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Quills – sex, satire, and sadism

By on October 1, 2012 | Category: Blog | Comments Off on Quills – sex, satire, and sadism

Quills Second Skin Theatre

As the days shorten and the nights draw in, Second Skin Theatre is courting our darker sides with its production of Doug Wright’s wickedly satirical play

by Sarah Gill, The Hackney Citizen

Monday 1 October 2012

Stoke Newington’s White Rabbit Cocktail Club opens its doors as a theatre venue for the first time this month with Quills, a play re-imagining the last days of the Marquis de Sade told from the cold dungeons of Charenton insane asylum in 1806 France.

We follow the musings of the notorious French aristocrat, armed with nothing but his quill, as he pens tales of the grotesque, the beautiful and the erotic from the confines of his cell. Framed by the cruel repressions of France’s Reign of Terror, the play is a satirical take on personal freedom, passion and state control.

“The issue of censorship, the reason Doug Wright wrote the play originally, is one that will sadly never go away,” says the company’s co-founder and artistic director Andy McQuade. “Hopefully audiences will be in awe of the performances and the script; laugh a lot, jump a lot and leave pondering just how shaky so many of our societal foundations are, whether they purport to be ‘good’ or ‘bad’ or immoral.’

For a libertine that scandalised a nation with his sexual philosophies, pornographic literature and bacchanalian lifestyle, the Marquis de Sade has kept a remarkably low profile in the London theatre scene until now.

But Second Skin has made a name for itself plucking neglected plays out of the rafters and re-working them with intensely atmospheric and provocative performances in quirky theatre spaces.

“The White Rabbit is the perfect setting for our productions: dark, intimate, atmospheric, and full of little nooks and crevices and alcoves. The space inspires the way we stage our productions and sometimes even which plays we choose to produce,” says the company’s creative producer Jessica Ruano.

She says Second Skin’s audience base is swelling in Hackney, and she goes on to describe the rise of small independent theatres and the role they play in developing the local creative community:

“London’s West End is chock full of shows – but I feel like some of the most interesting theatre is found where you wouldn’t expect it: in those intimate spaces that seat only 30 or 40 people, in those obscure areas that are not always accessible by tube, from companies that you may only know through word of mouth,” she says. “Theatre on the fringe – one of London’s gems.”

Theatre-goers are encouraged to stick around for a drink to unwind with the cast and crew afterwards to talk about the experience.

“We really can’t see the point in staging Chekhov or Shakespeare,” says McQuade. “Not because we don’t love those writers but simply because: why bother when they are attended to with clockwork regularity? We believe audiences want to be provoked, have their expectations and beliefs challenged and be encouraged to invest something of themselves in a theatre show. If an audience member ever walked away from a show feeling nothing at all then I would say we’d failed.”

Quills
17 October – 11 November 2012, Wednesday to Sunday
White Rabbit Cocktail Club
125 Stoke Newington Church Street
N16 0UL

Tel: 020 3556 3350 or go to Ticket Web

Quills: Stephen Connery-Brown

By on September 27, 2012 | Category: Blog | Tags: , , | Comments Off on Quills: Stephen Connery-Brown
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Stephen Connery-Brown
trained at East 15 Acting School. With Second Skin Theatre, Stephen played Josefino in “La Chunga” and the Preacher in “Poe: Macabre Resurrections”. Recent stage appearances include “4.48 Psychosis” at the Drayton Theatre, The Man in Catalan playwright Josep M. Benet i Jornet’s UK premiere of “Desig (Desire)” at the White Bear Theatre, and Sir Peter Teazle in Jessica Swale’s production of “A School for Scandal”, and Shylock in a tour of “The Merchant of Venice” for Clockhouse Theatre Company. Other work includes theatre-in-education, corporate videos, commercials, short films and radio.


What is your role in ‘Quills’?
Doctor Royer-Collard.  He is the chief physician at the Charenton Asylum – a smart and very ambitious man, whose authority is severely tested by the Marquis de Sade’s subversive exploits. My approach to the character is to discover the humanity and compassion in him, and use that as a counterpoint against his sometimes cruel and duplicitous actions.

How did you first get involved in theatre?
One of my first jobs was as the sound operator for the pantomime “Aladdin”, and also playing the voice of the Genie of the Ring. Much to the director’s consternation I decided to do the voice using my Paul Lynde impersonation. 
 
What was your first impression of ‘Quills’?
A rollicking good story. I wanted to get to the end to see what happened to all the characters.

“Lust’s passion will be served; it demands, it militates, it tyrannizes”

By on September 18, 2012 | Category: Blog | Comments Off on “Lust’s passion will be served; it demands, it militates, it tyrannizes”

BUY TICKETS NOW: TICKET WEB

Second Skin Theatre opens new theatre venue with Doug Wright’s Quills

Second Skin Theatre’s fifth season opens with Doug Wright’s Obie-award winning play Quills, a re-imagining of the Marquis de Sade’s incarceration at Charenton’s insane asylum. Originally produced in New York City in 1995, this new production of Quills runs from October 17 to November 11, 2012 at the White Rabbit Cocktail Club in Stoke Newington, marking the launch of London’s newest and most intimate theatre venue.

Directed by Second Skin Theatre co-founder Andy McQuade (Best Theatre Director 2012 – Fringe Report), this production explores the delicate and often malleable line between morality and personal freedoms, while satirising the hypocrisy and convenience of censorship, sexuality and cruelty.

France, 1806. The Marquis de Sade, infamous libertine and criminal, sentenced to life in a lunatic asylum, embarks on a mission to record in writing the thoughts and philosophies that have scandalised a whole nation. But his only sword is a quill: his opponents are armed with far deadlier weapons.

Written partially as a response to Wright’s own experiences with government censorship, Quills serves as a reminder of how freedom of speech is as fragile and disposable as quills from centuries past.

SECOND SKIN THEATRE QUILLS CREATIVE TEAM AND CAST

Director…Andy McQuade
Producer…Jessica Ruano

Designed by Mike Lees
Composer Michael Cryne
Lighting Designer Sarah Crocker
Costume Designer Vana Giannoula & Vasiliki Syrma
Lights & Sound Tech Luca Romagnoli
Props Master Kitty Parkinson
Stage Manager Naomi Vandermolen

Marquis de Sade…Peter Glover / Andy McQuade
Abbe de Coulmier…Chris Brown
Doctor Royer-Collard…Stephen Connery-Brown
Renée Pélagie…Lauren Kellegher
Madeleine LeClerc…Nika Khitrova
Monsieur Prouix…Dan Shelton
Madame Royer-Collard…Julia Taylor

Second Skin Theatre’s Quills by Doug Wright plays from October 17 to November 11, Wednesday to Sunday evenings at 7:30pm (7pm Saturdays | 3pm Sat. November 10)  at the White Rabbit Cocktail Club, 125 Stoke Newington Church Street, N16 0UH

Advance tickets: £12/£10 at 020 3556 3350 or ticketweb.co.uk
For all venue enquiries: info@whiterabbitlondon.co.uk | whiterabbitlondon.co.uk

Second Skin on WeFund

By on September 11, 2012 | Category: Blog | Comments Off on Second Skin on WeFund

Second Skin Theatre is on WeFund!

Your contributions will help launch our fifth season and new theatre venue in Stoke Newington. Visit our WeFund account page for more details.

AUDITIONS: QUILLS

By on September 5, 2012 | Category: Blog,Uncategorized | Comments Off on AUDITIONS: QUILLS

Second Skin Theatre opens its fifth season with Doug Wright’s Obie-award winning play ‘Quills’, a re-imagining of the Marquis de Sade’s incarceration at Charenton’s insane asylum. Actors of all ages, backgrounds, and ethnicities are invited to audition.

Please submit a link to your online CV and photo to Jessica Ruano at marketing[at]secondskintheatre.com.

Shortlisted actors will be contacted by the end of the week to arrange an audition date and time.

AUDITIONS: Tues Sept 11 and Wed Sept 12. 1-6pm.
REHEARSALS: from Tues Sept 18, daytimes and evenings (flexible)
PERFORMANCES: October 10 to November 4, Wednesday to Sunday evenings

Down The Rabbit Hole…

By on August 7, 2012 | Category: Blog,Uncategorized | Comments Off on Down The Rabbit Hole…

 Second Skin Theatre – Resident Company at White Rabbit Cocktail Club

Since its inception in 2007, Second Skin Theatre has been an artistic staple in Stoke Newington, having presented spectacular plays in Ryan’s Bar and St. Mary’s Church. Entering its fifth year, the company has found a home at the White Rabbit Cocktail Club.

Co-owners of the White Rabbit Cocktail Club, David Mofford and William Knowles-Mofford, are adapting their thriving nightclub (The Rabbit Hole) to also house a fully-functioning theatre space managed by Second Skin Theatre Artistic Director Andy McQuade.

Second Skin Theatre will announce imminently a full season of cutting-edge drama at the Church Street Theatre, as well as a reading series on the first Wednesday of every month to showcase new work in the style of early twentieth century radio plays.

 

For all White Rabbit venue enquiries, please contact info@whiterabbitlondon.co.uk or call 0203 556 3350 and visit the website http://whiterabbitlondon.co.uk

 

REVIEW: Alain English

By on June 11, 2012 | Category: Shakespeare Inc. articles | Comments Off on REVIEW: Alain English

Shakespeare Inc. 

Friday, March 5, 2010 

It was a pleasure to see “Shakespeare Inc.” in full last night after following it’s progress for a number of weeks. It is remarkable seeing how well the direction, the performances and the play continue to change over rehearsals and performances.

The play tackles the famous Shakespearean authorship question, suggesting that the man from Stratford was not who wrote the plays. It’s done here in a comical but nevertheless plausible way, with two Lord Stanley and Edward De Vere, two aristocrats who can’t publish plays because of their high status, teaming with Christopher Marlowe and Mary Sydney to form the “Shakespeare Inc.” of the title. The man from Stratford, William Shaksper (his change in name is a running gag), is here played as a clueless dolt the company use as a front to disguise their activities. Despite being a farce, this is still an important play and deserves a wide audience.

The set is a well-lit, mix of red and blue that is specific enough to convey the Elizabethan era without compromising the play’s comedic qualities. Andy McQuade said he thought the script was closer in spirit to “Blackadder” and Ben Elton/Richard Curtis-penned sitcoms than Shakespeare, and this is exactly what is conveyed.

As ever, it’s theatre and no two performances are ever quite the same. This was demonstrated to hilarious effect last night. The actors are brilliant and really embody their characters – a solid ensemble of performers. Mention however must be made of the brilliant Filip Krenus and Patrick James, playing Edward De Vere and Lord Stanley respectively. The latter in particular adlibs wonderfully in response to any stimulus – be it police sirens wailing outside the theatre, losing his shoe on-stage or even collapsing sets – “My God, the walls are falling down!”

After the darkness of their award-winning double-bill, this is a welcome change of pace for Second Skin Theatre and a well-directed comic tale of jealousy and intrigue.

REVIEW: The British Theatre Guide

By on June 11, 2012 | Category: Shakespeare Inc. articles | Comments Off on REVIEW: The British Theatre Guide

Shakespeare Inc By Don Fried

Second Skin Theatre at 
Rosemary Branch Theatre

Review by Howard Loxton (2010)

This show is a hoot! There have been a host of theories about who wrote ‘Shakespeare’s’ plays – always assuming that the Stratford lad was incapable of writing them himself – and this is a delicious piece of froth that solves the problem to satisfy all the theorists, for it wasn’t Francis Bacon, an un-dead Christopher Marlowe, the Earl of Oxford or the Earl of Derby (and certainly not Queen Elizabeth, though somehow she gets involved) but it was a camp consortium or conglomerate that involved all of them.

It starts off in the Mermaid Tavern with a not very talented actor (the character, not Corin Rhys Jones who plays him) with a definite Midlands accent, a little broader and it would be Brummagem, attempting to be a poet. ‘A horse, a horse’ he starts a poem about a stable boy whose amorata is a mare. He’s really pretty wet and prissily camp, next to him Christopher Marlowe (Anthony Kernan), trying to steal a drink, is butchly virile despite what you might have heard about him. Marlowe decides to offer his help provided Shagspere, or whatever his name is, foots his bar bill.

Enter a bunch of would be poets and dramatists, intellectual aristos of decidedly lavender persuasion who want a plebeian professional front man for their work. Patrick Jones’s William Stanley, Filip Krenus’s Edward de Vere and later Karl Dobby’s Francis Bacon with arsenic white maquillage are an outrageous, bejewelled and grope-happy bunch who put Shakespeare under contract and, with Marlowe providing the real talent and Mary Sidney, Countess of Pembroke, as researcher, the team turn out a series of literary and dramatic successes in competition with builder’s son Ben Jonson (Tyler Coombes), who puffs a pipe to emphasise his masculinity.

It’s clever, outrageous and very funny. Of course it helps to know your Shakespeare quotes and the real life facts about its characters but it’s great fun even if you don’t. The two young kids in front of me were thoroughly enjoying it and I doubt if they would know their Hero from their Leander. It’s a joie d’esprit that doesn’t bear too close a scrutiny.

When the characters are going grey and Shakespeare has signed up with a rival with less talent it hardly reflects his later plays or the years of his retirement before his somewhat sudden demise and, if you are going to make obviously anachronistic references to Milton and the Garrick Club, then it would be wise to point them up as deliberate and intended to amuse. They are not and they are not funny, but most of this show romps along under Andy McQuade’s direction.

Nika Khitrova has given it a simple Jacobethan set and Valentina Ida contrived some wittily elaborated costumes from modest resources including a regal red-headed Queen Elizabeth (Maggie Turner, who doubles as the Mermaid’s barmaid).

It wasn’t a packed house the night I saw it but the cast were playing it to the hilt and seemed to be enjoying themselves almost as much as the audience. If you want a night out to cheer you up then this could be just what you need.

REVIEW: Remote Goat

By on June 11, 2012 | Category: Shakespeare Inc. articles | Comments Off on REVIEW: Remote Goat

“A farcical comedy of authors”

by Peter Carrington, Remote Goat

May 4, 2010

Shakespeare Inc. is an enjoyable farce with satirical and referential humour. The play transports the audience through the career of the young actor Shakspur and those who ‘helped’ him become a famous writer. All manner of historic figures are present, chiefly Anthony Kernan as Christopher Marlowe, lyrical verse galloping off his tongue, balanced by the camp manner and machivellian schemes of Filip Krenus and Patrick James as Edward De Vere and William Stanley; two noble patrons of the arts.

The play gives an exaggerated but well researched view of the times and the costumes created by Valentina Ida really bring it to life. The design of the whole production is good; the set evokes the time period without overshadowing the space and choice music grounds it. The stage is set then for a great farce.

The tale starts with Shakespeare at the beginning of his career and Marlow at his height then travels through the world of the Elizabethan theatre. Soon enough the play pokes fun at every historical figure of the time, lampooning Sir Francis Bacon (Karl Dobby in cool comedic form), Ben Jonson (an understated Tyler Coombes) as well as Queen Elizabeth I (a well cast Maggie Turner, giving gravitas to the Queen) and turning them all around Shakespeare as a crux for their greed and ambition.

Shakespeare Inc. is funny and referential beyond merely the Elizabethan era. Mostly this works well, but some audiences may find it throws open the fourth wall too far and unlike many comedies there are moments of pure seriousness.

Overall, this farce is still enjoyable to watch, with the great cast overcoming their opening night jitters and sending up the conspiracy of Shakespeare’s authorship with glee.

That playwright states that he wishes the audience to “Learn a little, to be moved a little and to laugh a lot,” and that is accomplished with this superb production that gets the audience bubbling with joy within the theatre and sending them scurrying to wikipedia after they have left.

CALLING ALL PLAYWRIGHTS

By on May 30, 2012 | Category: Blog | Comments Off on CALLING ALL PLAYWRIGHTS

CALLING ALL PLAYWRIGHTS

Second Skin Theatre requests new scripts for an upcoming reading series to be held at the White Rabbit Cocktail Club in Stoke Newington.

We want scripts that are fearless, poetic, provocative, taboo, sensual, full of tension, and unabashedly scandalous. Open to all playwrights from every corner of the globe.

All scripts must adhere to the following items:

– new piece of writing that has never been staged (adaptations are welcome!)

– playing time 20 minutes to 80 minutes (if more than 60 minutes, please allow for an intermission)

– maximum of 5 actors / 10 characters

– text-focused (rather than ‘physical theatre’)

DEADLINE : August 15th at midnight
QUESTIONS AND SUBMISSIONS : mail@secondskintheatre.com

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