Uncle Vanya
PRESS RELEASE
Uncle Vanya
By Anton Chekhov
Directed by Susan Wilson
Translated by Stuart
Young
Uncle Vanya, a captivating story of tangled and
tragic love by one of the best, most original and
influential playwrights of all time, opens at CIRCA Theatre
on Saturday 28th April at 8pm, and runs until 2nd
June.
Chekhov’s superbly comic and beautifully tender masterpiece is set on the family’s remote country estate, where Vanya, his niece, Sonya and the local doctor, Astrov find the calm of their lives thrown into chaos by the arrival of Sonya’s father, the ailing Professor Serebryakov and his beautiful young wife, Yelena.
An acutely observed study of humanity, Uncle Vanya is a brilliant and unforgettable classic of Russian theatre. Lev Dodin, the director of St Petersburg’s Maly Theatre who is world renowned for its interpretation of Chekhov, describes Uncle Vanya as “A diamond. It is the most beautiful and crystalline of all Chekhov’s plays.”
Subtitled “Scenes from a Village Life” Uncle Vanya wonderfully illustrates Chekhov’s celebrated gift for capturing the ordinariness of people’s everyday lives. He said famously: ”Let everything on the stage be just as complex and at the same time just as simple as in life. People dine, merely dine, but at that moment their happiness is being made or their life is being smashed.”
In Uncle Vanya Chekhov shows us people trying, increasingly desperately, to inject some drama into their very ordinary, unremarkable lives in order to escape the sense – especially acute in Vanya’s case - of a life wasted and unfulfilled. In Chekhov’s hands, this is both poignant and deeply comic. Chekhov always insisted that his plays are comedies, and this is certainly true of Uncle Vanya, which features elements of pure farce and whose tone is, above all, ironic. Vanya’s predicament is however universally recognizable – everyone knows what it is like to be gripped by a dream and not succeed – and yet at the end, there is consolation.
With a wonderful cast that is a fine blend of experience and rising talent, a new up-to-date local translation by New Zealander Stuart Young (The Cherry Orchard), beautiful costumes by Gillie Coxill, and directed by leading director Susan Wilson (Death of a Salesman, The Cherry Orchard), Uncle Vanya is exciting, special, and not-to-be-missed theatre.
Starring: BRUCE PHILLIPS, JEFFREY THOMAS,
MEL DODGE,
DANIELLE MASON, GAVIN RUTHERFORD, KATE
HARCOURT,
DONNA AKERSTEN, PETER
VERE-JONES
“Spine-tingling, heart-wrenching, exhilarating”- New Statesman
“One of the greatest and most moving plays ever written” - Daily Telegraph
“The most prescient writer of the twentieth century” – Nicholas Wright
Uncle Vanya
Opens on SATURDAY 28th
April at 8pm
and runs until 2nd June 2007.
$20
PREVIEW - Friday 27th April - 8pm
$20 SUNDAY SPECIAL - Sunday 29th April – 4pm
AFTER-SHOW
FORUM – Tuesday 1st May
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
Kindly supported
by CHRIS FINLAYSON
BOOKINGS: CIRCA Theatre, 1
Taranaki Street, Wellington Phone 801
7992
www.circa.co.nz
--
ANTON PAVLOVICH
CHEKHOV
Playwright
Anton Chekhov was born in 1860, the
son of a grocer and the grandson of a serf, and brought up
in a small port town on the Sea of Azov. After a harsh
childhood he went to Moscow in 1879 and entered the medical
faculty of the university, graduating in 1884. During his
university years he supported his family by contributing
stories and sketches to magazines. In 1885 he met Soovorin,
editor of Novoye Vremya, in St Petersburg, who encouraged
him to write and in 1886 Chekhov published a volume of
stories. In 1887 his first full-length play Ivanov was
produced in Moscow. For five years he lived in the country
near Moscow, practicing medicine and writing many of his
best stories. It was there that he began to accumulate his
wealth of subtle observations of the peasants who came to
see him in the hospital, of the army officers (stationed in
the little town), and of those innumerable characters
typical of provincial Russia of his time.
But when his
health started to fail he moved to Crimea, and after 1900
most of his life was spent at Yalta where he met Tolstoy and
Gorky. He wrote his best-known plays in the last years of
his life. In 1898 Stanislavsky produced The Seagull at his
newly founded Moscow Art Theatre, and it was for him that
Chekhov wrote Uncle Vanya (1900), The Three Sisters (1901)
and The Cherry Orchard (1903). But just as he was beginning
to gain international recognition as a major dramatist,
Chekhov suffered two heart attacks and died in the German
spa town of Badenweiler, in July 1904.
Chekhov’s other
plays include On the High Road, The Bear, The Wood Demon,
The Wedding, Platonov, and The Proposal,
STUART
YOUNG
Translator
Since the beginning of 2006, Stuart
has been Associate Professor and Head of the Theatre Studies
programme at the University of Otago. Prior to that he
taught Drama and Theatre at the University of Auckland (for
13 years).
Stuart comes from Wellington. He has an
MA(Hons) in Russian and French from Victoria University, and
a PhD in English (Cambridge).
Chekhov-in-performance is a
major focus of his research and teaching.
He is
concerned with the production of Chekhov and other Russian
drama, especially on the British and New Zealand stages, and
with rewritings and relocations of the plays. He is also
interested in Translation Studies and translation practice
in the theatre, and has translated a number of plays from
Russian and French, including The Cherry Orchard for Circa
in 2005.
Stuart is currently on study leave in England,
where he is catching up with four new Chekhov productions,
one of each of the four great plays.
SUSAN
WILSON
Director
Susan is known throughout New Zealand
for her work as both an actor and a director. She received
the ONZM for her Services to Theatre in the Queen’s
Birthday Honours list 2002.
In 1981 she won the Feltex
Best Actress award for her role as Beryl in the television
series Gliding On a role she continued in the sequel TV
series - Market Forces.
Susan is a co-founder of Circa
Theatre and a current member of the Circa Council. She has
directed a number of smash hits for Circa including Torch
Song Trilogy, Stevie, Woman in Mind, Mrs Klein and
Entertaining Mr Sloane. Susan has directed four of the late
Robert Lord’s plays, Bert & Maisy, China Wars, Glorious
Ruins, and Joyful & Triumphant, the production which gained
her the Director of the Year Award at the Chapman Tripp
Theatre Awards in 1992. Susan also directed its return
season at the State Opera House, its subsequent national
tour and the tours to Sydney, Adelaide, and London.
She
again received the Director of the Year Award in 1994 for
her production of Angels in America, which opened the new
Circa on the Waterfront venue. Other plays which she has
directed include The Learner’s Stand, Dylan Thomas: Nogood
Boyo (Wellington & Sydney), Broken Glass, Arcadia (Winner
of the Circa production of the Year 1995), The Herbal Bed,
Amy’s View, The Big Picture, Boys at the Beach,
Travesties, Rutherford (NZ Festival 2000) The End of the
Golden Weather, The Seagull, Noises Off, Take a Chance on
Me, The Face Maker (NZ Festival 2002), The Real Thing, The
Importance of Being Earnest, Oxygen, In Flame, A Passionate
Woman, The Breath of Life, Vincent in Brixton, the sell-out
success Taking Off. In 2005 she directed The Cherry Orchard,
Bright Star and Roger Hall’s pantomime, Cinderella, and in
2006 she directed Death of a Salesman (winner of Director of
the Year at the Chapman Tripp Theatre Awards), Picture
Perfect and Roger Hall’s pantomime Aladdin, and was
dramaturg for Troy, The Musical.
DONNA
AKERSTEN
Mariya
Donna is well known throughout New
Zealand for her work on Stage, TV and Film. Winner of the
Best Actress award at the Chapman Tripp Awards 2002 for her
role as Meg in The Birthday Party, she was last seen at
Circa in The Cherry Orchard, Taking Off, Vincent in Brixton,
She Stoops to Conquer, The Breath of Life, Humble Boy,
Conversations After a Burial, The Importance of Being
Earnest, Life x 3, and the smash hit Take a Chance on Me.
Her previous Circa productions include Noises Off, The
Seagull, A Delicate Balance, Honor, The Cripple of
Inishmaan, Broken Glass, Hamlet, Entertaining Mr Sloane, The
Sisters Rosensweig, Angels in America, Insignificance and
Middle Age Spread. She was last seen at Downstage as Big
Mama in Cat on a Hot Tin Roof. Other Downstage credits
include Daughters of Heaven, The Importance of Being
Earnest, and The Cherry Orchard.
Donna is also a frequent
guest actress at the Auckland Theatre Company. Acclaimed for
her portrayal of Honor, in 1999 she won the ATC Best Actress
award in Roger Hall’s one-woman show The Book Club, and
was most recently seen there as Colleen Bacon in Secret
Bridesmaids’ Business.
Television includes Jackson’s
Wharf, Shortland Street, The Fireraiser, Country GP and
Bread and Roses, and film: Via Satellite, The Last Tattoo,
Middle Age Spread, Te Rua, Bad Blood and Sleeping Dogs.
Donna received a MNZM for her services to the theatre in
the New Year Honours list 2003.
MEL DODGE
Sonya
Mel
has an MA in Acting from ArtsEd London.
Since returning
to New Zealand she has established her own theatre company
BRAVE for which she has appeared in The 1/4 Pounding ,'Fight
or Flight and Anything to Declare? Anything to Declare? had
a successful season at the Edinburgh Fringe in 2006. Other
credits include Senga in My Heart is Bathed in Blood,
Marjory Pinchwife in The Country Wife, Lisa in Collected
Stories, Greta in Taming of the Shrew, Juliet in Romeo and
Juliet, Ella in Kiwifruits, Sam in No Moa and Fairy Lilly in
Enchanted Tales.
Uncle Vanya is Mel's debut performance
for Circa Theatre.
www.meldodge.com
KATE
HARCOURT
Marina
DANIELLE MASON
Yelena
A
2002 graduate of Toi Whakaari: NZ Drama School, Danielle
holds a Bachelor of Arts from Waikato University. Since
completing her studies Danielle has performed widely for
stage, screen and radio.
In 2004 she won Chapman Tripp
Theatre awards for Best Female Newcomer in Collected Stories
directed by Miranda Harcourt, and Most Outstanding
Performance in The Shape of Things directed by Ross Jolly
(both at Circa Theatre).
Other stage credits include
Private Lives, Fond Love and Kisses, An Inspector Calls, The
Remedy Syndrome, Finding Willy, Lulu, Dinner, Hitchcock
Blonde and Dracula.
Danielle appears as the lead female
role in the NZ feature film Black Sheep.
BRUCE
PHILLIPS
Uncle Vanya
A busy actor/director for 31 years, Bruce has appeared twice in two of Chekhov’s plays, The Seagull (Trigorin - Downstage 1980, Circa 2000) and The Cherry Orchard (Gayev - Court Theatre 2002, Circa 2005), but never before in Uncle Vanya. He says he never before realised the richness and depth of this play and is delighted to be cast in it. Last year he directed Dinner, and A Number and acted in The Rivals at Circa and this year has just directed the fantastic Two Brothers which was highly esteemed by discerning audiences. This year is the 20th anniversary of Bruce joining the Circa Council. He is pleased to see the extraordinary progress the theatre has made during that time: “there is no other theatre in the country which has the breadth of programming and the facilities that we do. Wellington, I hope you realise how spoiled for choice you are!”
GAVIN
RUTHERFORD
Telyegin
Gavin Rutherford has been working as an actor and director since graduating from UNITEC School of Performing and Screen Arts in 2001. He has performed most recently at the Museum Hotel in the multi award winning sitespecific.co.nz show Hotel during the Fringe Festival for which he received the Most Outstanding Performance award. He has also recently performed at Court Theatre in Christchurch and Fortune Theatre in Dunedin. Circa audiences may remember him from Wild East, An Inspector Calls, This Lime Tree Bower, Ugly Customers and The Cherry Orchard. His most recent film and television credits include Insiders Guide to Love and Lost Children.
JEFFREY THOMAS
Mikhail
Astrov
Jeffrey Thomas has written two books, including a
collection of stories for children, and also written and
directed one short film, Making Money.
Winner of Best
Actor Award for TV’s Mercy Peak, Jeffrey was last seen on
stage at Circa as Lars in Dinner.
He has recently
returned from the UK where he appeared in the long-running
BBC Welsh language drama series Pobol Y Cwm.
His move to
a new career as a quantity surveyor is currently on
hold.
PETER VERE-JONES
Professor
Serebryakov
Peter Vere-Jones has been working as a
professional actor since 1961.
A lead and character actor
for Radio New Zealand Drama, he moved into television and
theatre as they developed.
In television he has appeared
in a great many productions, from the first major NZ TV
drama, The Evening Paper by Bruce Mason, to almost all the
popular series from Pukemanu to Shortland Street and Duggan.
He has played leading roles in Xena and Hercules, and has
many NZ film credits.
He has performed regularly at both
Downstage and Circa Theatres since their earliest days.
Favourite performances include Salieri in Tony Taylor’s
production of Amadeus (Downstage) and several productions of
Pinter plays by Ross Jolly at Circa, especially No Man’s
Land and The Birthday Party. Also Estragon in the Beckett
classic Waiting for Godot. In 2000 and 2002 Peter toured
Bruce Mason’s solo show, The End of the Golden Weather. In
2005 he appeared as Firs in Chekhov’s The Cherry Orchard,
and as Horst Ehmke in Democracy.
In 2000 he was made an
ONZM for services to acting and
writing.
ENDS