Punk Rock (play)
Punk Rock | |
---|---|
Written by | Simon Stephens |
Characters |
William Carlisle Lily Cahill Bennett Francis Cissy Franks Nicholas Chatman Tanya Gleason Chadwick Meade Lucy Francis Dr Richard Harvey |
Date premiered |
2009 Royal Exchange Theatre |
Original language | English |
Punk Rock is a play by the British playwright Simon Stephens which premiered at the Royal Exchange in 2009[1] and transferred to the Lyric Hammersmith directed by Sarah Frankcom. The play concerns a group of private school sixth formers during their A Level mocks exams.[2]
Plot
In the library of a grammar school, eight sixth-formers are preparing for their mock-A Levels and nearing the end of their school lives. There are various sub-plots detailing the various love lines or triangles that emerge through the play.
Characters
Character | Original Cast, 2009 | Revival Cast, 2010 | Wales Cast, 2012 | New Zealand Cast, 2012 | Australian Cast, 2012 | Australian Cast, 2014 | Spanish Cast, 2014 | New York Cast, 2014 | New Zealand Cast, 2015 | Edinburgh Cast, 2015 |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
William Carlisle | Tom Sturridge | Rupert Simonian | Samuel Harris | Nathan Mudge | Sam O'Sullivan | Andrew Creer | Víctor de la Fuente | Douglas Smith | Jared Kirkwood | Oliver Matjasz |
Bennett Francis | Henry Lloyd-Hughes | Edward Franklin | Christopher Harris | Jordan Mooney | Graeme McRae | Bevan Pfeiffer | Samy Khalil | Will Pullen | Taylor Barrett | Stefan Collins |
Chadwick Meade | Harry McEntire | Mike Nobel | John Clark | Ryan Dulieu | Gabriel Dean Fancourt | Dacre Montgomery-Harvey | Álvaro Quintana | Noah Robbins | Hamish Annan | Lewis Norton |
Lily Cahill | Jessica Raine | Laura Pyper | Leah Carroll | Sarah Graham | Darcie Irwin-Simpson | Jessica Paterson | María Romero | Colbie Minifie | Ripeka Templeton | Jane Hogan |
Cissy Franks | Sophie Wu | Ruth Milne | Jeni Lloyd | Morgan Albrecht | Madeleine Jones | Stephanie Panozzo | Carolina Yuste | Lily Englert | Ailis Oliver-Kerby | Debbie Ashley |
Nicholas Chatman | Nicholas Banks | Nicholas Banks | Alex Enmarch | George Mason | Owen Little | Luke Fewster | Alejandro Chaparro | Pico Alexander | Andrew Coshan | Elliot Gardner |
Tanya Gleason | Katie West | Katie West | Becky Ormrod | Elizabeth McMenamin | Rebecca Martin | Harriet Gordon-Anderson | Helena Mocejón | Annie Funke | Lana Walters | Josie Webster |
Lucy Francis | Emma Warbuton | Juliet York | Emily Dyble | Rosie Hayden / Caitlin Roscherr / Jaimee McCann | Clementine Mills | Elle Harris | - | Sophie Shapiro | Sinead Fitzgerald | Claire Elkins |
Dr Richard Harvey | Simon Wolfe | Simon Wolfe | Liz Tustin (Dr Rachel Harvey) | Devlin Bishop | Paul Hooper | David J Rose | Ariadna Gil, Chani Martín, Eugenio Villota | David Greenspan | Ross Johnston | Chris Green |
Other productions
- Haptic Theatre Company performed the play in Dylan Thomas' Boathouse on the 5th and 6 April 2013, directed by Elinor Richards. Bennet Francis was played by Oliver Selby and Chadwick Meade by Ollie Goulstone.[3]
- The Australian premiere was on 27 July 2012 performed by pantsguys Productions in association with the Australian Theatre for Young People[4]
- From 3 to 18 August 2012 the play was performed at the Edinburgh Fringe by the No Prophet Theatre Company, starring Will Merrick as William Carlisle.
- A production of the play was done at the Oxford Playhouse.[5]
- The New Zealand premiere was performed by The Outfit Theatre Company at The Basement Theatre in Auckland from 27 March to 7 April.[6]
- From 14 to 16 March March 2012, a production of the play was performed at the Doncaster Little Theatre in Doncaster.[7]
- The Welsh premiere of the play was performed at the Arad Goch theatre in Aberystwyth on 18 and 19 May 2012, directed by Rhodri Brady.[8]
- Manchester School of Theatre produced the play in April 2012, directed by Chris Honer, starring Lucas Smith as William Carlisle.
- School theater DISK of Academy of Performing Arts in Prague produced the play from 3 April 2012, directed by Ivo Kristián Kubák.[9]
- The New Wolsey Young Company performed the play from 3 to 7 December 2013. Tom Chamberlain played Tom Carlisle and Gemma Raw played Lilly Cahill.
- The Western Australian Academy of Performing Arts produced this play in 2014 directed by Will O'Mahony
- The play made its New York premiere on October 29, 2014 in an MCC Theater production at the Lucille Lortel Theatre. The production, directed by Trip Cullman, was selected as a New York Times Critic's Pick,[10] and earned Lucille Lortel Award nominations for Will Pullen (Outstanding Featured Actor in a Play, for his turn as Bennett Francis) and Japhy Weideman (Outstanding Lighting Design).[11]
- La Joven Compañía from Madrid produced the first Spanish production of Punk Rock directed by José Luis Arellano and adapted by José Luis Collado, opening on 11 November 2014 at Centro Cultural Conde Duque. This production was listed as candidate for Premios MAX 2015 as Best Outstanding Production.
- The Nottingham New Theatre produced a production in their 2014 Autumn Season, directed by Bridie Rollins and Lara Tysseling.
- The play made its Edinburgh Fringe return on August 24, 2015 by Theatre Company 'The Pigeon Collective'. The production received a five star review from 'Broadway Baby' and made it into the Top Rated Shows of 2015 at Edinburgh Fringe http://www.broadwaybaby.com/shows/punk-rock-by-simon-stephens/708183 [12]
- The Fortune Theatre (Dunedin, New Zealand) produced this play, opening June 27th 2015, directed by Lara Macgregor.[13]
Reception
The premiere received generally positive reviews with Variety saying "confirms Simon Stephens as one of the most important and exciting British playwrights working today". The play has also been nominated for the 2010 TMA Best New Play award. It was also well received by The Guardian,[14] the Crikey blog,[15] The Times[16] and others.
Some critics have criticised Stephens for unoriginality, however. For example, Leo Benedictus, writing for the guardian in 2009, said "The critics spot various possible influences such as The History Boys, Another Country, Lord of the Flies, Elephant, If…, Skins, and The Catcher in the Rye."[14]
Legacy
Identity Crisis
Punk Rock inspired Identity Crisis, a drama and philosophy project, exploring the play's themes with young people in London and Manchester.[17]
Teaching
Punk Rock is frequently used in Drama education in sixth form in England, as well as a few other places around the world. There have been multiple student productions of the play, some of which the play's author, Simon Stephens, has attended.
References
- ↑ "'Punk Rock' at The Royal Exchange, Manchester". Retrieved 28 January 2013.
- ↑ http://www.royalexchangetheatre.org.uk/event.aspx?id=180
- ↑ https://www.facebook.com/HapticTheatreCompany?fref=ts
- ↑ http://www.atyp.com.au/under-the-wharf/productions/punk-rock
- ↑ http://www.oxfordplayhouse.com/archive/show.aspx?eventid=1614
- ↑ http://outfittheatre.co.nz/the_outfit_theatre_co/Punk_Rock_Auckland_Theatre_2012.html
- ↑ http://www.doncasterlittletheatre.co.uk/index.php/whats-on/theatre/250-punk-rock
- ↑ http://www.thenomadicplayers.co.uk/?page_id=6
- ↑ http://divadlodisk.cz/repertoar-detail.php?id=516
- ↑ http://www.nytimes.com/2014/11/18/theater/punk-rock-by-simon-stephens-at-the-lucille-lortel.html
- ↑ http://www.lortelaward.com/2015nominees.htm
- ↑ http://www.broadwaybaby.com/shows/punk-rock-by-simon-stephens/708183
- ↑ "PUNK ROCK - A chance to understand them: so beautiful, so evil, so vulnerable". www.theatreview.org.nz. Retrieved 2016-03-23.
- 1 2 Leo, Benedictus (10 September 2009). "What to say about... Punk Rock by Simon Stephens". The Guardian (London: The Guardian). Retrieved 3 November 2012.
- ↑ Bradford Syke, Luke. "REVIEW: Punk Rock". Crikey. Retrieved 3 November 2012.
- ↑ "The Times".
- ↑ "Identity Crisis". Retrieved 28 January 2013.