Page 1 of 2 12 LastLast
Results 1 to 10 of 14

Thread: Drama 2011/2012

  1. #1
    Join Date
    Feb 2007
    Location
    Bristol, UK
    Posts
    8,625

    Default Drama 2011/2012

    I seem to have uncovered a list of forthcoming drama productions. No dates, just some titles:

    2011 A Midsummer Night’s Dream Shakespeare New Production of Stage Play
    2011 Glass Chair Chair Glass Annie Caulfield New Writing
    2011 St Joan Bernard Shaw New Production of Stage Play
    2011 Cock Mike Bartlett Stage Transfer
    2011 Brand Henrik Ibsen New Production of Stage Play
    2011 Louis Robert Forrest New Writing
    2011 Mincemeat Adrian Jackson Stage Transfer
    2011 Antigone Anouilh/Neil LaBute New Production of Stage Play
    2011 The Piano Lesson August Wilson New Production of Stage Play
    2011 Skyvers Barry Reckord New Production of Stage Play
    2011 The Recruiting Officer Farquhar New Production of Stage Play
    2012 Salford Play Anjum Malik New Writing
    2012 Things Might Change or Cease Linda Marshall Griffiths New Writing
    2012 My Generation Alice Nutter New Writing
    2012 Sunset Doug Doug Lucie New Writing
    2012 A Man's World Adrian Mead New Writing
    2012 Sea Change John Fletcher New Writing
    2012 Chowringhee Mukherjee Adaptation
    2012 Marathon Tales Colin Teevan New Writing
    2012 The Tempest Shakespeare New Production of Stage Play
    2012 The Product Mike Walker New Writing
    2012 The Go-Between L P Hartley/Frances Byrnes Adaptation
    2012 Ghosts Henrik Ibsen New Production of Stage Play
    2012 Tennyson and Edison David Pownall New Writing
    2012 Updike's Mother Margaret Heffernan New Writing
    2012 Henceforward Alan Ayckbourn New Production of Stage Play
    2012 The Visit Friedrich Dürrenmatt New Production of Stage Play
    2012 Singles and Doublets Martyn Wade New Writing
    2012 Sisters: Lucrezia, Mantegna and I Michelene Wandor New Writing

    Two Shakespeares, two Ibsens, Dürrenmatt, August Wilson again (I enjoyed Fences last year) ...

  2. #2
    Join Date
    Nov 2010
    Posts
    69

    Default

    ... August Wilson again (I enjoyed Fences last year) ...
    August Wilson's Piano Lesson was one of the most exciting plays I ever saw at the Tricycle Theatre in London some years ago.
    Partly due to a small cast that was electric - hope a radio production's as good.

    Looking through those titles is enticing, but will we be getting a play a week, I wonder?

  3. #3
    Join Date
    Feb 2007
    Location
    Bristol, UK
    Posts
    8,625

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by 2LO View Post
    Looking through those titles is enticing, but will we be getting a play a week, I wonder?
    The previous one on the list was My Heart's A Suitcase - which has already been broadcast, so MND may be next up quite soon. It looks like one a week for the rest of the year, with probably some repeats which aren't listed.

    2012 looks very short with only 18 titles, but the list may be incomplete, to be added to later.

    The Trust's review said that R3 drama was much appreciated by those who listened but lacked 'impact'. This seems to be not so much a reflection on the productions as the 'marketing' of them. Reassuringly, the conclusion was that high-class drama does have a place on R3. The latest issue of the service licence says R3 should: 'Broadcast at least 35 new drama productions each year', though these will include 'The Wire'.

  4. #4
    Join Date
    Dec 2010
    Location
    Liverpool
    Posts
    702

    Default

    MND is to be broadcast on Sunday next but if you're expecting Shakespeare, check the schedules.

    The list is interesting indeed and seems to suggest that things are looking up but I am little worried that a number of plays are "New productions of stage plays". Quite what does this mean ? The stage play with stage actors? I wonder what Shaw would have said about that.

    I know what he would have said about the ST JOAN if it varies in any way from the entire original script.

    Nevertheless, winter is already looking a bit brighter than I had expected.

    Now .... when is the Afternoon Play play slot to be filled by playwrights?

    Don

  5. #5
    Join Date
    Feb 2007
    Location
    Bristol, UK
    Posts
    8,625

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by Angle View Post
    The list is interesting indeed and seems to suggest that things are looking up but I am little worried that a number of plays are "New productions of stage plays". Quite what does this mean ? The stage play with stage actors? I wonder what Shaw would have said about that.
    I assumed that it was a new radio adaptation of an existing play (classic or modern) rather than a written-for-radio play.

    And Stage Transfer would be a work currently being performed in a theatre somewhere (or very recently produced with the same director and actors).

  6. #6
    Lateralthinking1 Guest

    Default

    Thank you for this list frenchfrank. It is very helpful to have them all. There will be the dreaded trailers. I have already heard the one for MND.

    A couple of these take me back to the days of English Lit Os and As - the LP Hartley, Shakespeare's Tempest. Ayckbourn is welcome - N Yorkshire associations there - Stephen Joseph Theatre.

    A couple of curious inclusions. First, Alice Nutter from the folk anarchist group Chumbawamba is becoming an effective writer of drama. Her "Snow in July" on Radio 4 in 2008 was very good. And then "Salford Play" - I wonder why that has been included at this time!!!!!

    I have to admit that I am more inclined to listen to the plays on Radio 4. I am not sure why but I intend to listen more to those on 3 this season. Does anyone have a view on how, when taken as a whole, the Radio 3 drama differs from that on Radio 4? Is there any special remit? Anything to make 3 distinctive?

  7. #7
    Join Date
    Dec 2010
    Location
    Liverpool
    Posts
    702

    Default

    I was misled by the Radio 3 listings website about the nature of the MND production, I hope. More detail revealed by the link on that page makes me think I should now be looking forward to Sunday evening.

  8. #8
    Join Date
    Feb 2007
    Location
    Bristol, UK
    Posts
    8,625

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by Lateralthinking1 View Post
    I have to admit that I am more inclined to listen to the plays on Radio 4. I am not sure why but I intend to listen more to those on 3 this season. Does anyone have a view on how, when taken as a whole, the Radio 3 drama differs from that on Radio 4? Is there any special remit? Anything to make 3 distinctive?
    We've often discussed this, sometimes saying that a Do3 play was 'more R4 than R3'. Certainly, all R3 plays are full-form, the normal slot being 90 minutes but it could be up to 3 hours if needed; just occasionally it might be a bit shorter. R3 will do a classic play in one go - it doesn't serialise. There are probably more 'stage plays', and certainly more classics, than on R4 which has more emphasis on new work. There will be more obscure works (the Maeterlinck symbolist trilogy or Golden Age Spanish plays; to say nothing of Shakespeare). It will do stage transfers e.g. National Theatre productions. The new work can be 'experimental' in form. R3 plays have very bad, erm, I mean 'strong', language without turning a hair.

    I don't exactly know what R4 plays are like because I never listen, but I think they are mostly new writing for particular slots, therefore written to be 45 mins/1 hour, or whatever. I get the feeling that they are aimed at R4's wider audience though possibly there is as much 'gritty realism' in the new writing on R4 as on R3 (I tend to find these rather boring). I have heard R4 drama enthusiasts say R3's plays are scandalously boring.

  9. #9
    Join Date
    Nov 2010
    Location
    On a Cyber Hill Gazing at You....
    Posts
    2,066

    Default

    I do not understand why with all the chanels both Radio and TV , why more stage productions, which one only HEARS of on Review programmes, do not get recorded for Radio....How often does one think [Like with Enron]....I'd love to hear/see that.... but no, off into the ether it goes; but never caught by the radio waves....

  10. #10
    Al R Gando Guest

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by eighthobstruction View Post
    I do not understand why with all the chanels both Radio and TV , why more stage productions, which one only HEARS of on Review programmes, do not get recorded for Radio....How often does one think [Like with Enron]....I'd love to hear/see that.... but no, off into the ether it goes; but never caught by the radio waves....
    Staging drama for the theatre, and producing it well on radio, are very different disciplines indeed. It requires great talent and creativity to make drama work on the radio - and sadly it's a dying art. Transferring a play from the stage to radio would effectively require starting afresh - you can't just "point a mike at it", and I think this explains why theatre productions aren't presented on radio.

    Quote Originally Posted by french frank View Post

    I don't exactly know what R4 plays are like because I never listen,.
    Mostly they are about English women who are treated in a dastardly way during the days of the British Raj in India

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •