediation, reproduction and recomposition remain central themes, as well as important musical processes, in each piece.
For me, though, the most interesting and important idea that the piece investigates is that of the Voice. The Voice is, of course, the central concern of all opera. However, Triptych can be seen not just to interrogate the place of the Voice in opera, but to make use of the medium to extend this interrogation to the various unique qualities, dimensions and potentialities of the Voice in the world.
In Triptych, voices are both located (in space, in time, in social class, in gender) and dislocated. Each piece makes use of the superimposition of voices that are present and voices that are absent. The presence of absent voices is, in fact, the most striking musical link between the three operas. These voices call up all that is uncanny about recording, the voice as ‘partial object’ in psychoanalytic theory, the voice as artefact, the mediated voice and the reproduced, represented, reframed voice.
‘Reunion’ (Singing in Tongues)
Mediation – technological, social, interpersonal – is conspicuous everywhere, beginning with the multi-layered Nun piece (Christian Mason’s ‘Reunion’) which juxtaposes at least three very different modes of vocalisation. We are presented with an interview – two recorded voices, talking ‘on record’, as it were – and an attempt to articulate, or re-articulate, a past experience or intangible, unbearable truth. To realise something latent, by drawing it into (recorded) speech, and preserve it therein. The key word: ‘confession’, a paradigmatic ‘speech act’ if ever there were one.
Against this, we hear a religious ceremony in which the voices are the actors, effecting a transcendental transformation not only through linguistic content but also through its utterance, and its utterance via prescribed melodic contours. In such ceremonies, vocal (and musical) quality becomes a kind of magic catalyst that transforms mere words into divine actions (words which, if read on a page, would hardly have the same ‘agency’). There are two layers of content here: the language itself appears plain – ‘I vow’, ‘I profess’, ‘I pronounce’ – but beneath it is a more esoteric content which can never be fully understood.
This third layer is comprised of every aspect of the Voice that is not reducible to words. ‘Reunion’ is a repository of unparsable content, not just in the ceremony itself which enacts more than it expresses, but in the rigid constructions of the melismas and, most pointedly, in the vocalisations which form the majority of the amorous nuns’ musical material. Whole passages of text are initially heard spoken and then sung, foregrounding the ‘gap’ between the two. In this way, the piece plays out the (often gendered) politics supposedly present in much opera, wherein the expressive content of the (female) voice exceeds the ‘logocentrism’ of the words that contain it, and that drive the often downright sexist narratives.
‘Reunion’ is, in some ways, about a male imposition into a female-gendered world, although this world is itself determined by a kind of transcendent, absent maleness, in the figure of Christ-as-bridegroom. I’m not sure whether it can convincingly be read as a feminist piece, even though it was informed from early on by various real-world feminist aesthetics, yet it certainly engages with the gendered context of opera (the palpable division of vocal types across the pitch spectrum), as well as the immediate context of the Company, which is primarily female in constitution. The final moments of the piece, when the embittered Man finds himself expelled from the nuns’ world, features an ecstatic ensemble chant, devoid of linguistic content, which nevertheless affirms the inexpressible, inarticulable truth that the young nun has found in her new life (perhaps even a truth that cannot be reduced to a male gender pronoun).
‘A Party’ (Me Sing Pretty One Day)
The Voice takes an even larger presence in the Comedy piece – Thomas Smetryns’s ‘A Party’ – which is effectively about learning to speak. Both this and the final piece could be said to make use of the ‘hauntological’ qualities of the Voice, although these qualities are more expressive of a comedic failure in the second, and a poignant lack in the third piece, than an uncanny present-absence. The piece is replete with references to the failure of vocalisation, of speech and communication. There are effectively zero instances in which two characters speak (or sing) to each other in everyday communicative dialogue. In every case, the speech comes pre-mediated, problematised, its mechanics awkwardly exposed. I see this as a necessary dimension of opera, whose vocalisations are always-already problematised; nobody can ever just ‘speak’ in opera, because they’re always singing as well. It isn’t normal, it screams out its own abnormality. For these reasons, it’s an incredibly productive medium for investigating the real barriers to communication, the real impossibility of dialogue.
In ‘A Party’, speech is reproduced as soon as it is produced. The piece’s sonic score is composed entirely of repurposed recordings, plundered from an actual English language audio course from the ’50s. Through an ingenious performance conceit, speech is determined, mediated, socially instrumentalised in the moment of its utterance. As a kind of ironic riposte to the crisis of expressivity in the previous piece, we are shown how we are socialised through language, and at the same time, the sheer inadequacy of such a social adhesive is made glaringly clear. The piece culminates in an orgy composed entirely of social niceties.
‘The Tall Office Building Artistically Considered’ (Reported Song)
The final piece in Triptych, Chris Mayo’s ‘The Tall Office Building Artistically Considered’, is a mystery, which places absence (the disappeared architectural photographer Richard Nickel) at the centre of its narrative. All the ideas of the recorded voice as artifact, snapshot, trace etc, find their visual analogies in this piece, which is obsessed with piecing together both narrative and identity from remnants, ruins and traces.
As in all the pieces, the presence of an absent voice is balanced by the necessary incompleteness of present voices – the singers who are not fully characters, whose voices are semi-autonomous, who appear as mouthpieces for a patchy narrative which nevertheless instrumentalises their bodies, their human presence, to draw us into an emotional attachment to the absent Nickel. The text style is one of reporting and quotation, even the aria at the end – giving voice to the doubly-absent fiancée Carol Sutter, partially obscured in the hopeless search for Nickel – is a quotation, performed as a quotation of a quotation, however seduced we might be by the material reality of the singer’s presence and the affective power of her voice.

The refusal to naturalise or normalise sung speech within the ‘world’ of the opera is, I believe, an important position for new opera to explore. The music remains a problem, it is conscious of itself; opera cannot pretend it is identical to theatre, nor to a concert performance, nor to mainstream musical theatre. In his director’s note for Triptych, entitled ‘Reverse Engineering Opera’, Patrick Eakin Young calls the piece ‘an attempt on many levels to disassemble, analyze, and reconstruct opera itself’. A re-analysis of the place of the Voice in opera is central to this process.

Friday 16 May 2014

Patrick Eakin Young on Triptych

I have long been interested in reverse engineering as a model for a creative process: to take a work, a text, or an art form, reduce it to its component parts, analyze how it functions, and then attempt to build a new work, text, or art form that accomplishes the same thing, but does not duplicate the original.
Triptych was created through such a process. At its root, it is the deconstruction of a single opera—Giacomo Puccini’s Il Trittico­­—but it is also an attempt on many levels to disassemble, analyze, and reconstruct opera itself.
This piece was created in a very short amount of time, over a series of workshops, through a process that involved experimentation and improvisation, in collaboration with the composers and the librettists. It is a method that is modelled on dance and contemporary theatre companies, and one that has at its centre a willingness to embrace uncertainty.
Broken down to its most basic level, Puccini’s Il Trittico can be described as three short operas: a tragedy, a comedy, and a piece about nuns. Our Triptych is the same. But in the process of devising new works from this foundation, we have travelled through feminist theory and performance art, 19th century American architecture, language lessons from the 1950s, reimagined liturgies, cut-and-paste big band recordings, memory, the internet, and the loneliness of modern life.
In this piece we use found texts, old recordings, historical documents and imagined narratives as our subject matter, libretto, and sometimes score. This questioning of form and confusion of authorship is reflected in the set design by visual artist Gavin Turk. Gavin’s work deals with issues of authenticity and identity, and the “myth” of the artist. He is known for his trompe l’oeil painted bronzes of everyday objects and appropriations of other artists’ motifs. Playing with his own interest in fakes and replicas, he has set this performance within a “fake” Gavin Turk exhibition, filled with replicas of his own work.
Deconstructing, analyzing, copying, reimagining—these are not only methods of plagiarism, but creative tools as well. Opera itself was born out of an attempt by renaissance humanists to replicate Greek tragedy. Their reconstructions created an entirely new art form. If we apply the same process to opera now, who knows what kind of fascinating results will arise? Like a styrofoam cup disguised as a bronze disguised as a styrofoam cup, let’s reconstruct the reconstruction and see what we get.

Friday 9 May 2014

Our Favourite Singing Nuns!


Inspired by the structure of Puccini's Il Trittico, TRIPTYCH is comprised of three genre pieces - a tragedy, a comedy and a piece about nuns -

SO! to celebrate our singing nun we look at some of the best singing nuns who have come before...



Whoopie Goldberg as Sister Mary Clarence

Sister Act (1992)




Debbie Reynolds as Sister Ann
The Singing Nun (1966)




Julie Andrew as Sister Maria
The Sound of Music (1965)




AND! This singing Nun from The Voice in Italy.....


Wednesday 30 April 2014

Comedy, Tragedy, Nuns, Trailers


Comedy
- A Party - 



Tragedy
- The Tall Office Building Artistically Considered -



Nuns
- Reunion - 


Tuesday 22 April 2014

Opera Erratica has Arrived at The Print Room



Click through to find out more about our collaborative partners Opera Erratica opening Triptych 17 May!


"Opera is a place where genres and styles blur. Working with collaborators across media, we create theatrical experiences that are at once familiar and strange, bringing new perspectives on old traditions and challenging audiences to see differently."

Tuesday 1 April 2014

The Dead Dogs Production Images by Nobby Clark


The Dead Dog by Jon Fosse

Ends March 12

Cast: Danny Horn, Valerie Gogan, Jennie Gruner, Sam Redford and William Troughton

Director: Simon Usher

Set Design: Libby Watson










Wednesday 12 March 2014

A Little More With Your Show

Dr Cindy Lawford will be hosting post show talks and Q&A’s with the creative team of The Dead Dogs, dates as follows:

March 25 Post-Show Talk
April 1 Post-Show Talk
April 4 Psychoanalytical Evening with Creative Team
April 8 Q&A with Creative Team

http://www.cindylawford.co.uk/

Monday 10 March 2014

The Dead Dogs Trailer!

The Print Room presents the UK premier of
The Dead Dogs by Jon Fosse
translated from the Norwegian by May-Brit Akerholt

15 March - 12 April 

Friday 21 February 2014

Meet the cast of The Dead Dogs by Jon Fosse



We are very excited to be able to announce the stunning new cast for our production of The Dead Dogs by Jon Fosse!





Danny Horn, Valerie Gogan, Jennie Gruner, Sam Redford, William Troughton

Monday 17 February 2014

The Dramaturg


A note our wonderful IGNIS dramaturg Laura Farnworth.


Last summer, I was extremely lucky to be introduced to Hubert Essakow by Anda Winters. Hubert was looking for a dramaturg for his next dance show and the project intrigued me. Although primarily a theatre director, I previously trained as a ballet dancer, and so I was really excited by the opportunity of re-igniting my love of dance and combining it with my love of narrative and theatre. To learn that Sara Kestelman was also involved was amazing and I was so excited by the challenge of how we could create a fusion between dance and theatre.

In early conversations, it became clear to Hubert and I that we were particularly inspired by the idea of exploring fire as a metaphor for our emotions. We talked a lot about what fire meant to us in human terms and how it made us think of our ambitions, passions and loves. And so we became interested in the story of an older woman who is looking back on her life, meeting and coming to terms with her memories, regrets and lost loves. It seemed to make sense that the dancers would be these memories, dancing around and interacting with her through a series of vignette encounters.

During the research and development I learnt that Sara was also an excellent poet. Sara’s poems really spoke to Hubert and I - we felt they captured the tone and emotion we wanted to establish in the piece. Sara was extremely open to including her poems in IGNIS and she generously worked with me, listening to my ideas and making several adaptations - in fact a new poem, which Sara called IGNIS, was born out of the process by merging together several of her original poems. 

Working in dance is obviously very different to the world of theatre. In dance you can afford to be abstract, but in theatre, because it generally involves speaking, or at least characters, you are immediately in some kind of human story. What has been excellent for me about this process is learning how to approach story in a whole new way. Hubert and I knew the framework of the story we wanted to base the show around – but for me, it was more a case of finding the opportunities to tell this story in the choreography that Hubert was making, rather than imposing it on the performers. The result I hope is a journey that is accessible to many, but that remains open to individual interpretation and experience. 


Wednesday 5 February 2014

IGNIS Talks with Dr Cindy Lawford

Tuesday 18 February, The Print Room will host a very special Q&A session with choreographer Hubert Essakow, designer Lee Newby, composer Jon Opstad, dramaturg Laura Farnworth and actor Sara Kestelman.  Dr. Cindy Lawford will lead the discussion, looking into IGNIS’s unique creation over several months.  The artists will explain how the dance piece gained narrative shape, what the particular inspirations for the music were, set design and choreography, and what it has been like to dance – quite literally – with fire.
Tuesday 25 February, Dr. Cindy Lawford will give a post-show talk, detailing the story of IGNIS’s complex birth and how Sara Kestelman’s poetry found its way into the piece.
Dr Cindy Lawford’s talks have become a vital thread in the fabric of The Print Room, offering audiences the chance to gain extra insight into the creative process of our performances.  They also provide a forum for audiences to ask questions and discuss their own thoughts and feeling.
For more information on our Outreach Manager, Dr Cindy Laword you can check out her WEBSITE.

And to book tickets for either of the talks please call The Print Room box office on 020 7221 6036.


N.B. The Performance time for IGNIS is roughly 1 hour and the talks will take place after the show and will last 20 minutes.