Auckland Theatre Company: 2010 Season
Auckland Theatre Company will recreate the giddy
glamour of 1930s’ Berlin in 2010 with its production of CABARET in Salon Perdu Spiegeltent, the
Company’s very own Kit Kat Klub, just one of the fantastic
shows Auckland Theatre Company is offering theatre lovers in
2010.
“The plays that we’re offering in 2010
reflect all that is best about the theatrical experience:
great stories and great characters brought vibrantly to life
by New Zealand’s finest stage talent,” says Auckland
Theatre Company’s artistic director, Colin McColl.
First up is Dave Armstrong’s latest work LE SUD, a wickedly revisionist satire that
imagines the South Island or “Le Sud” was claimed by the
French in 1838 giving rise to its hilarious and somewhat
ridiculous diplomatic relationship with the English speaking
North Island. Armstrong who has penned THE TUTOR, NIU SILA
and KING AND COUNTRY has emerged as one New Zealand’s most
original and popular satirists.
In March the Company
presents Oscar Wilde’s witty and irreverent THE IMPORTANCE OF BEING
EARNEST. Set in the 1960s and starring Elizabeth
Hawthorne, this production will continue Auckland Theatre
Company’s reputation for revamping the
classics.
“I always relish the opportunity to work
with Elizabeth Hawthorne and I know she relishes the
prospect of becoming the formidable Lady Bracknell - that
self-acclaimed arbiter of London taste and manners,” says
McColl.
Ken Duncum’s HORSEPLAY
is a forgotten gem of a Kiwi comedy which claims the
third spot in the Company’s season. It is a wonderfully
original take on literary rivalry, as two of New Zealand’s
most eccentric men of letters, James K Baxter and Ronald
Hugh Morrieson, clash over horses, women, booze and the
nature of the creative act. Simon Bennett, a superb exponent
of Duncum’s work, has been enticed away from his busy job
as Head of Drama at South Pacific Pictures to whip this
bloody funny beast into shape.
Tapping its way on to
SKYCITY Theatre’s stage in June is Richard Harris’
prize-winning comedy STEPPING OUT,
the perfect heart-warming toddy for cold winter nights.
Television talent shows like X-FACTOR, NEW ZEALAND IDOL and
BRITAIN’S GOT TALENT just go to show that these days
practically anyone has a chance to jump on the fame train.
So when the spotlight turns on Mavis Turner’s weekly tap
class, excitement and sheer terror go side by side as this
bunch of amateur dancers realise that potential fame is only
one fabulous tap routine away. After its SKYCITY Theatre
season, STEPPING OUT tours to
the North Shore, Hamilton, the Hawkes Bay, Taranaki and
Tauranga.
In July, wunderkind Dutch director Willem
Wassenaar teams up with designer Andrew Foster for a
contemporary take on Shakespeare’s enduring story of
thwarted young love. Referencing photographers David
LaChapelle and Anthony Goicolea, as well as Auckland’s
private school culture, this ROMEO AND JULIET is Shakespeare for here and now.
Family has always been central to great American
drama. The best work of Eugene O’Neill, Tennessee Williams
and Edward Albee revolves around dysfunctional domestic
relationships. Now, Tracy Letts joins the club with AUGUST: OSAGE COUNTY, his
savagely funny and compelling indictment of where the
American Dream went wrong. This multi-award-winning play has
been hailed as an instant classic after its sensational
Broadway season and comes sixth in the season, playing in
September.
Auckland Theatre Company rounds off 2010
with a divinely decadent party in Auckland’s very own Kit
Kat Klub at the Salon Perdu Spiegeltent on the Eastern
Viaduct. Audiences will enjoy CABARET
director Michael Hurst with its unforgettable show tunes and
delicious characters as never before.
As well as this
theatrical feast, Auckland Theatre Company’s add-on treats
like THE NEXT STAGE festival of plays in development and our
YOUNG AND HUNGRY season of work for young people, will
provide theatre lovers with a taste of what the future
holds.
“The theatre scene in Auckland has never
been so lively and we are proud to have been the city’s
flagship professional theatre company for the last 18
years,” says Auckland Theatre Company’s Artistic
Director, Colin McColl.
The 2010 season brochure can
be downloaded from http://www.atc.co.nz/content/2031/ATC_Final_SUBSbrochure_D07_Web2.pdf.
ENDS