Photo Flash: First Look At THE NOISES In Rehearsal

By: Mar. 26, 2019
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Told entirely from the perspective of a dog, The Noises is a visceral new play about fear, courage, the nature of violence and what we're prepared to do for the ones we love. This new show, longlisted for the 2017 Bruntwood Prize for Playwrighting, will receive its world premiere at The Old Red Lion this April, starring Amy McAllister (Call the Midwife, Scorch). The Noises is a mother and daughter collaboration between TS Eliot Award shortlisted poet and playwright Jacqueline Saphra and director-dramaturg Tamar Saphra, and is a poetic and sensory piece with sound design from Tom Parkinson (I'm A Phoenix, Bitch; Super Duper Close Up). The sound is another character in the play, and the audience hear the world as Luna hears it.

Luna is a dog. A good dog. Nemesis of the big-dick-labradoodle, expert rabbit hunter and merciless protector of the human pack. It's a warm April night and The Noises are everywhere. Luna's only friend, Ellie, has gone out, but Ma has locked Luna in, and she's getting restless. The night is stretching out and changing shape, strange smells are drifting through the closed door. Beyond the door, The Noises are getting faster and louder and Ellie hasn't come home. What does it mean to be brave? What does it mean to be good? Confined here together in the dark, what else do we have but each other?

Jacqueline Saphra is an award-winning poet, playwright, performer, teacher and editor. The Noises marks her return to playwriting, where her writing career began with commissions from The Soho Poly and The Watford Palace Theatre and Theatre Centre among others. Her illustrated sequence of prose poems If I Lay on my Back I saw Nothing but Naked Women (Emma Press 2014) won Best Collaborative Work at the Saboteur Awards and her second full collection, All My Mad Mothers (Nine Arches Press) was shortlisted for the T.S. Eliot Prize 2017.

"Long, long ago at a time when I didn't like dogs, my four kids convinced me we should get one. We ended up with a traumatised rescue mutt I thought I would never be able to love. How wrong I was. As she and I got acquainted, I began to wonder what terrors the world holds for an animal like her - and how she might respond in a situation of extreme human crisis. I wanted to examine the life of a family and the world outside from her point of view and see whether it might provide a mirror to our very human madness", Jacqueline says "Tamar often jokes that we have been long-term collaborators since she was in utero. Working on The Noises together seemed an obvious choice for us - we have a very natural, shared language which makes the creative process smooth and productive, and we're not afraid to challenge each other."

Every performance has fully integrated audio description for blind and visually impaired audiences. www.oldredliontheatre.co.uk/the-noises

Photo Credit: Ali Wright

Photo Flash: First Look At THE NOISES In Rehearsal
Team of THE NOISES

Photo Flash: First Look At THE NOISES In Rehearsal
Amy McAllister

Photo Flash: First Look At THE NOISES In Rehearsal
Amy McAllister

Photo Flash: First Look At THE NOISES In Rehearsal
Amy McAllister

Photo Flash: First Look At THE NOISES In Rehearsal
Amy McAllister

Photo Flash: First Look At THE NOISES In Rehearsal
Amy McAllister and Tamar Saphra



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