Master Class
PRESS RELEASE
Master Class
By David
Pownall
Directed by Ross Jolly
AMUSEMENT, MUSIC AND
MENACE!
One of Circa’s greatest hits, MASTER CLASS
returns as part of the theatre’s 30th Birthday
celebrations. First produced in a sell-out extended season
in 1986, MASTER CLASS opens in Circa One on Saturday 14th
October at 8pm and runs until 11th November.
Starring RAY HENWOOD as Stalin, and DAVID MCKENZIE as Prokofiev - both from the original cast – joined by DANNY MULHERON as Shostakovich, and PETER HAMBLETON as Zhdanov, MASTER CLASS is again under the hand of one of Wellington’s leading directors, ROSS JOLLY.
And, MASTER CLASS is a play that makes unusually high demands of the cast - each must play the piano live on stage!
A smart, funny play, full of a powerful mix of amusement, music and menace, MASTER CLASS is set in 1948, in an anteroom of the Kremlin where Josef Stalin, and his henchman Zhdanov, have ‘invited’ leading Russian composers of the day, Sergei Prokofiev and Dmitri Shostakovich to justify their work. Stalin is determined that all music must be ‘purged’ of its elitist tendencies, and made more accessible to the common people.
The atmosphere is tense as Stalin conducts a droll, deadly game of psychological warfare, which has a surprising and shocking conclusion.
Director, Ross Jolly says, “When the idea for reprising MASTER CLASS was mooted I was delighted. MASTER CLASS is one of the best scripts I have ever worked on, with a fine blend of menace, music, mayhem and humour that is extremely appealing. For sheer excellence and entertainment this script is hard to beat.
“MASTER CLASS is a play that is always dramatic, often hilarious, and ultimately extremely moving. During the first season in 1986 I was amazed at the intensity of the audience response. The play not only had them in stitches, but also touched their hearts, and so many people put it high on their list of memorable theatrical moments.
“I
am very lucky to have such a dream cast, including two of
the ‘the originals’ for this revival. And we are having
a ball!
The musical content is challenging, but as each
actor, including novice pianoforte student Peter Hambleton,
nails his respective pieces and sings his heart out, their
achievements are a sheer delight.
“The power and passion of this play is unforgettable. Audiences last time laughed, were surprised, shocked, and moved - they loved it!”
“Master Class teems with chilling discords
and hilarious clanking andantes, and is a musical and
political triumph. You might see a better play or production
this year, but I very much doubt it. Master Class is one of
those rare events … it may indeed be a masterpiece”
- Ralph McAllister, The Dominion 1986
“A riveting portrait of intrigue and betrayal” - Sunday Express
MASTER CLASS
Opens SATURDAY 14th October at
8pm
and runs until 11th November 2006.
$20 PREVIEW - Friday 13th October- 8pm
$20 SUNDAY SPECIAL - Sunday 15th October – 4pm
AFTER-SHOW FORUM –
TUESDAY 17th October
Performance times: Tues &
Wed - 6.30pm; Thurs, Fri and Sat - 8pm; Sun -
4pm.
Prices: $35 Adults; $28 Students, Senior Citizens
and Beneficiaries
$30 Groups 6+ $18 Student Standby -
from 1 hour before the show
MASTER CLASS is kindly
sponsored by CHRIS FINLAYSON
BOOKINGS: CIRCA
Theatre, 1 Taranaki Street, Wellington
Phone 801
7992 www.circa.co.nz
--
DAVID
POWNALL
Playwright
David Pownall was born in Liverpool and is a graduate of Keele University. Founder of Paines Plough, an award-winning British touring theatre company, his plays include Master Class, Elgar's Rondo, Music to Murder By, Getting the Picture, An Audience Called Edouard, Beef, and Livingstone and Sechele. Pownall has also written radio drama, several novels, short stories and poetry. Theatre awards include the John Whiting Prize for Beef, and the New York Theatre Yearbook, LS Directors Award for Livingstone and Sechele.
ROSS
JOLLY
Director
Founding member of Circa Theatre, Circa
councillor, actor and freelance theatre and television
director, Ross has directed many productions for Circa over
the past years including the original production of Master
Class in 1986, and Moonlight, F.I.L.T.H., Picasso at the
Lapin Agile, Travels with my Aunt, the record-breaking smash
hit Social Climbers, the award-winning Taking Sides (Best
Circa Production 1997), the acclaimed production of Heretic
for the 1998 NZ International Festival of the Arts, and most
recently, The Cripple of Inishmaan, How I Learned to Drive,
Waiting for Godot, The Beauty Queen of Leenane, the sell-out
success ART (and its return season), The Unexpected Man, The
Memory of Water, The Weir, Madame Melville, the NZ Festival
2002 success Copenhagen, Life x 3, The Birthday Party,
Conversations after a Burial, Ancient Lights, Humble Boy,
the sell-out hit of the 2004 Festival of the Arts, Roger
Hall’s Spreading Out, Stones in his Pockets, Neil
LaBute’s The Shape of Things which was nominated for Best
Director and Best Production at the Chapman Tripp awards
2004, An Inspector Calls, The Mercy Seat and Democracy.
Earlier this year Ross directed the NZ premiere of Ross
Gumbley’s Happy Coupling for the Court Theatre, and The
Underpants and Wild East for Circa.
Ross won Director of
the Year for his production of Waiting for Godot, at the
Chapman Tripp Theatre Awards 1999.
RAY
HENWOOD
Stalin
A founding member of the Circa Council,
Ray’s most recent performances at Circa include Spreading
Out, Conversations After a Burial, The Birthday Party,
Copenhagen, Playing Burton, The Unexpected Man, A Delicate
Balance, Rutherford, Travesties, Waiting for Godot, Honour,
Simply Disconnected, Skylight, Market Forces, F.I.L.T.H.,
Moonlight, The Master Builder, Angels in America, I Hate
Hamlet, No Man’s Land and Time of my Life. Other
performances include Otherwise Engaged, Othello, Uncle
Vanya, Hedda Gabler, Much Ado About Nothing (Downstage),
Honour (ATC), NoGood Boyo (NZ & Australia) and Ken Hill’s
Phantom of the Opera (Japan). Television includes Shortland
Street, Market Forces, William Tell, Enid Blyton, Gliding
On, Atlantis High and Film: Heavenly Creatures, The End of
the Golden Weather, and Lord of the Rings.
Ray won Best
Actor at the Chapman Tripp Awards 2001, for his role in
Playing Burton, which has since toured to several NZ cities
including Christchurch and Auckland and also to Sydney,
Melbourne and Brisbane.
2005 again saw Ray touring NZ,
this time in the one-man show The Carer.
Last seen at
Circa as Willy Brandt in Democracy, and at Downstage in
Under Milk Wood, Ray also received an ONZM in this year’s
honour’s list.
PETER HAMBLETON
Zhdanov
Peter
has made numerous appearances at Circa including A Doll’s
House, I Hate Hamlet, Angels in America, Twelfth Night,
Moonlight, Travels with my Aunt, The Herbal Bed, The Cripple
of Inishmaan, The John Wayne Principle, Design for Living,
Travesties, The Beauty Queen of Leenane, The Seagull, The
Memory of Water, Lady in the Van, Copenhagen, Take a Chance
on Me, An Enemy of the People, Ancient Lights, Humble Boy,
Spreading Out, The Bach and Bright Star, Democracy and Dr
Buller’s Birds.
Other recent stage work includes
Sylvia, Much Ado about Nothing, Cat on a Hot Tin Roof,
Rosencrantz and Guildenstern are Dead, Middle Age Spread,
Richard III, Black Comedy, The Goat (all at Downstage), and
The Graduate (Centrepoint).
A recipient of a Shakespeare
Globe Centre International Artistic Fellowship (with Judith
Gibson) in 2002, Peter also won Best Actor at the Chapman
Tripp Theatre Awards for his performance as Heisenberg in
Copenhagen, and a performance accolade for An Enemy of the
People.
As a director Peter’s work includes Marathon,
Pericles and A Midsummer Night’s Dream.
DAVID
McKENZIE
Prokofiev
A veteran performer of 40 years,
David began his professional career in England, returning to
NZ in 1971. Since then he has worked in most of the
country’s theatres – Mercury, Central, Centrepoint, Four
Seasons, Circa, Downstage and Court – as well as in Radio
Drama, TV commercials and film.
David was most recently
seen at Circa in The Underpants and The Lady in the Van. He
also appeared recently in the award-winning Albert Speer at
Bats in 2004, and in Mum’s Choir at Downstage earlier this
year.
DANNY MULHERON
Shostakovich
Actor, writer,
director and comedian, Danny is probably best known for his
work as a director both for stage (Drawer of Knives, The
Bach, The Tutor, The Love of Human Kind, The Daylight
Atheist, Market Forces) and screen (Seven Periods with Mr
Gormsby, The Semisis). As an actor he is probably most well
known as one of the Classy Flagrant’e Brothers (along with
Brian Sergent) in the long running comedy sketch show Skitz,
which he also directed. Other highlights in a great comic
career have included The Very Liberal Phineas O’Diddle in
Away Laughing and the hapless Matthew from The Sex Fiend a
smash hit he wrote with Stephen Sinclair at the height of
the politically correct 80’s.
Danny was last seen on
stage at Circa in Simply
Disconnected.
ENDS