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Fourthwall’s Favourites: February
Fourthwall’s round-up of what to see this coming February.
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Training: ALRA North launches online TV station
The Academy of Live and Recorded Arts are launching a new online TV station from their Wigan base.
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Greenwich Playhouse loses home in first casualty of the Olympics?
Curtain down on Greenwich Playhouse after thirteen years.
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War Horse film drives demand for stage version
The hype surrounding the release of Spielberg’s film, has triggered huge interest in the award-winning stage production.
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Blog: Uncovering The Faction #10
Up and running, there’s time for Gareth to find amusement in the smallest details.
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Blog: Uncovering The Faction #9
All three Faction shows are now up and running and Gareth has a second to take a moment’s pause to contemplate this achievement and to ruminate on Miss Julie.
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Greenroom Gossip: Mulligan on drama school auditions
Last month actress Carey Mulligan told an American newspaper that she was rejected from every drama school she auditioned for.
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Blog: Uncovering The Faction #8
Gareth wonders whether Miss Julie, the third show in The Faction’s rep season, might be suffering from ‘third-child’ syndrome.
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Review: The Pitchfork Disney, Arcola ****
Amy Stow reviews a near-perfect revival of Phillip Ridley’s seminal play, The Pitchfork Disney, at the Arcola.
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Review: The Bee, Soho Theatre *****
As part of its world tour, The Bee returns to its original home, The Soho Theatre, London. David Richards reviews.
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Review: The Faction’s Miss Julie, New Diorama ***
David Richards is drawn into The Faction’s mesmerising blend of physical action and theatricality in the final play in their rep season, Miss Julie.
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Review: The Faction’s Mary Stuart, New Diorama ****
Simultaneously innovative and traditional The Faction’s Mary Stuart, at the New Diorama, impresses Alice Anderson.
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Chris New: Taking Each Opportunity as it Comes
Chris New is currently starring as Joe Orton in the play Prick Up Your Ears. Knight Hooson discovers a modest young actor enjoying an inspired career.
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Chris New stars as Joe Orton in Prick Up Your Ears at the Comedy TheatreIs Chris New the luckiest actor around? Just three years out of RADA, he has already appeared in the West End opposite Alan Cumming, acted with both the National Theatre and the RSC, made several appearances on the BBC, and a turn each at the Old Vic and the Royal Exchange Theatres. Now, he is about the appear again in the West End in Prick Up Your Ears opposite Matt Lucas. It's almost enough to make you jealous.

Photos by Catherine Ashmore
Luckily, he is a nice guy, with a wicked sense of humour and enough humility to realise his good fortune. You can only admire the way he has seized the opportunities which have been presented to him and ran with them.
His current project, a new play by Simon Bent inspired by the John Lahr biography of Joe Orton, is a study of the relationship between the playwright Orton, on the cusp of success and fame, and his lover Kenneth Halliwell, about to be left in his shadow.
In 1987 Prick Up Your Ears was made into a film by Alan Bennett and John Lahr directed by Stephen Frears. It starred Gary Oldman and Alfred Molina with supporting roles played by Vanessa Redgrave, Frances Barber, Julie Walters and Wallace Shawn. But this is the first time the story has been told on stage.
Chris New's flatmate had the idea that Chris should play Joe Orton in a stage version opposite Matt Lucas as Kenneth Halliwell. The idea might have ended there if not for a chance meeting between Chris and Matt Lucas in a restaurant where he pitched the idea to him. To his surprise, Lucas was interested. “Matt and I had a meeting with the producer, Sonia Friedman, about the idea,” New says. “She just leapt on it. She absolutely loved it.” Friedman commissioned Simon Bent to write the script.

Bent has spent the last year combing through Orton's diaries and family archives while interviewing family and friends of Orton and Halliwell. Chris has also got into the research. “We've all spent a lot of time talking to friends of his [Orton] and I've met Leonie, who is his sister, and who now runs the estate,” he says. “I've tried to get below the legend to try to see what he was really like. Also to see how he changed. It's very simple to think he was just one person. He has to have had a journey. Most people know who Joe Orton is, but very few people know what he was really like.”
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Published on October 4, 2009 · Filed under: Current Issue, Highlights, Interviews, Magazine Content;







