7:84: Difference between revisions
m link Andy Arnold using Find link |
|||
(29 intermediate revisions by 18 users not shown) | |||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
{{short description|Scottish left-wing theatre group}} |
|||
{{Use British English|date=February 2013}} |
{{Use British English|date=February 2013}} |
||
{{Use dmy dates|date= |
{{Use dmy dates|date=March 2021}} |
||
'''7:84''' was a [[Scotland|Scottish]] [[left-wing]] [[agitprop theatre]] group. The name comes from a statistic, published in ''[[The Economist]]'' in 1966, that 7% of the population of the UK owned 84% of the country's wealth |
'''7:84''' was a [[Scotland|Scottish]] [[left-wing]] [[agitprop theatre]] group. The name comes from a statistic on [[Income in the United Kingdom#Wealth|distribution of wealth in the United Kingdom]], published in ''[[The Economist]]'' in 1966, that 7% of the population of the UK owned 84% of the country's wealth. |
||
The group was founded by playwright [[John McGrath (playwright)|John McGrath]], his wife [[Elizabeth MacLennan]] and her brother [[David MacLennan (theatre practitioner)|David MacLennan]] in 1971, and operated throughout [[Great Britain]]. In 1973, it split into 7:84 ([[England]]) and 7:84 ([[Scotland]]). The English group folded in 1984, having lost its grant from the [[Arts Council of Great Britain]].<ref>{{cite news |url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/scotland/4763110.stm |title=Funding axed for theatre company |work=BBC News|date= 1 March 2006 | |
The group was founded by playwright [[John McGrath (playwright)|John McGrath]], his wife [[Elizabeth MacLennan]] and her brother [[David MacLennan (theatre practitioner)|David MacLennan]] in 1971, and operated throughout [[Great Britain]].<ref>{{Cite web |title=University of Glasgow Library - Collections - Scottish Theatre Archive |url=https://www.gla.ac.uk/myglasgow/library/files/special/collections/STA/Collections/784/index.html |access-date=2023-05-09 |website=www.gla.ac.uk}}</ref> In 1973, it split into 7:84 ([[England]]) and 7:84 ([[Scotland]]). The English group folded in 1984, having lost its grant from the [[Arts Council of Great Britain]].<ref>{{cite news |url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/scotland/4763110.stm |title=Funding axed for theatre company |work=BBC News|date= 1 March 2006 |access-date=4 April 2017}}</ref> [[Jo Beddoe]] joined the Scottish group as producer in 1988 until 1992;<ref>{{Cite web|last=Bird|first=Charlotte|date=2018-04-12|title=Jo Beddoe obituary|url=http://www.theguardian.com/stage/2018/apr/12/jo-beddoe-obituary|access-date=2021-02-03|website=the Guardian|language=en}}</ref> however, it lost its funding from the [[Scottish Arts Council]] in 2006, though Artistic Director Lorenzo Mele successfully secured funding for a further year from April 2007.<ref>{{cite news |url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/scotland/glasgow_and_west/5292290.stm |title=Reprieve for 7:84 theatre company |work=BBC News |date=28 August 2006 |access-date=4 April 2017}}</ref> He subsequently commissioned a series of four plays, ''Wound'' by Nicola McCartney, ''Eclipse'' by [[Haresh Sharma]], ''A Time To Go'' by Selma Dimitrijevic, and ''Doch-An-Doris (A Parting Drink)'' by Linda McLean. Together, these short plays formed ''Re:Union'', a production which toured Scotland in early 2007. This was followed in September 2007 by [[Raman Mundair]]'s ''The Algebra of Freedom'', which also toured extensively throughout Scotland. This production was directed by 7:84's Associate Director, Jo Ronan, and designed by David Sneddon. |
||
On 31 December 2008, the Scottish company ceased operating, citing "the changing funding structures in Scottish theatre."<ref>Announcement posted at http://www.784theatre.co.uk/. Cached page available https://www.webcitation.org/5pnoU9luB</ref> |
On 31 December 2008, the Scottish company ceased operating, citing "the changing funding structures in Scottish theatre."<ref>Announcement posted at http://www.784theatre.co.uk/. Cached page available https://www.webcitation.org/5pnoU9luB?url=</ref> |
||
==Touring productions== |
==Touring productions== |
||
Line 17: | Line 18: | ||
! Writer |
! Writer |
||
! Date |
! Date |
||
|- id="The Algebra of Freedom" |
|||
|- |
|||
| The Algebra of Freedom |
| The Algebra of Freedom |
||
| Jo Ronan |
| Jo Ronan |
||
| [[Raman Mundair]] |
| [[Raman Mundair]] |
||
| 5 September |
| 5 September – 6 October 2007 |
||
|- id="Re:Union" |
|||
|- |
|||
| Re:Union |
| ''Re:Union'' |
||
| Lorenzo Mele & Jo Ronan |
| Lorenzo Mele & Jo Ronan |
||
| Selma Dimitrijevic, Nicola McCartney, Linda McLean & [[Haresh Sharma]] |
| Selma Dimitrijevic, Nicola McCartney, Linda McLean & [[Haresh Sharma]] |
||
| 11 April |
| 11 April – 5 May 2007 |
||
|- id="Free-Fall" |
|||
|- |
|||
| Free-Fall |
| ''Free-Fall'' |
||
| Lorenzo Mele |
| rowspan="5" | Lorenzo Mele |
||
| Christopher Deans |
| Christopher Deans |
||
| 16 February |
| 16 February – 8 April 2006 |
||
|- id="Borderland" |
|||
|- |
|||
| Borderland |
| ''Borderland'' |
||
| Lorenzo Mele |
|||
| Andrew Doyle |
| Andrew Doyle |
||
| 22 September |
| 22 September – 5 November 2005 |
||
|- id="Tipping Point" |
|||
|- |
|||
| Tipping Point |
| ''Tipping Point'' |
||
| Lorenzo Mele |
|||
| Davey Anderson |
| Davey Anderson |
||
| 6 June |
| 6 June – 3 July 2005 |
||
|- id="Boiling a Frog" |
|||
|- |
|||
| Boiling a Frog |
| ''Boiling a Frog'' |
||
| Lorenzo Mele |
|||
| Christopher Deans (based on the novel by [[Christopher Brookmyre]]) |
| Christopher Deans (based on the novel by [[Christopher Brookmyre]]) |
||
| 3 February |
| 3 February – 2 April 2005 |
||
|- id="Private Agenda" |
|||
|- |
|||
| Private Agenda |
| ''Private Agenda'' |
||
| Lorenzo Mele |
|||
| N/A |
| N/A |
||
| 2 September |
| 2 September – 23 October 2004 |
||
|- id="Reasons to be Cheerful" |
|||
|- |
|||
| Reasons to be Cheerful |
| ''Reasons to be Cheerful'' |
||
| Stuart Davids |
| Stuart Davids |
||
| Martin McCardie |
| Martin McCardie |
||
| 19 February |
| 19 February – 10 April 2004 |
||
|- id="Gilt" |
|||
|- |
|||
| Gilt |
| ''Gilt'' |
||
| Zinnie Harris |
| [[Zinnie Harris]] |
||
| [[Stephen Greenhorn]], [[Rona Munro]] & Isabel Wright |
| [[Stephen Greenhorn]], [[Rona Munro]] & Isabel Wright |
||
| 2 October |
| 2 October – 9 November 2003 |
||
|- id="Can't Pay? Won't Pay!" |
|||
|- |
|||
| Can't Pay? Won't Pay! |
| ''Can't Pay? Won't Pay!'' |
||
| [[Andy Arnold]] |
| [[Andy Arnold]] |
||
| [[Dario Fo]] |
| [[Dario Fo]] |
||
| 6 February |
| 6 February – 22 March 2003 |
||
|- id="Factory Girls" |
|||
|- |
|||
| Factory Girls |
| ''Factory Girls'' |
||
| Guy Hollands |
| Guy Hollands |
||
| [[Frank McGuinness]] |
| [[Frank McGuinness]] |
||
| 3 October |
| 3 October – 9 November 2002 |
||
|- id="Cave Dwellers" |
|||
|- |
|||
| Cave Dwellers |
| ''Cave Dwellers'' |
||
| Gordon Laird |
| rowspan="4" | Gordon Laird |
||
| Nicola McCartney |
| Nicola McCartney |
||
| 14 February |
| 14 February – 23 March 2002 |
||
|- id="The News at When...?" |
|||
|- |
|||
| The News at When...? |
| ''The News at When...?'' |
||
| Gordon Laird |
|||
| N/A |
| N/A |
||
| 23 November |
| 23 November – 22 December 2001 |
||
|- id="Marching On" |
|||
|- |
|||
| Marching On |
| ''Marching On'' |
||
| Gordon Laird |
|||
| [[Gary Mitchell]] |
| [[Gary Mitchell]] |
||
| 29 March |
| 29 March – 12 April 2001 |
||
|- id="A Little Rain" |
|||
|- |
|||
| A Little Rain |
| ''A Little Rain'' |
||
| Gordon Laird |
|||
| Peter Arnott |
| Peter Arnott |
||
| 22 September |
| 22 September – 5 November 2005 |
||
|- id="24 Hours" |
|||
|- |
|||
| 24 Hours |
| ''24 Hours'' |
||
| Iain Reekie |
| rowspan="3" | Iain Reekie |
||
| Frances Corr, [[Deirdre Heddon]], Jess Kerr, Ernie Kyle, Frank Shields, Rhiannon Tise |
| Frances Corr, [[Deirdre Heddon]], Jess Kerr, Ernie Kyle, Frank Shields, Rhiannon Tise |
||
| 16 March |
| 16 March – 22 April 2000 |
||
|- id="Caledonia Dreaming" |
|||
|- |
|||
| Caledonia Dreaming |
| ''Caledonia Dreaming'' |
||
| Iain Reekie |
|||
| [[David Greig (dramatist)|David Greig]] |
| [[David Greig (dramatist)|David Greig]] |
||
| 6 June |
| 6 June – 19 July 1999 and later revived at the 1999 Edinburgh Festival |
||
|- id="Dissent" |
|||
|- |
|||
| Dissent |
| ''Dissent'' |
||
| Iain Reekie |
|||
| [[Stephen Greenhorn]] |
| [[Stephen Greenhorn]] |
||
| 5 November |
| 5 November – 6 December 1998 |
||
|- id="Valley Song" |
|||
|- |
|||
| Valley Song |
| ''Valley Song'' |
||
| Natalie Wilson |
| Natalie Wilson |
||
| [[Athol Fugard]] |
| [[Athol Fugard]] |
||
| 19 May |
| 19 May – 14 June 1998 |
||
|- id="Tongues" |
|||
|- |
|||
| Tongues |
| ''Tongues'' |
||
| Andrew Dawson, John Heraghty, Natalie Wilson |
| Andrew Dawson, John Heraghty, Natalie Wilson |
||
| |
| |
||
| 11–28 February 1997 |
| 11–28 February 1997 |
||
|- id="Angels in America" |
|||
|- |
|||
| [[Angels in America]] |
| ''[[Angels in America]]'' |
||
| Iain Reekie |
| rowspan="2" | Iain Reekie |
||
| [[Tony Kushner]] |
| [[Tony Kushner]] |
||
| 29 March |
| 29 March – May 1996 |
||
|- id="Born Guilty" |
|||
|- |
|||
| Born Guilty |
| ''Born Guilty'' |
||
| Iain Reekie |
|||
| Peter Sirchrovsky |
| Peter Sirchrovsky |
||
| 27 April |
| 27 April – 18 June 1995 |
||
|- id="The Salt Wound" |
|||
|- |
|||
| The Salt Wound |
| ''The Salt Wound'' |
||
| Jim Culleton |
| Jim Culleton |
||
| [[Stephen Greenhorn]] |
| [[Stephen Greenhorn]] |
||
| 21 September |
| 21 September – 5 November 1994 |
||
|- id="The Grapes of Wrath" |
|||
|- |
|||
| [[The Grapes of Wrath]] |
| ''[[The Grapes of Wrath]]'' |
||
| Iain Reekie |
| rowspan="7" | Iain Reekie |
||
| [[Frank Galati]] |
| [[Frank Galati]] |
||
| 25 February |
| 25 February – 1 March 1994 |
||
|- id="Twilight Shift" |
|||
|- |
|||
| Twilight Shift |
| ''Twilight Shift'' |
||
| Iain Reekie |
|||
| [[Jackie Kay]] |
| [[Jackie Kay]] |
||
| 6 October |
| 6 October – 7 November 1993 |
||
|- id="Phoenix" |
|||
|- |
|||
| Phoenix |
| ''Phoenix'' |
||
| Iain Reekie |
|||
| Roy MacGregor |
| Roy MacGregor |
||
| 11 May |
| 11 May – 20 June 1993 |
||
|- id="Sophocles' Antigone" |
|||
|- |
|||
| |
|[[Sophocles]]' ''[[Antigone (Sophocles play)|Antigone]]'' |
||
| Iain Reekie |
|||
| Dan Taylor |
| Dan Taylor |
||
| 23 February |
| 23 February – 27 March 1993 |
||
|- id="The Lament for Arthur Cleary" |
|||
|- |
|||
| The Lament for Arthur Cleary |
| ''The Lament for Arthur Cleary'' |
||
| Iain Reekie |
|||
| [[Dermot Bolger]] |
| [[Dermot Bolger]] |
||
| 14 October |
| 14 October – 21 November 1992 |
||
|- id="Scotland Matters" |
|||
|- |
|||
| Scotland Matters |
| ''Scotland Matters'' |
||
| John Binnie, Iain Heggie, [[Liz Lochhead]], Ann-Marie Di Mambro, Gurmeet Mattu, [[Rona Munro]] & [[Jimmy Reid]] |
|||
| Iain Reekie |
|||
| 12 May – 6 June 1992 |
|||
| John Binnie, Iain Heggie, [[Liz Lochhead]], Ann-Marie Di Mambro, Gurmeet Mattu, [[Rona Munro]] & Jimmy Reid |
|||
|- id="Jump the Life to Come" |
|||
| 12 May - 6 June 1992 |
|||
| ''Jump the Life to Come'' |
|||
|- |
|||
| Jump the Life to Come |
|||
| Iain Reekie |
|||
| [[Noel Greig]] |
| [[Noel Greig]] |
||
| 6 February |
| 6 February – 15 March 1992 |
||
|- id="The Resistible Rise of Arturo Ui" |
|||
|- |
|||
| [[The Resistible Rise of Arturo Ui]] |
| ''[[The Resistible Rise of Arturo Ui]]'' |
||
| Roanna Benn |
| Roanna Benn |
||
| Ralf Manheim / [[Bertolt Brecht]] |
| Ralf Manheim / [[Bertolt Brecht]] |
||
| 4 October |
| 4 October – 4 November 1991 |
||
|- id="Revolting Peasants" |
|||
|- |
|||
| Revolting Peasants |
| ''Revolting Peasants'' |
||
| Gerard Kelly |
| Gerard Kelly |
||
| Patricia Prior |
| [[Patricia Prior]] |
||
| 14 May |
| 14 May – 15 June 1991 |
||
|- id="Bold Girls" |
|||
|- |
|||
| Bold Girls |
| ''Bold Girls'' |
||
| Lynne Parker |
| Lynne Parker |
||
| [[Rona Munro]] |
| [[Rona Munro]] |
||
| 27 September |
| 27 September – 17 November 1990 |
||
|- id="Govan Stories" |
|||
|- |
|||
| Govan Stories |
| ''Govan Stories'' |
||
| Roanna Benn |
| Roanna Benn |
||
| |
| |
||
| 2–25 May 1990 |
| 2–25 May 1990 |
||
|- id="When The Wind Blows" |
|||
|- |
|||
| [[When the Wind Blows (comics)|When The Wind Blows]] |
| ''[[When the Wind Blows (comics)|When The Wind Blows]]'' |
||
| Gerard Kelly |
| [[Gerard Kelly]] |
||
| [[Raymond Briggs]] |
| [[Raymond Briggs]] |
||
| 25 August |
| 25 August – 7 October 1989 |
||
|- id="Road" |
|||
|- |
|||
| Road |
| ''Road'' |
||
| David Hayman |
| [[David Hayman]] |
||
| [[Jim Cartwright]] |
| [[Jim Cartwright]] |
||
| 8 May |
| 8 May – 3 June 1989 |
||
|- id="The Sash" |
|||
|- |
|||
| The Sash |
| ''The Sash'' |
||
| Gerard Kelly |
| Gerard Kelly |
||
| Hector MacMillan |
| Hector MacMillan |
||
| 24 January – 25 April 1989<ref>[http://archive.list.co.uk.s3-website.eu-west-2.amazonaws.com/the-list/1989-01-13/24/index.html Preview of ''The Sash''], ''The List'', Issue 85, 13 - 26 January 1989, p. 22</ref><ref>[http://archive.list.co.uk.s3-website.eu-west-2.amazonaws.com/the-list/1989-02-10/26/index.html Review of ''The Sash'' by Sarah Hemming], ''The List'', Issue 87, 10 - 23 February 1989, p. 24</ref> |
|||
| 24 January - 25 April 1989 |
|||
|- id="Long Story Short" |
|||
|- |
|||
| Long Story Short |
| ''Long Story Short'' |
||
| Finlay Welsh |
| Finlay Welsh |
||
| Donald Campbell, James Graham, Tom Leonard, Aonghas Macneacoil, [[Ann Marie Di Mambro]], Gureet Mattu, Rona Munro, Ricky Ross and Ann Samuel |
| Donald Campbell, James Graham, Tom Leonard, Aonghas Macneacoil, [[Ann Marie Di Mambro]], Gureet Mattu, Rona Munro, Ricky Ross and Ann Samuel |
||
| 28 February |
| 28 February – 31 March 1989 |
||
|- id="No Mean City" |
|||
|- |
|||
| No Mean City |
| ''No Mean City'' |
||
| Alex Norton |
| Alex Norton |
||
| David Hayman |
| David Hayman |
||
| 24 May |
| 24 May – 16 July 1988 |
||
|- id="Mairi Mhor - The Woman from Skye" |
|||
|- |
|||
| |
|''Mairi Mhor - The Woman from Skye'' |
||
| [[John McGrath (playwright)|John McGrath]] |
| [[John McGrath (playwright)|John McGrath]] |
||
| John McGrath |
| John McGrath |
||
| 2 September |
| 2 September – 17 October 1987 |
||
|- id="The Gorbals Story" |
|||
|- |
|||
| The Gorbals Story |
| ''The Gorbals Story'' |
||
| David Hayman |
| David Hayman |
||
| Robert McLeish |
| Robert McLeish |
||
| 6 May |
| 6 May – 20 June 1987 |
||
|- id="There is a Happy Land" |
|||
|- |
|||
| There is a Happy Land |
| ''There is a Happy Land'' |
||
| [[John McGrath (playwright)|John McGrath]] |
| [[John McGrath (playwright)|John McGrath]] |
||
| [[John McGrath (playwright)|John McGrath]] |
| [[John McGrath (playwright)|John McGrath]] |
||
| 25 April |
| 25 April – 7 June 1986 |
||
|- id="Beneath One Banner" |
|||
|- |
|||
| Beneath One Banner |
| ''Beneath One Banner'' |
||
| David Maclennan |
| David Maclennan |
||
| Sean McCarthy |
| Sean McCarthy |
||
| 13 February |
| 13 February – 5 April 1986 |
||
|- id="The Incredible Brechin Beetle Bug" |
|||
|- |
|||
| The Incredible Brechin Beetle Bug |
| ''The Incredible Brechin Beetle Bug'' |
||
| John Haswell |
| rowspan="2" | John Haswell |
||
| Matt McGinn |
| [[Matt McGinn (Scottish songwriter)|Matt McGinn]] |
||
| 3 December |
| 3 December – 16 January 1986 |
||
|- id="High Places" |
|||
|- |
|||
| High Places |
| ''High Places'' |
||
| Ena Lamont Stewart |
|||
| John Haswell |
|||
| 13 March – 16 May 1985 |
|||
| Ena Lamont Stewart |
|||
|- id="The Albannach" |
|||
| 13 March - 16 May 1985 |
|||
| ''The Albannach'' |
|||
|- |
|||
| The Albannach |
|||
| Finlay Welsh |
| Finlay Welsh |
||
| [[John McGrath (playwright)|John McGrath]] |
| [[John McGrath (playwright)|John McGrath]] |
||
| 28 February |
| 28 February – 26 April 1985 |
||
|- id="In Time of Strife" |
|||
|- |
|||
| In Time of Strife |
| ''In Time of Strife'' |
||
| David Hayman |
| David Hayman |
||
| [[Joe Corrie]] |
| [[Joe Corrie]] |
||
| 7 May |
| 7 May – 15 June 1984 |
||
|- id="The Baby and the Bathwater" |
|||
|- |
|||
| The Baby and the Bathwater |
| ''The Baby and the Bathwater'' |
||
| John Haswell |
| John Haswell |
||
| [[John McGrath (playwright)|John McGrath]] |
| [[John McGrath (playwright)|John McGrath]] |
||
| 19 October |
| 19 October – 8 December 1984 |
||
|- id="The Ragged Trousered Philanthropists" |
|||
|- |
|||
| The Ragged Trousered Philanthropists |
| ''The Ragged Trousered Philanthropists'' |
||
| David Hayman |
| David Hayman |
||
| Archie Hind |
| [[Archie Hind]] |
||
| 8 May |
| 8 May – 9 June 1984 |
||
|- id="The Clydebuilt Season" |
|||
|- |
|||
| The Clydebuilt Season |
| '''The Clydebuilt Season''' |
||
| |
| |
||
| |
| |
||
| 10 February |
| 10 February – 15 May 1982 |
||
|- id="Gold in his Boots" |
|||
|- |
|||
| Gold in his Boots |
| ''Gold in his Boots'' |
||
| [[John McGrath (playwright)|John McGrath]] |
| [[John McGrath (playwright)|John McGrath]] |
||
| George Munro |
| George Munro |
||
| |
| |
||
|- id="Johnny Noble" |
|||
|- |
|||
| [[Johnny Noble]] |
| ''[[Johnny Noble]]'' |
||
| David Scase |
| David Scase |
||
| Ewan MacColl |
| [[Ewan MacColl]] |
||
| |
| |
||
|- id="Men Should Weep" |
|||
|- |
|||
| [[Men Should Weep]] |
| ''[[Men Should Weep]]'' |
||
| Giles Havergal |
| [[Giles Havergal]] |
||
| Ena Lamont Stewart |
| [[Ena Lamont Stewart]] |
||
|- id="One Big Blow" |
|||
|- |
|||
| One Big Blow |
| ''One Big Blow'' |
||
| |
| John Burrows |
||
| |
| John Burrows |
||
| 1981 |
| 1981 |
||
|- id="The Catch" |
|||
|- |
|||
| The Catch |
| ''The Catch'' |
||
| [[John McGrath (playwright)|John McGrath]] |
| rowspan="3" | [[John McGrath (playwright)|John McGrath]] |
||
| [[John McGrath (playwright)|John McGrath]] |
| rowspan="4" | [[John McGrath (playwright)|John McGrath]] |
||
| 15 August |
| 15 August – 7 November 1981 |
||
|- id="Blood Red Roses" |
|||
|- |
|||
| Blood Red Roses |
| ''Blood Red Roses'' |
||
| 18 August – 8 November 1980 |
|||
| [[John McGrath (playwright)|John McGrath]] |
|||
|- id="Swings and Roundabouts" |
|||
| [[John McGrath (playwright)|John McGrath]] |
|||
| ''Swings and Roundabouts'' |
|||
| 18 August - 8 November 1980 |
|||
| 26 February - 22 March 1980 |
|||
|- |
|||
|- id="Joe's Drum" |
|||
| Swings and Roundabouts 26th |
|||
| ''Joe's Drum'' |
|||
| [[John McGrath (playwright)|John McGrath]] |
|||
| [[John McGrath (playwright)|John McGrath]] |
|||
| - 22 February March 1980 |
|||
|- |
|||
| Joe's Drum |
|||
| Campbell Morrison |
| Campbell Morrison |
||
| 21 May – 22 June 1979 |
|||
| [[John McGrath (playwright)|John McGrath]] |
|||
|- id="Thought for Today" |
|||
| 21 May - 22 June 1979 |
|||
| ''Thought for Today'' |
|||
|- |
|||
| rowspan="2" | David Maclennan |
|||
| Thought for Today |
|||
| David Maclennan |
|||
| Company collaboration |
| Company collaboration |
||
| 10 February |
| 10 February – 16 March 1977 |
||
|- id="Honour Your Partners" |
|||
|- |
|||
| Honour Your Partners |
| ''Honour Your Partners'' |
||
| David Maclennan |
| David Maclennan |
||
| 27 January – 10 April 1976 |
|||
| David Maclennan |
|||
|- id="Little Red Hen" |
|||
| 27 January - 10 April 1976 |
|||
| ''Little Red Hen'' |
|||
|- |
|||
| colspan="2" rowspan="3" | [[John McGrath (playwright)|John McGrath]] |
|||
| Little Red Hen |
|||
| 16 September – 13 December 1975 |
|||
| [[John McGrath (playwright)|John McGrath]] |
|||
|- id="The Cheviot, the Stag, and the Black Black Oil" |
|||
| [[John McGrath (playwright)|John McGrath]] |
|||
| ''[[The Cheviot, the Stag, and the Black Black Oil]]'' |
|||
| 16 September - 13 December 1975 |
|||
| 31 March – June 1973 |
|||
|- |
|||
|- id="The Game’s a Bogey" |
|||
| [[The Cheviot, the Stag, and the Black Black Oil]] |
|||
| ''The Game’s a Bogey'' |
|||
| [[John McGrath (playwright)|John McGrath]] |
|||
| 1974 |
|||
| [[John McGrath (playwright)|John McGrath]] |
|||
| 31 March - June 1973 |
|||
|- |
|||
|} |
|} |
||
==Notable |
==Notable people== |
||
*Peter Mcbrearty (guitarist) |
*Peter Mcbrearty (guitarist) |
||
*[[Jo Beddoe]] |
|||
* [[Henry Ian Cusick]] |
* [[Henry Ian Cusick]] |
||
*[[Dick Gaughan]] |
*[[Dick Gaughan]] |
||
Line 337: | Line 315: | ||
*[[Douglas Henshall]] |
*[[Douglas Henshall]] |
||
*[[Valerie Lilley]] |
*[[Valerie Lilley]] |
||
* |
*Dolina MacLennan |
||
*[[Steve McNicholas]] |
*[[Steve McNicholas]] |
||
*[[Cathy-Ann McPhee]] |
*[[Cathy-Ann McPhee]] |
||
Line 348: | Line 326: | ||
*[[David Tennant]] |
*[[David Tennant]] |
||
*[[The Flying Pickets]] |
*[[The Flying Pickets]] |
||
* |
*Allan Stuart Ross (fiddle) |
||
==Reviews== |
|||
[[Bill Findlay (writer)|Findlay, Bill]] (1982), review of ''Clydebuilt: A season of Scottish Popular Drama from the '20s, '30s and '40s'', in Hearn, Sheila G. (ed.), ''[[Cencrastus]]'' No. 10, Autumn 1982, p. 39, {{issn|0264-0856}} |
|||
== References == |
== References == |
||
<references/> |
<references/> |
||
{{authority control}} |
|||
==External links== |
|||
[[Category:Theatre companies in Scotland]] |
[[Category:Theatre companies in Scotland]] |
Latest revision as of 15:32, 18 August 2024
7:84 was a Scottish left-wing agitprop theatre group. The name comes from a statistic on distribution of wealth in the United Kingdom, published in The Economist in 1966, that 7% of the population of the UK owned 84% of the country's wealth.
The group was founded by playwright John McGrath, his wife Elizabeth MacLennan and her brother David MacLennan in 1971, and operated throughout Great Britain.[1] In 1973, it split into 7:84 (England) and 7:84 (Scotland). The English group folded in 1984, having lost its grant from the Arts Council of Great Britain.[2] Jo Beddoe joined the Scottish group as producer in 1988 until 1992;[3] however, it lost its funding from the Scottish Arts Council in 2006, though Artistic Director Lorenzo Mele successfully secured funding for a further year from April 2007.[4] He subsequently commissioned a series of four plays, Wound by Nicola McCartney, Eclipse by Haresh Sharma, A Time To Go by Selma Dimitrijevic, and Doch-An-Doris (A Parting Drink) by Linda McLean. Together, these short plays formed Re:Union, a production which toured Scotland in early 2007. This was followed in September 2007 by Raman Mundair's The Algebra of Freedom, which also toured extensively throughout Scotland. This production was directed by 7:84's Associate Director, Jo Ronan, and designed by David Sneddon.
On 31 December 2008, the Scottish company ceased operating, citing "the changing funding structures in Scottish theatre."[5]
Touring productions
[edit]Although much of its work centres on outreach projects throughout Scotland, 7:84 was principally known for its touring productions. The following table contains details of all 7:84's major productions that toured nationally.
Show | Director | Writer | Date |
---|---|---|---|
The Algebra of Freedom | Jo Ronan | Raman Mundair | 5 September – 6 October 2007 |
Re:Union | Lorenzo Mele & Jo Ronan | Selma Dimitrijevic, Nicola McCartney, Linda McLean & Haresh Sharma | 11 April – 5 May 2007 |
Free-Fall | Lorenzo Mele | Christopher Deans | 16 February – 8 April 2006 |
Borderland | Andrew Doyle | 22 September – 5 November 2005 | |
Tipping Point | Davey Anderson | 6 June – 3 July 2005 | |
Boiling a Frog | Christopher Deans (based on the novel by Christopher Brookmyre) | 3 February – 2 April 2005 | |
Private Agenda | N/A | 2 September – 23 October 2004 | |
Reasons to be Cheerful | Stuart Davids | Martin McCardie | 19 February – 10 April 2004 |
Gilt | Zinnie Harris | Stephen Greenhorn, Rona Munro & Isabel Wright | 2 October – 9 November 2003 |
Can't Pay? Won't Pay! | Andy Arnold | Dario Fo | 6 February – 22 March 2003 |
Factory Girls | Guy Hollands | Frank McGuinness | 3 October – 9 November 2002 |
Cave Dwellers | Gordon Laird | Nicola McCartney | 14 February – 23 March 2002 |
The News at When...? | N/A | 23 November – 22 December 2001 | |
Marching On | Gary Mitchell | 29 March – 12 April 2001 | |
A Little Rain | Peter Arnott | 22 September – 5 November 2005 | |
24 Hours | Iain Reekie | Frances Corr, Deirdre Heddon, Jess Kerr, Ernie Kyle, Frank Shields, Rhiannon Tise | 16 March – 22 April 2000 |
Caledonia Dreaming | David Greig | 6 June – 19 July 1999 and later revived at the 1999 Edinburgh Festival | |
Dissent | Stephen Greenhorn | 5 November – 6 December 1998 | |
Valley Song | Natalie Wilson | Athol Fugard | 19 May – 14 June 1998 |
Tongues | Andrew Dawson, John Heraghty, Natalie Wilson | 11–28 February 1997 | |
Angels in America | Iain Reekie | Tony Kushner | 29 March – May 1996 |
Born Guilty | Peter Sirchrovsky | 27 April – 18 June 1995 | |
The Salt Wound | Jim Culleton | Stephen Greenhorn | 21 September – 5 November 1994 |
The Grapes of Wrath | Iain Reekie | Frank Galati | 25 February – 1 March 1994 |
Twilight Shift | Jackie Kay | 6 October – 7 November 1993 | |
Phoenix | Roy MacGregor | 11 May – 20 June 1993 | |
Sophocles' Antigone | Dan Taylor | 23 February – 27 March 1993 | |
The Lament for Arthur Cleary | Dermot Bolger | 14 October – 21 November 1992 | |
Scotland Matters | John Binnie, Iain Heggie, Liz Lochhead, Ann-Marie Di Mambro, Gurmeet Mattu, Rona Munro & Jimmy Reid | 12 May – 6 June 1992 | |
Jump the Life to Come | Noel Greig | 6 February – 15 March 1992 | |
The Resistible Rise of Arturo Ui | Roanna Benn | Ralf Manheim / Bertolt Brecht | 4 October – 4 November 1991 |
Revolting Peasants | Gerard Kelly | Patricia Prior | 14 May – 15 June 1991 |
Bold Girls | Lynne Parker | Rona Munro | 27 September – 17 November 1990 |
Govan Stories | Roanna Benn | 2–25 May 1990 | |
When The Wind Blows | Gerard Kelly | Raymond Briggs | 25 August – 7 October 1989 |
Road | David Hayman | Jim Cartwright | 8 May – 3 June 1989 |
The Sash | Gerard Kelly | Hector MacMillan | 24 January – 25 April 1989[6][7] |
Long Story Short | Finlay Welsh | Donald Campbell, James Graham, Tom Leonard, Aonghas Macneacoil, Ann Marie Di Mambro, Gureet Mattu, Rona Munro, Ricky Ross and Ann Samuel | 28 February – 31 March 1989 |
No Mean City | Alex Norton | David Hayman | 24 May – 16 July 1988 |
Mairi Mhor - The Woman from Skye | John McGrath | John McGrath | 2 September – 17 October 1987 |
The Gorbals Story | David Hayman | Robert McLeish | 6 May – 20 June 1987 |
There is a Happy Land | John McGrath | John McGrath | 25 April – 7 June 1986 |
Beneath One Banner | David Maclennan | Sean McCarthy | 13 February – 5 April 1986 |
The Incredible Brechin Beetle Bug | John Haswell | Matt McGinn | 3 December – 16 January 1986 |
High Places | Ena Lamont Stewart | 13 March – 16 May 1985 | |
The Albannach | Finlay Welsh | John McGrath | 28 February – 26 April 1985 |
In Time of Strife | David Hayman | Joe Corrie | 7 May – 15 June 1984 |
The Baby and the Bathwater | John Haswell | John McGrath | 19 October – 8 December 1984 |
The Ragged Trousered Philanthropists | David Hayman | Archie Hind | 8 May – 9 June 1984 |
The Clydebuilt Season | 10 February – 15 May 1982 | ||
Gold in his Boots | John McGrath | George Munro | |
Johnny Noble | David Scase | Ewan MacColl | |
Men Should Weep | Giles Havergal | Ena Lamont Stewart | |
One Big Blow | John Burrows | John Burrows | 1981 |
The Catch | John McGrath | John McGrath | 15 August – 7 November 1981 |
Blood Red Roses | 18 August – 8 November 1980 | ||
Swings and Roundabouts | 26 February - 22 March 1980 | ||
Joe's Drum | Campbell Morrison | 21 May – 22 June 1979 | |
Thought for Today | David Maclennan | Company collaboration | 10 February – 16 March 1977 |
Honour Your Partners | David Maclennan | 27 January – 10 April 1976 | |
Little Red Hen | John McGrath | 16 September – 13 December 1975 | |
The Cheviot, the Stag, and the Black Black Oil | 31 March – June 1973 | ||
The Game’s a Bogey | 1974 |
Notable people
[edit]- Peter Mcbrearty (guitarist)
- Jo Beddoe
- Henry Ian Cusick
- Dick Gaughan
- Bill Paterson
- David Hayman
- Douglas Henshall
- Valerie Lilley
- Dolina MacLennan
- Steve McNicholas
- Cathy-Ann McPhee
- Hilton McRae
- Alexander Morton
- Peter Mullan
- Alex Norton
- David Paisley
- Laurance Rudic
- David Tennant
- The Flying Pickets
- Allan Stuart Ross (fiddle)
Reviews
[edit]Findlay, Bill (1982), review of Clydebuilt: A season of Scottish Popular Drama from the '20s, '30s and '40s, in Hearn, Sheila G. (ed.), Cencrastus No. 10, Autumn 1982, p. 39, ISSN 0264-0856
References
[edit]- ^ "University of Glasgow Library - Collections - Scottish Theatre Archive". www.gla.ac.uk. Retrieved 9 May 2023.
- ^ "Funding axed for theatre company". BBC News. 1 March 2006. Retrieved 4 April 2017.
- ^ Bird, Charlotte (12 April 2018). "Jo Beddoe obituary". the Guardian. Retrieved 3 February 2021.
- ^ "Reprieve for 7:84 theatre company". BBC News. 28 August 2006. Retrieved 4 April 2017.
- ^ Announcement posted at http://www.784theatre.co.uk/. Cached page available https://www.webcitation.org/5pnoU9luB?url=
- ^ Preview of The Sash, The List, Issue 85, 13 - 26 January 1989, p. 22
- ^ Review of The Sash by Sarah Hemming, The List, Issue 87, 10 - 23 February 1989, p. 24