Betrayal by Harold Pinter
PRESS RELEASE
BETRAYAL
By Harold Pinter
Directed by Ross Jolly
A
PASSIONATE AFFAIR. TOLD IN REVERSE
An enduring
dark comedy of love and deceit, Betrayal is
one of Harold Pinter’s finest
plays.
Betrayal opens at Circa Theatre on Saturday 24th January at 8pm, and runs until 21 February.
Unravelling from its poignant end to its blissful first kiss, Betrayal traces a seven-year illicit affair played out in reverse.
Robert and Jerry were best friends.
Robert and Emma were married.
Jerry and Emma were lovers.
Welcome to the tangled emotional world of BETRAYAL
Passionate, funny, sexy and
bristling with treachery!
Winner of the Nobel
Prize for Literature 2005, Harold Pinter is one of the
world’s great playwrights. His plays include The
Birthday Party, The Caretaker, No Man’s Land, The
Homecoming and Old Times.
Harold Pinter
died in London on Christmas Eve, and Betrayal
(written in 1978) is his most autobiographical play based on
his 7-year affair in the 1960s with Joan Bakewell (a
well-known television broadcaster of the time).
Betrayal was first produced by Circa Theatre in 1980.
Starring DANIELLE MASON, TOBY
LEACH, and JASON WHYTE, and introducing DANIEL
ARMSTRONG, Betrayal is directed by
award-winning Ross Jolly – his fifth production of a
Pinter play!
“A thrillingly frank study of
love, friendship and the human heart … a
masterpiece”
– Daily Telegraph
“An exquisitely crafted play”
– Michael Billington,
Guardian
DIRECTOR’S NOTE
“I suppose
all directors have favourites, and Harold Pinter is my main
man.
Posthumously hailed as “the world’s leading playwright”, Pinter’s sardonic humour and brilliant, robust writing appealed immediately when seeing The Homecoming in 1970.
“I have now directed four
‘Pinters’ – The Homecoming (1992), No
Man’s Land (1994), Moonlight (1995) and The
Birthday Party (2002) – Betrayal will be
the fifth and I love them all.
“In fact, it was
after Moonlight that I received a letter from the man
himself, congratulating us on our success, praising my
programme notes, but rebuffing and firmly correcting an
incorrect assertion. I was delighted, yet alarmed, lest I
had offended my hero. Anyway, it had sparked the letter
which remains a treasured icon – akin to a religious
relic. Chided by Harold Pinter – what an
honour!
“So, what’s it like in 2008 directing
Betrayal, one of the world’s best plays,
with a stellar cast. Quite simply – sublime!
“Pinter is a theatrical genius, the master
craftsman – a giant. Betrayal, his moving,
funny, compassionate dissection of love, is a celebration of
meticulous economy, understated subtext, and rich,
wonderful, lean language. It is a rare, glittering
gem.
“It has been said of Pinter’s plays:
“They’re not realistic. They’re so much better than
that. They’re the truth.”
“I feel I know the man
a little from his work. I will miss him, because I’m sure
we will not see his like again – a fair cricketer, a good
actor, and a playwright of rare power and
originality.”
- Ross Jolly
-
-
BETRAYAL
24th January – 21st February
$20 SPECIALS – Friday 23 January
- 8pm; Sunday 25 January - 4pm.
Performance
times: Tuesday & Wednesday 6.30pm
Thursday, Friday, Saturday 8pm
Sunday 4pm
Ticket
Prices: Adults - $38; Concessions - $30; Friends of
Circa - $28
Under 25s - $20; Groups 6+ s- $32
BOOKINGS Circa Theatre 1
Taranaki Street, Wellington
Phone 801 7992 www.circa.co.nz
--
HAROLD PINTER (1930
– 2008)
Playwright
Harold Pinter was born in London in 1930. He has written twenty-nine plays including The Birthday Party, The Caretaker, The Homecoming, and Betrayal, twenty-one screenplays including The Servant, The Go-Between, The French Lieutenant's Woman and, most recently, Sleuth and directed twenty-seven theatre productions, including James Joyce's Exiles, David Mamet's Oleanna, seven plays by Simon Gray and many of his own plays including his latest, Celebration, paired with his first, The Room at The Almeida Theatre, London in the spring of 2000.
In 2005 he received the Nobel Prize for Literature. Other awards include the Companion of Honour for services to Literature, the Legion D’Honneur, the Laurence Olivier Award and the Moliere D'Honneur for lifetime achievement. In 1999 he was made a Companion of Literature by the Royal Society of Literature. He has received honorary degrees from eighteen universities.
Harold Pinter died in London on 24th December 2008. He is survived by his second wife, Antonia Fraser.
ROSS
JOLLY
Director
Founding member of Circa
Theatre, Circa councillor, actor and freelance theatre and
television director, Ross has directed many productions for
Circa including: Master Class, Moonlight,
F.I.L.T.H., Picasso at the Lapin Agile, Travels with my
Aunt, Social Climbers, Taking Sides (Best Circa
Production 1997), Heretic (1998 NZ International
Festival of the Arts), The Cripple of Inishmaan,
How I Learned to Drive, Waiting for Godot, The
Beauty Queen of Leenane, ART, The Unexpected Man, The Memory
of Water, The Weir, Madame Melville, Copenhagen, Life x 3,
The Birthday Party, Conversations after a Burial, Ancient
Lights, Humble Boy, Roger Hall’s Spreading Out
(2004 Festival of the Arts), 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. In 2007 he re-directed Neil LaBute’s The Shape
of Things for the Court Theatre, followed by
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. Last
year Ross directed Roger Hall’s Who Wants to be
100? (International Arts Festival), Love Song
(Circa 2) and Some Girl(s) (Circa 1), and also
re-directed the original cast in Heroes for a season
at Expressions in Upper Hutt.
Ross won Director of the
Year for his production of Waiting for Godot, at the
Chapman Tripp Theatre Awards 1999.
TOBY
LEACH
Jerry
Toby graduated from Toi
Whakaari: NZ Drama School in 1996.
Favourite roles
include Fool for Love (Bats) Hamatsa (La Mama,
New York), Have Car will Travel (Bats, Silo),
Meltdown, When Sun and Moon Collide, Trick of the Light, An
Enemy of the People (Circa), Gross Indecency
(Downstage), Cloud 9, Mr Kolpert, Plenty
(Silo) Wheeler’s Luck (Auckland Theatre Co,
Edinburgh Fringe, Circa), Fat Pig (Circa), Some
Girl(s) (Circa), Wait Until Dark
(Circa).
Television credits include Duggan, Outrageous
Fortune, Facelift and most recently, Burying
Brian.
Toby was nominated Best Supporting Actor at
1999 TV Awards for his role in Duggan, won the 2002
Best Supporting Actor Chapman Tripp Award for Trick of
the Light, and was nominated Best Supporting Actor for
his role as Carter in Fat Pig at Circa last
year.
DANIELLE MASON
Emma
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, Dracula, Uncle Vanya, Finding
Murdoch, The Winslow Boy, Jack and the Beanstalk,
Rabbit and most recently, Love Song, Some
Girl(s) and Red Riding Hood.
Danielle appears
as the lead female role in the NZ feature film Black
Sheep.
JASON WHYTE
Robert
Jason
has an extensive list of theatre and film credits to his
name.
Most recent work includes Second Hand Wedding
(film), Apollo 13 Mission Control (Bats), Until Proven
Innocent (TV), Mammals (Circa), Avatar (Film), The American
Pilot (Circa), The Singularity (Bats) Shining City (Circa
Two} Pig Hunt (Bats} Fat Pig (Circa) Death of a Salesman
(Circa) and The Tutor (Circa), for which he won an
Outstanding Performance Accolade at the Chapman Tripp Awards
2006. Other theatre credits include The Mercy Seat (Circa),
Clockwork Orange (AK05), The Shape of Things (Circa & Court
Theatre), Goldie (Auckland Theatre Co), The Collective
(Bats), Gunsmoke, One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest, Mojo,
Time of my Life and Beautiful Thing (all
Circa).
Jason’s screen credits also include The
Insider’s Guide to Happiness (TV2) – winning Best
Supporting Actor at the Screen Directors’ Guild Awards,
and Kombi Nation (feature film).
DANIEL
ARMSTRONG
Waiter
Daniel graduated from the
New Zealand College of Performing Arts in 2008. This is his
second show at Circa Theatre, having appeared in John
Kolvenbach's Love Song (Circa 2) last year, while he
was still a student.
Daniel was named Most Promising
Youth Actor in 2003's National One Act Play competition
(district level) for Pandora's
Suitcase.
ENDS