Roger Hall’s 'Who Wants to be 100?'
PRESS RELEASE
The SOVEREIGN Season of
Roger
Hall’s
WHO WANTS TO BE 100 ?
anyone
who’s 99
Directed by Ross Jolly
Starring KEN
BLACKBURN, GEORGE HENARE, RAY HENWOOD,
PETER
HAMBLETON, JUDE GIBSON, JANE WADDELL
Circa Theatre and the 2008 International Festival of the Arts, are delighted to present Roger Hall’s latest hit comedy - WHO WANTS TO BE 100? (ANYONE WHO’S 99) which opens in CIRCA ONE on Saturday 23rd February at 8pm.
Roger Hall is, without
doubt, the most popular playwright for audiences throughout
the country.
In this heartfelt new comedy he turns his
sharp satirical pen on everyone’s secret dread – the old
folks’ home.
Be nice to your children, they choose your rest home!!
Welcome to the Regina Rest Home where the old boys’ network is alive and kicking with a retired Q.C., an ex-All Black, a former university professor and a famous potter among the residents.
Restless, irrepressible and determined to enjoy their twilight years they declare war on illness, old age, guilty wives, greedy off-spring and the quality of the catering!
With his celebrated gift of having his finger on the pulse of the lives of ordinary New Zealanders, Hall has, over the past 30 years, taken us on an hilarious roller-coaster ride with snapshots of our journey from the civil service, to mid-life crises, to mature students, suburban share clubs and book clubs, to overseas travel and retirement. It is fitting that Roger’s newest comedy faces ‘the next step’ as he exposes our hopes and fears, joys and sorrows - and makes us laugh!
“Was it
because he came originally from another culture, that Roger
was able to so sharply critique and capture the foibles of
ours?” asks director Ross Jolly, who has been involved as
an actor and director with Hall’s work now for over 30
years (since the seminal Glide Time in 1976). “Roger has
demonstrated an uncanny ability to mine comedy gold from
unlikely topics. His social comedies have made him a
household name (a trivial pursuit question) and a trusted
brand. A “Roger Hall” to audiences, means a funny,
satirical, entertaining, damn good night in the theatre.
“And Who Wants To Be 100? is all of the above. All the
familiar ‘Hallmarks’ are on display as we meet the
middle class codgers and the underclass who attend them.
Our social status quo is brilliantly captured and
chronicled.
“So, is this Roger Hall’s funniest,
darkest comedy? All I can say is that it has been the
fastest selling play in New Zealand theatrical history!”
For this season of Who Wants to be 100? Ross Jolly has assembled a stunning cast of actors with an unsurpassed history of playing ‘Roger Hall’:-
Ken Blackburn,
Ray Henwood and George Henare have all experienced the
delighted audience responses from the sell-out seasons in
Auckland or Christchurch.
“This is the most serious
funny play I have ever been in” says Ray. And George is
relishing his foray into the life of an Alzheimer patient -
“Ahh – second childhood – no memory, no cares, no
responsibility, no inhibitions. Bring it on!!” he says.
Ken quite simply considers Who Wants to be 100? the best
play Roger has written so far.
Peter Hambleton gets to experience the tribulations of old age a little earlier than most. “I’ve now had the great privilege of playing characters of all ages in Roger Hall’s plays,” he says. “Baby P in Who Needs Sleep Anyway?; Colin in Middle Age Spread; and now an elderly man in Who Wants to be 100?”.
Jane Waddell and Jude Gibson were both last seen at Circa
in a very different ‘Hall’ experience - the pantomime,
Jack & the Beanstalk!
“I have been performing in Roger
Hall's plays since the late 1970's,” says Jude. They have
included the original Cinderella, By Degrees, Social
Climbers, Middle Age Spread, Cinderella - revamped, Jack and
the Beanstalk, and now Who Wants to be 100?. Whether it's
pure entertainment, comedy or drama Roger always seems to
have his finger on the pulse of the day. I am continually
amazed by his ability to ensnare unpalatable portions of NZ
life and serve them up as an appetizing dish for an
audience.”
For Jane - “Having breathed life into many
of Roger’s women (Middle Age Spread, By Degrees, Take a
Chance on Me, The Book Club, Spreading Out) I’m relishing
the challenge of creating three characters in Who Wants to
be 100? Two wives and a daughter provide a textured insight
into the impact of declining health on immediate family with
truth, humour and compassion.”
So - Stand by for geriatric hi-jinks as Hall teaches some old dogs a few new tricks.
With its endearing, quintessentially Kiwi characters, wry humour, astute observations and legendary one-liners, Who Wants to be 100? is vintage Roger Hall.
“One of Hall’s best … Old age may be no joke, but this play sure is funny” - Press
WHO
WANTS TO BE 100 ?
23rd FEBRUARY – 3rd MAY
$20 PREVIEW Friday 22nd February – 8pm (Bookings: CIRCA Theatre 801 7992)
Performance times: Tues & Wed - 6.30pm; Thurs, Fri and Sat - 8pm; Sun - 4pm.
BOOKINGS:
23 February – 16 March 17
March – 3 May
TICKETEK
0800 842 538
www.ticketek.co.nz
CIRCA Theatre,
1
Taranaki Street, Wellington
Phone 801
7992
www.circa.co.nz
Proud
sponsor
Sovereign
Who wants to be 100? is presented
in association with Playmarket
--
ROGER
HALL
Playwright
Roger Hall was born in England in 1939
and emigrated to NZ in 1958.
Hall’s earliest scripts
were for television, but in 1976 he wrote his first stage
play Glide Time (opened at Circa Theatre) which helped
establish him as New Zealand’s best known and most
commercially successful playwright. Many successful play
productions followed including Middle Age Spread, By
Degrees, Market Forces, C’Mon Black, Dirty Weekends,
Social Climbers, The Book Club, You’ve Gotta Be Joking!, A
Way of Life, Take a Chance on Me, Spreading Out, Taking Off,
Who Wants to be 100? and Who Needs Sleep Anyway? together
with musicals, pantomimes – Cinderella, Aladdin, radio
dramas, books and plays for children and comedy series for
television, most notably, Gliding On and Market Forces, and
for UK television, Conjugal Rites.
His plays have been
performed in nine other countries, the most successful being
Middle Age Spread which ran in London’s West End for 15
months and won the award for Comedy of the Year.
Roger
Hall was awarded a QSO and the Turnovsky Prize in 1987, a
Commemoration Medal 1990, the 1996 Katherine Mansfield
Fellowship for study in Menton, an Hon Doctorate of
Literature from Victoria University, 1996, and in 2003 he
was made a Companion of the NZ Order of Merit
(CNZM).
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. In
2006 Ross directed the NZ premiere of Ross Gumbley’s Happy
Coupling for the Court Theatre, and The Underpants, Wild
East and a revival of Master Class for Circa. 2007 started
with Ross re-directing Neil LaBute’s The Shape of Things
for the Court Theatre, followed by the sell-out season of
Heroes in Circa Two before returning to the world of LaBute
for Fat Pig, and ending the year with Rattigan’s modern
classic, The Winslow Boy.
Ross won Director of the Year
for his production of Waiting for Godot, at the Chapman
Tripp Theatre Awards 1999.
KEN BLACKBURN
Charles
Benson
Born in Bristol, England and educated both there
and in New Zealand, Ken has been a freelance actor for over
40 years working extensively in film, television, radio and
theatre in Australia, NZ and the UK. He has also written a
book, “Blitz Kids”, which was selected by the BBC for
publication to celebrate the 50th anniversary of VE Day in
Britain in 1995.
Ken also has considerable experience as
a theatre director and has been Associate Director of both
Downstage and Mercury Theatres.
Ken returned to the
Wellington stage, after a twelve-year absence, in Travels
with my Aunt at Circa in 1987. Since then he has toured with
the NZ Symphony Orchestra as narrator for A Midsummer
Night’s Dream, performed in his self-devised show An
Evening with Dickens (with Perry Piercy), and appeared at
Circa in many shows including The Sisterhood, as Wilhelm
Furtwängler in Taking Sides (Best Circa Production 1997 at
the Chapman Tripp Theatre Awards), as Old Derek Freeman in
Circa’s Festival hit show Heretic, Vladimir in Waiting for
Godot, and Frank in Amy’s View (a role he repeated in the
Auckland Theatre Co production), Life X 3, The Weir, The
Lady in the Van, Noises Off, The Face Maker, Humble Boy, A
Passionate Woman, The Love of Human Kind, Milo’s Wake, The
Cherry Orchard, Bright Star, Democracy , Death of a
Salesman, and, most recently Heroes (Circa 2) and Who Wants
to be 100? for Court Theatre, where he played the part of
Alan.
Ken has also directed She Stoops to Conquer, Wind
in the Willows, The Country Wife and The Rivals for Circa.
Ken’s screen credits include White Fang, Sir Bruce
Warner in Shortland St, Dr Kamins in The Frighteners, Bad
Blood, Absent without Leave, Skin Deep, Gliding On plus a
wide range of Australian television productions.
Ken won
Best Actor at the Chapman Tripp Theatre Awards 1999 for his
role as Vladimir in Waiting for Godot, and received the MNZM
in the Queen’s Birthday honours in 2005.
JUDE
GIBSON
Elaine / Sharon / Debbie / Gloria
Jude is
well-known for her work as an actor and director throughout
New Zealand, and has also been a recipient of a Shakespeare
Globe Centre International Artistic Fellowship which had her
travelling to London to study at the Globe.
Jude has
recently performed the roles of Betsy the cow / Goosey the
goose in Roger Hall’s pantomime Jack & the Beanstalk,
Grace Winslow in The Winslow Boy and 15 roles in Monarchy,
the Musical and before that was last seen at Circa as Mercy
Lott in the Humble Boy. Some of her recent theatre credits
include Elizabeth in Middle Age Spread, Richard III, Romeo
and Juliet, Under Milk Wood (Downstage) The Clean House,
Cinderella and Paradise Package (Fortune Theatre, Dunedin)
and directing The Vagina Monologues (Centrepoint) and Boston
Marriage (Downstage). She has also combined with Geraldine
Brophy to mount productions of Confessions of a Chocaholic
and Real Estate around the country and in Wellington, and
has worked as Acting Tutor at Toi Whakaari: NZ Drama School.
Television and film credits include Shortland Street,
The Chosen (a mini-series), a Garth Maxwell film, When Love
Comes, and The Strip.
PETER HAMBLETON
Leo
Maddox
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, Dr Buller’s Birds, Master
Class and Home Land.
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, Flagons and Foxtrots,
Othello, The Graduate, and Who Needs Sleep Anyway? (all at
Downstage).
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.
GEORGE HENARE
Alan
Webster
A theatrical career spanning 40 years began in
1965 with the then NZ Opera Company’s Porgy & Bess. Along
with other NZ Opera productions were performances with the
original Downstage, the NZ Maori Theatre Trust and the NZ
Quartet.
In 1971 George moved to Auckland’s Mercury
Theatre as one of its lead actors for the next 20 years
playing everything from King Lear, Sweeney Todd, Salieri,
and Horner to Toad, Scarecrow and Cinderella’s ugly
sister, to name but a smidgen. Interspersed with these were
stints with Stetson Productions, Night & Day, Extremities,
Pirates of Penzance etc, plus numerous radio plays and TV
series.
The nineties saw a move to Australia, where
George worked with the Melbourne Theatre Company, Sydney’s
Ensemble Theatre and B.Company Belvoir in
Sydney.
George’s TV productions have included Xena,
Hercules, Ocean Girl IV, Street Legal, Shortland Street; and
films – Once were Warriors, Rapanui, the Silent One,
Johnny Lingo.
In 1980 George received an OBE for Services
to Theatre, 2000 Best TV Actor, 2001 Narrator of the Year,
for the second time, for Talking Books for the Blind, and in
2006 he was named Actor of the Year at The Chapman Tripp
Theatre Awards for his role as Willy Loman in Death of a
Salesman at Circa.
George’s other Wellington
productions include Urinetown, I’m Not Rappaport (1987 &
2007), Othello, Purupuruwhetu, Dracula (Downstage) Heroes,
Death of a Salesman, This Train I’m On (Circa) Haruru Mai
(Taki Rua), and Evita.
George has also starred in many
productions with Christchurch’s Court Theatre including
Professor Higgins, Christian Brothers, Frank’n’furter
and Fagin in Oliver, and has a long list of stage credits in
his home town of Auckland, where he was last seen as Sir
Toby Belch in Twelfth Night and Alan in Who Wants to be 100?
(ATC).
RAY HENWOOD
Edwin Davis
A founding member
of the Circa Council, Ray’s 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.
Ray’s most
recent stage performances were as Willy Brandt in Democracy
(Circa), Under Milk Wood (Downstage), Stalin in Master Class
(Circa), Heroes (Circa), Who Wants to be 100? And The
Crucible (ATC) and I’m Not Rappaport (Downstage).
Ray
also received an ONZM in the 2006 honour’s list.
JANE
WADDELL
Sarah / Audrey / Mary
Jane is a graduate of Toi
Whakaari: NZ Drama School and has been based in Wellington
for most of her theatrical career, where she is known as
both an actor and director.
Jane has appeared in numerous
productions at Circa including Joyful & Triumphant, Julius
Caesar, Serial Killers, The Country Wife, Take a Chance on
Me, Spreading Out, Taking Off, Death of a Salesman and most
recently Wild East. Jane has also toured the country
extensively with the one-woman play The Book Club by Roger
Hall. Other recent roles include Jack & the Beanstalk
(Circa), Who Needs Sleep Anyway?, Wednesday to Come
(Downstage), Weighing In (Centrepoint) and Andrea in Bright
Star at Circa, for which she won Best Supporting Actress at
the Chapman Tripp Theatre Awards.
While tutoring at Toi
Whakaari Jane directed several student productions, and she
has a long list of children’s production, both stage and
TV to her name. Other stage productions include Wolf
Lullaby, LifeLines (Circa), Taking Off (Fortune), The
Country (Circa), and most recently the highly acclaimed Home
Land (Circa) for which she won Director of the Year and
Production of the Year at the Chapman Tripp Awards. She has
also produced plays, stories and book readings for Radio New
Zealand.
ENDS