Been touring in Cathy for some time, and the play has gone
from strength to strength. We took it to
Edinburgh for the festival where it played for four weeks to pretty much sold out
houses at the Dome Pleasance theatre.
Saw some great theatre while I was there too, including ‘The Nature of
Forgetting’, a physical theatre piece by Theatre Re, punctuated with beautiful
live music, about early onset dementia, which was easily the best show of the
fringe and one of the most compelling and moving theatre I have ever seen. We performed a few more venues in London and
finished in Brighton, having been invited by the Labour Party to perform it at
their conference. The venue was packed and
it felt kind of weird performing in front of famous faces you see daily on TV
and in the media. There followed an
inspirational speech by Andy Burnham about how the Labour Party might tackle
the housing crisis and what his council is trying to achieve in Manchester. Later we were eating fish and chips in a
nearby restaurant and the shadow chancellor, John McDonnell spotted us and came
over to our table for a chat; he had seen the play in Edinburgh and was really
congratulatory, stating how important the play’s message was and how housing
would be top of the agenda should Labour be elected again... had a bit of a
chat about Brexit too; he ensured me Labour would be challenging the Brexit
bill in its various stages. The play
does seem to be touching nerves everywhere its performed, and I myself have a
greater insight into what it is to be homeless through outreach work I have
participated in with Cardboard Citizens, and working with and meeting their
members too; who are truly inspirational people having suffered the indignities
of homelessness and extreme poverty. I
have at one time in my life done quite a bit of sofa surfing in London and even
lived for a while in a squat in Peckham, but I have never suffered the privations
and despair that some of the desperate people I have met recently, and consider
it shocking that families have to endure such terrible circumstances in modern
day Britain. But the bedroom tax,
housing policy, greedy landlords and a seemingly uncaring government whose
recent changes to the benefit system seem to me to be aimed primarily at those
in society who are poor and dispossessed seem to my mind to make life even more
difficult and challenging for those among us who are at the very brink of
despair. I have now begun to write a play
inspired by things I have learnt whilst working on Cathy and inspired by the
amazing people I have met along the way.
I think it’s an important modern day dilemma that deserves our
attention. Of course Ali Taylor’s
fantastic play addresses some of these issues wonderfully, so I am approaching
it from a different point of view; but it’s a massive subject with many, many
disparate stories, and one I feel obliged to tackle.
Monday, 20 November 2017
Sunday, 28 May 2017
Manchester bombing atrocity
The Manchester bombing, deliberately targeting young
children innocently enjoying themselves at a concert is shocking beyond
words. I can’t comprehend how or why
someone could be so cruel and callous, but I was distressed also to hear that Dr.
Naveed Yasin, an orthopaedic surgeon who had spent 48 hours operating on the
injured from that despicable crime was later racially abused in the street,
called a ‘Paki bastard’ and told to go home.
While it is natural to be angry and even furious about what happened on
that tragic day, we should remember that the person who committed this horrific
crime was not a Muslim, but a terrorist, and the majority of Muslim citizens in
this country are as equally appalled by what he did as are the rest of us. I think on the whole the UK is a tolerant
place to live and work, but sadly there are those among us who when events like
this occur will use the occasion to voice their own hateful prejudices... We are all human beings made of the same clay,
bound on the same journey together, sharing the same planet; no single act,
however horrifying and terrible should stand in the way of our unity; together
we are strong, no matter what God we choose to worship or the colour of our
skin. Dr. Yasin was a hero who
relentlessly battled to save the life of those injured on that fateful day, and
Manchester is his home, England his country.
Friday, 17 March 2017
Cathy at the House of Lords
Cathy
tour is now over, and it’s been quite an experience as we performed not only in
theatres, but homeless hostels and many prisons too, including Wormwood Scrubs
and Pentonville and the inmates there were amazing; wonderfully welcoming and
keen to share their own life experiences with us. The very last gig a few weeks ago I think
reflects the diverse venues we have been touring to, as we were invited to
perform the play at the House of Lords as part of an evening reception for the ‘Homes
for Cathy’ charity. Again the people
there were moved by the play and we were made very welcome by the Lords and MP’s
who had attended the event, and were later invited to ‘Strangers Bar’ for a few
late drinks by the labour shadow housing minister, John Healey. Can’t believe it’s all over; it was difficult
to say goodbye to the cast and crew after so long, but a fantastic final outing
for Cathy, and what a privilege to have been a part of it all. Here’s
some picture of the event – the cast and crew and John Healey too!
Monday, 6 March 2017
A couple of breaks!
There was a break in the tour of ‘Cathy’ during December when I
unfortunately had a second break! During
a drunken moment at a local party I accepted a challenge to arm wrestle;
something I’ve done a few times with varying success... however this time things
didn’t go quite as planned and I ended up with a rather nasty broken arm – see picture! Well of course it was my own stupid fault for
taking part in the first place, but also rather stupidly I was kneeling at the
table, so my opponent had a bit of an advantage and was always gonna beat
me. I felt things weren’t going well and
was just about to call time on the whole endeavour when I heard a sickening
crack and my arm was suddenly limp and was dangling in a pretty alarming
manner. The pain was excruciating, so an
ambulance was called and off I went to hospital. My first thought was ‘will I still be able to
perform in the show in a few weeks time’, and with the aid of a sling which I
wore for the first scene, thankfully the tour carried on and I didn’t let
anyone down. However, a few weeks later
we were visiting a night club in Manchester after a late show and it had been
snowing and the steps down to the entrance were wet and I slipped and fell on
my arm and broke it again! My arm is on
the mend though now, but not quite so well knit together as I would have
hoped. But as you can see from the
picture there is evidence of another break from some years previous – a metal
plate, seven screws and six pieces of wire in my elbow from an injury on a
building site where I was labouring. I’m
always doing stuff like this and Sarah remarked that life with me is never
dull... Got to be more sensible in future though... but I did arm wrestle in my
local pub with my left arm recently and won too!
Monday, 7 November 2016
Acting again!
I’m treading the
boards again! Touring in Cardboard
Citizens production of Cathy. Been a
while, but auditioned a month or so ago for this wonderfully powerful play by Ali
Taylor which addresses many current issues regarding homelessness. I’m playing five different roles and had a
week to learn them before opening at the Pleasance Theatre in London as the
previous actor had fallen ill and was unable to carry on... A bit nerve-wracking the first few nights,
but all is going well and I’m really enjoying acting once more. We have also been playing at hostels and a
woman’s prison, meeting some incredible people whose lives are sometimes sadly
mirrored somewhat in the play. We do a
thing called ‘forum theatre’ afterwards involving the audience directly in
decisions which the main character may have made to change her history; a
unique theatrical technique I have never done before, but which really gets
ideas and passions flowing. Below are
links to Cardboard Citizens and ‘Cathy’.
It’s quite an extensive tour if you can catch it...
Book now for our brand new Forum Theatre piece Cathy, on tour until Feb 2017. Written by award-winning playwright Ali Taylor and directed by Adrian Jackson, this powerful, interactive piece explores resonances with Ken Loach’s Cathy Come Home to offer a timely reflection on the impact of spiralling housing costs, gentrification and the challenges of the forced relocation away from London.
Click here to book now and join the conversation on Twitter using
Thursday, 23 June 2016
The tragic case of Ellie Butler
The recent traumatic and devastating case of Ellie Butler, a six year
old girl who was murdered by her father is something I find very disturbing;
particularly as the trial judge exonerated him from a previous offence of
shaking and injuring her as a small baby, and then after spending most of her
life in the tender care of her grandparents she was handed over to a man and
woman she barely knew. I work as a carer
in children’s homes with kids some who have been
physically and sexually abused, and at the moment I am working with a very
challenging ten year old girl whose parents were nothing short of monsters; the
abuse she and her nine siblings suffered at the hands of their parents is
something that will probably scar them emotionally for the rest of their lives,
and the thought of this poor girl being sent back to the very people who did
such terrible things to her fills me with horror. Yet this is exactly what happened to
Ellie. Her grandfather has been speaking
in the media about it recently, of how he and his late wife fought tooth and
nail to keep her with them, but were basically told they were interfering with
judicial procedures and warned to back off.
At the end of her life when her grandfather last saw her, Ellie was
covered in bruises and was withdrawn and quiet... a few days later she was
dead, and Ellie’s own mother
colluded to cover up the murder. We are
only carers, but the work we do is the stuff no one really hears about, and
believe me life in a children’s
home is nothing like Tracy Beaker. We
work for minimum wage with complex kids who for various reasons cannot be
fostered or adopted, and sometimes I do feel their needs are not properly
supported by the agencies and social workers who should have their best
interests at heart... a point sadly proved by Ellie Butler’s tragic story.
Wednesday, 9 March 2016
BBC Audio Drama Award
Last year I was involved as an actor in an online drama called The Kindness of Time, which recently won BBC Audio Drama Award 2016. If you’d like to listen, here’s a link to the site: http://www.rosieboulton.co.uk/
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