Tuesday, October 1, 2013

Curtains Down - For Now!

A huge thank you to the cast and crew for bringing my play to life so powerfully.
To Stephen Bradley and Kate McSwiney O'Rourke, the actors; to Jonathon Burgess of Blue Eagle Productions who produced; to Caroline Byrne, Director, to Fiona Ryan, Designer, to Ilo Tarrant, Lighting Designer,to the composer Alan Wright and his musicians - Ben McGonigle on keyboard, Janice Channing on flute and Cliodhna McAteer on cello; to Stage Manager, Darrell Bracegirdle, and Production Manager Arthur Oliver-Brown.

Also to Laura Willis of Thursday's Child who handled marketing, Ben Willis of Hijump who designed the poster, the Waterside Theatre, Derry and EVERYONE who came along to see George emerge from the shadows!

Some snippets from the reviews:

...Starring Derry-born Farquhar fanatic, Stephen Bradley, the actor immerses himself in the role of Farquhar, conveying each and every emotion of frustration, isolation and destitution to comic effect, due in no small part to the witty dialogue.

Dublin playwright Lindsay Sedgwick portrays each scene to perfection, leaving the audience with a poignant understanding of the agonies which tormented Farquhar in his last days..."

- Fionnuala O'Kane, Belfast telegraph

http://www.belfasttelegraph.co.uk/entertainment/theatre-arts/review-legacy-of-legendary-playwright-george-farquhar-writ-large-29613922.html

"A comic, enlightening and hugely satisfying exploration of a famous Derry-Londonderry playwright..."

- Si’s Sights and Sounds

http://sis-sightsandsounds.blogspot.co.uk/2013/09/theatre-review-by-mr-farquhar.html

-

Tuesday, September 24, 2013

Opening Night -- only 5 years after Mr Farquhar started talking to me

Tonight is the opening night in Derry for my play, By Mr Farquhar... Five years after his voice started talking to me in a most compelling and exciting fashion!

Can't be there myself for opening night which is a bit like sending your child to school for the first time and they carry on in, chatting to a friend, without looking back. All grown up!

In case anyone reading this may be looking for an excuse to visit the magnificent walled city, bookings for the show are through the City of Culture box office which is run by The Forum. The number is 028 7126 4455 or www.millenniumforum.co.uk

For those of you who are coming along, THANK YOU! For those of you who would love to come along and can't, THANK YOU TOO! And for all of you, so many of you, who have encouraged and supported me through the ups and downs of getting this play performed, A HUGE BIG THANK OF A HUG.

Wednesday, September 4, 2013

My play, BY MR FARQUHAR, is now deep into rehearsal and it has a poster ---

Design is by Ben Willis of Hijump.

The play is on in The Foyle Theatre from Weds 25 September – Monday 1 Oct, 2013 at 8pm. It is presented by Blue Eagle Productions, directed by Caroline Byrne and stars Stephen Bradley and Kate O'Rourke.

I'm heading up on the bus on the Wednesday if anyone wants to join me. I know it's a furious long way from Dublin/ Galway, Cork but it would be fantastic is any of you were able to come along. I'll definitely buy you a drink fterwards!!

All tickets are £10.50 and £8.50 (conc) and can be booked through http://www.millenniumforum.co.uk/content/mr-farquhar-foyle-theatre or by calling +44 28 7126 4455.

THE CREATIVE TEAM

Producer - Jonathon Burgess of Blue Eagle Productions

Caroline Byrne - Director

Stephen Bradley - George Farquhar

Kate O'Rourke - Mistress Kempe

Darrell Bracegirdle - yes, isn't it a magnificent name!? - is Stage Manager

Ilo Tarrant - Lighting Designer

Fiona Ryan - Set and Costume designer

Alan Wright is the Musical Director

Thursday’s Child, the brainchild of Laura Willis, is handling marketing. She has dived enthusiastically into the project, has read the scripts and is just now releasing the marketing material.

esign is by Ben Willis of Hijump.

I'm hoping to post up more about the members of the creative team in the next few days; it's an amazing team that has gathered around this production. Can't wait for opening night!

BY MR FARQUHAR is part of the Blue Eagle George Farquhar Theatre Festival – Celebrating the life and work of the city’s oldest and foremost playwright. (www.blueeagleproductions.co.uk)

Monday, August 26, 2013

"Still, until the day I nearly killed a man... I might have been an actor now."

George Farquhar, welcome back to the stage... In just five weeks time, he will tread the boards in the place of his birth, Derry and the cogs are turning to make BY MR FARQUHAR a fantastic show. There are so many great people involved at every level of design, marketing, music as well as cast and crew...

Earlier this month, the cast, director and I met for a read through of the play in the Irish Centre in Camden -- I thought to fortify myself with a snack in a tapas cafe nearby but this is how I was served the chorizo.

Turned out I was too nervous/ excited to eat or maybe it was the idea of serving pig in a pig that put me off...

Anyway, the reading was great fun, discussions intense but productive and the chorizo was finally eaten by my daughter for breakfast next day - yeah, she has really odd breakfasts!

Last Friday, I delivered the final script. As George says in my play - "The play is done - I pray it is good."

In the photo, from left: Kate O'Rourke, who plays Mistress Kempe, Stephen Bradley, who plays George Farquhar, and director Caroline Byrne.

And that's me done, this time. Rehearsals start in Derry on the 2nd of September and the play opens in the Foyle Theatre on September 25th.

Can't wait!

Wednesday, July 24, 2013

We have our director!

Caroline Byrne has agreed to direct my play, 'BY MR FARQUHAR'. We sit down to go through the script tomorrow - exactly nine weeks before the opening night.

Excited to see it getting off the ground at last - I wrote the first draft in 2008 for the actor Stephen Bradley and directed him in a rehearsed reading in June 2010 at Smock Alley, courtesy of Patrick Sutton. But now it's happening!

The play opens in Derry on September 26th and run till - and including - October 2nd. Venue to be confirmed.

Caroline's directing credits include Text Messages (Project Theatre) Shakespeare in a Suitcase (co-directed with Tim Crouch for RSC) The Recovery Position (Lion and Unicorn), Twizzler Soaked Ecstasy, (devised, Bernhard Theatre Studio) The Children (Embassy Theatre), Lab Run and Attempts on her Life (Durham Theatre, Berkeley, USA). She is an education associate at RSC, where she has been an assistant director on an international tour of King Lear and she will assist Jonathan Munby on Wendy and Peter Pan this winter. She is a Creative Associate at The Gate Theatre, Notting Hill, London where she was assistant director on Purple Heart and associate director on Grounded (Traverse Theatre).

"I am delighted to be involved in bringing Lindsay's play to life and George Farquhar to Derry during the City of Culture. Farquhar contributed an incredible legacy to theatre and his plays continue to challenge actors and entertain audiences today. 'By Mr. Farquhar' gives life to the writer and offers an imagined glimpse into his creative process."

I very much look forward to work with her and making this play the very best it can possibly be -- and then I hope that many of you can make it up to Derry to see it!

I very much look forward to work with her and making this play the very best it can possibly be -- and then I hope that some of you can make it up to Derry to see it!

Monday, February 4, 2013

Lindsay Jane Sedgwick; writer, script ed, tutor: George Farquhar is In The Building...

The first meeting in Smock:

June 28th, 2010

Lindsay Jane Sedgwick; writer, script ed, tutor: George Farquhar is In The Building...: "... Up, all of you. I want to see the whites of your eyes and sense the swell and heave of your bosums as the play dances around you. Smell...

Thursday, November 10, 2011

RESURRECTING Farquhar, one of Ireland's greatest playwrights

An interview I did for the UPSTART blog/ website.

Playwright Lindsay Sedgwick writes about her relationship with George Farquhar (1677-1707).

The piece I submitted to UpStart was from the prologue with which my latest play opens. The voice comes out of the darkness and walks around three sides of the audience as the actor descends to the stage. We are in the 18th century. The speaker is George Farquhar, one of the most loved and most produced Restoration playwrights. Born in Derry, forgotten in Ireland. The prologue is intended to bring the audience into the world of the play, to put them IN the play.

Up! All of you. I want to see the whites of your eyes and sense the swell and heave of your bosums as the play dances around you.

Smell the underarm sweat. Inhale the odour of horse-shit walked in through the muddy cobbles, mixed with the lethargy of bare arms, the whore-making scent of excitement and desire. You. Are. In. The. Play.

You are the ones with the tomatoes and ale in equal measure in soft-paw and belly, aye with fists to fight and fingers to fondle.

The play is this.

It is all around you – listen to the burps and hiccups and slaps and the swearing and the standing on toes and the rip of lace caught between bench and foot.

You have paid good money to be here. To be part of it, of the smell and tumble, the rawness and nerves and gawking that is our theatre. Let your armpits sweat and your manhood rise – this is all, all part of it.

Pull a wench onto your knee. Steal an orange or drown a gallon of bitter ale so that the words shamble and swell around your head like nectar diving in a hive.

A clash of drums, the reek of thunder in the air, the ankles exposed, the shapely thighs and you haven’t even made it close to the stage yet.
But remember the writer.

Look for the writer when you fall out on the street, all puffed up from the energy of the night –– and trip over the heels of the writers in the gutter pulling poems from their begging bowls full of unsold lines.For it is a poor pastime being a writer… and a GLORIOUS one.


*-*-*-
I was approached two years ago by an actor, Stephen Bradley, to write a play about George. I’d never heard of the actor, there was only a vague notion that a producer would be interested… I was sceptical. These approaches happen.

In one week alone I’d been asked to write a surfing movie, a series about Scandinavian trolls and an animated Wizard series based on the math’s curriculum for 8 year-olds in Texas. I have shelves of material developed on spec for which funding fell through. But Stephen was so enthusiastic that I agreed to look at the material and yes, it was interesting, but I decided to be sensible for once and say no.

George had other ideas. He began talking to me. Page after page of the most wonderful visual language… it was utterly addictive. Before I knew it I had nearly an hour’s worth of material… When the producer up North saw and loved it, I was told to keep it hidden. There was no funding up North for plays already written.

But the funding didn’t come.

I contacted Smock Alley, which was only just being opened for shows – George had acted there in the 1660s; he had accidentally stabbed a fellow actor on stage, which forced him into writing; he was one of their most famous alumni and they were as excited as me. We did a rehearsed reading last June to fantastic

response. Patrick Sutton, Director of Smock said it made the hairs stand up on the back of his neck; Alan Stanford came on board as director…. Funding is still an issue but all being well, we hope to put it on in September, for the official re-launch of Smock Alley.

Lindsay blogs here, for those on you interested in finding out more about George (and those Scandinavian trolls, which we hope aren’t related to the Internet variety.)

From: Drama of the Day: Lindsay Sedgwick, from A Fresh Gale and Cold Chicken
BY KITWORDS ON APRIL 7, 2011 (http://upstart.ie/blog/?p=860)