Summer at the Ramshorn

Published: 4 May 2003
Reporter: Peter Lathan

Glasgow's Ramshorn Theatre, part of the University of Strathclyde, has anounced its summer season:

Thursday 15th - Saturday 17th May @ 8 pm
Bert’s Bilbao Ballroom Band
SHOW ME THE WAY TO THE NEXT WHISKY BAR

Directed by Susan C. Triesman
Musical Direction by Marion Christie

The acclaimed Brecht Cabaret returns to the Ramshorn.
An extraordinary evocation of the great years of cabaret between the wars and beyond, with songs and poetry redolent of revolt and decadence. Bertolt Brecht, Hans Eisler, Kurt Weill, Cole Porter... this is where Surabaya Johnny meets Lili Marlene.

Tickets £8/4 from the Ramshorn

Wednesday 21st - Saturday 24th May @ 8 pm
Pure Productions
SQUIRRELS
by David Mamet

Directed by Iain Kelly and Steven Scott

A hilarious comedy by Pullitzer prize-winning playwright David Mamet.

Young, ambitious writer Edmond takes a job as assistant to Arthur, a once successful scribe who has fallen on hard times. Edmond soon realises Arthur’s erratic work hides his deeply disturbing fascination for small, furry rodents. On top of that, the cleaning lady fancies herself as a bit of a creative spirit. Will Ed survive the insane office he finds himself caught in, or will he too develop an obscene obsession?

Mamet’s play deals with imagination, creativity, the meaning of life and gatherers of nuts in his own unique, sharp, controversial style.

Pure Productions is a new Glasgow-based company.

Tickets £8/4 from Collins Gallery 0141 - 548 2558
or from the Ramshorn

Monday 2 June - Saturday 7 June @ 7.30 pm
Strathclyde Theatre Group
LYSISTRATA - THE SEX STRIKE
by Germaine Greeer, after Aristophanes

Directed by Bruce Downie

The ancient world is gripped in a long and futile war. While the men of Athens fight in a foreign land, the women of Athens can take no more. In secret, they meet with the enemy women and form a pact. The battle moves into the bedroom. No sex for the men - unless the women get peace.

Germaine Greer, the world’s leading feminist raconteur, polemicist and wit, plunders the archetypal story of female resistance. The bullets and the double entendres fly thick and fast; Greer’s satirical eye takes no prisoners . She plays up the class divide between the snobby protesters and the chorus of cleaning women they disdainfully ignore. She heightens the divisions among the militant women and the chauvinist stupidity of the Athenian males who claim ’it’s the menopause makes them crazy like that.’

‘Fast, broad, silly and profound.’ The Independent on Sunday

Tickets: Mon/Tues £5/2.50 Wed - Sat £8/4
from Collins Gallery 0141 548 - 2558

Monday 16 - Saturday 21 June @ 7.30 pm
Strathclyde Theatre Group
COMEDIANS
by Trevor Griffiths

Directed by Susan C. Triesman

Comedians is one of the classics of tthe repertoire from the second half of the 20th century. Its politics and passion still resonate, especially as stand-up comedy has evolved into really big business. A study of the nature of comedy, it works both as a scabrous attack on the racist and sexist humour which passes for comedy in British popular culture, and as an exploration of the radical potential of comedy.

The play begins in the classroom, where a famous old comedian is taking an evening class for stand-up comics. For all of them - the docker, the milkman, the insurance agent, the labourer, the night-club owner and the van driver - success is the means to escape the dreary reality of their lives. This is their final briefing before facing a London agent. When they present their acts for him during bingo night at a club, desperate ambition puts character and integrity in the limelight, to revealing and stunning effect.

Trevor Griffiths created some of the definitive political theatre and TVplays of the period. His outstanding quality as a writer lies in the muscular dialectic of the play’s arguments, and the gritty reality of its characters.

Tickets; Mon/Tues £5/2.50 Wed - Sat £8/4
From the Collins Gallery 0141 - 548 2558

Thursday 26 - Saturday 28 June @ 8 pm
theatre odyssey
JASON - THE QUEST FOR THE GOLDEN FLEECE

Written and performed by Ross Baillie and John J. Taylor

Two men arrrive in the same place, but cannot leave. Some force is keeping them there, and is forcing them to tell some wierd story. A story about the young prince of Iolchus who, thousands of years ago, went on a long odyssey to gain the Golden Fleece and, in doing so, met his future wife, Medea. A story full of love, lust, passion, sex, violence, adventure, revenge, anger, turmoil, centaurs, gods, goddesses, fire-breathing monsters, horrific serpents, golden (yes, Golden) sheep, and other very ‘Greek’ things. Why are these men being forced to tell this strange tale? Are they having the wool pulled over their eyes by some godd or other? Or have they sheepishly arrived at the Ramshorn with ulterior motives?

Taylor and Bailllie appear in this newly-devised production, from the publicly and critically acclaimed arts organisation, theatre odyssey, in its first Glasgow branch.

Tickets: £8/4 From the Collins Gallery 548 2558

Sunday 29 June @ 7.30 pm
Strathclyde Theatre Group

TALES FROM THE WOMEN’S LOCKER ROOM

A special rehearsed reading for new writers: come and give feedback to them at this important stage of their careers

BABY BANK
by Shiona Morton

Pete is a security guard in a Glasgow city hospital. He is 51, recently divorced, and living along. His colleague, Liz, is a nurse in the maternity unit. A government initiative prompts the hospital to set up a Baby Bank, a no-blame facility for mothers who wish safely to give up their new-born babies. Pete is initially unsympathetic, but finds himself unable to remain detached.

Brought up in Troon, Shiona Morton studied Drama at Glasgow University in the mid-70s, and then became a teacher in london. Later, she started writing TIE plays about social issues for Mind Your Head Theatre Company in Bristol. In 2000, she decided to write in less didactic forms and has recently been funded by South West Arts to devlop her work as a playwright. Falling Through, a radio play, will be read at Bristol’s Tobacco Factory in July 2003.

Tickets: £3/2 ffrom the Ramshorn

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