Jermyn Street Theatre Presents THE RIVER LINE October 4-29

By: Aug. 22, 2011
Enter Your Email to Unlock This Article

Plus, get the best of BroadwayWorld delivered to your inbox, and unlimited access to our editorial content across the globe.




Existing user? Just click login.

Following the critical successes of Terence Raittigan's Less Than Kind, Henrik Ibsen's Little Eyolf and Tennessee Williams' The Two-Character Play, this Autumn Jermyn Street Theatre continues its policy of presenting revivals of little performed European and American classics with a rare staging of Charles Morgan's The River Line.

Originally written by Morgan as a novel in 1949 The River Line was adapted by him for the Edinburgh Festival of 1952 with a cast that included Paul Scofield and Virginia McKenna. At the time Morgan was considered one of the greatest dramatists of his era, before the angry young men of the late fifties revolutionised British theatre. With Harold Hobson of The Sunday Times describing him as "one of the most important writers of our generation" and the play as "the most exciting, the most sensitive, the most intellectually and emotionally alive play that the Edinburgh Festival has yet given us" and John Barber of the Daily Express writing of it "So dignified, it hurts. So humourless, it chills. So thought-choked, you can't follow it. But important - oh, most desperately that." The River Line divided opinion straight down the middle.

Drawing upon his own wartime experience Morgan tells the story of a group of downed, allied pilots in occupied France in 1943 hiding from the Nazis in the granary of a farmhouse owned by a member of the resistance. Tensions rise as they await news of the last leg of their journey through occupied Europe to the Pyrenees along the escape route known as 'The River Line'. As midnight approaches, one brutal action of terrible suddenness is to haunt their lives forever. It is the story of normal men and women are caught in the turmoil of war and how ordinary people are forced to face up to extraordinary circumstances.

Anthony Biggs is Associate Director of Jermyn Street Theatre, where he has directed Ibsen's Little Eyolf with Imogen Stubbs, Stewart Permutt's Many Roads To Paradise and the musical All I Want For Christmas. He has also developed and produced the premiere of Words Of Honour:The Mafia Exposed for the Assembly Rooms Edinburgh and Jermyn Street Theatre. Other directing credits include Fraser Grace's Gorgons and Beth Steele's Temptations for Decade, Sam Shepard's Savage/Love, Amir The Lost Prince of Persia and The Working Girl (all Theatre503), This Story of Yours (Old Red Lion), Carolyn Pertwee and Ros Adler's Between Friends (OSO Barnes) Brecht's The Wedding (Edinburgh Festival and tour), Hounslow West and Piccadilly Circus (Urban Scrawl), and Francis Turnly's Hiding with Claire Goose, Tanya Franks and Michael Smiley (Watford Palace).

Jermyn Street Theatre's recent critically acclaimed production Tennessee Williams' The Two-Character Play, directed by Gene David Kirk is to transfer to Provincetown, USA this September for the writer's 100th Birthday celebrations. Following that the production transfers for a twelve week run Off Broadway in the late Autumn of 2011.

LISTINGS
Jermyn Street Theatre
16b Jermyn Street
Piccadilly Circus tube

Oct 4th to 29th 2011

Mon- Sat 7:30pm
Sat matinees 3.30pm

Tickets £16.00 Concessions £14.00
Previews: Oct 4th & 5th
All tickets £13.00
Early Bird Offer £12 if booked before 12th September

Special rates for school bookings. Please call the theatre for more information

Box office 0207 287 2875
www.jermynstreettheatre.co.uk <http://www.jermynstreettheatre.co.uk>



Comments

To post a comment, you must register and login.

Vote Sponsor


Videos