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    • Home
    • PAST SHOWS
      • CHEKHOVS SHORTS
      • 1001 NIGHTS UK TOUR
      • CHEKHOV'S SHORTS UK TOUR
      • CHEKHOV'S SHORTS R&D
      • THE TEMPEST EUROPEAN TOUR
      • FRANKENSTEIN UK TOUR
      • THE GREAT GATSBY UK TOUR
      • NOT ABOUT HEROES UK TOUR
      • THE IMPERFECT PEARL
      • WEST SIDE STORY
      • DRACULA UK TOUR
      • KNACKERMAN
      • BAROQUE AROUND THE BLOCK
      • MONTEVERDIS FLYING CIRCUS
    • ACTING & DIRECTING
      • BIOG & PHOTO GALLERY
      • HEADSHOTS
      • DIRECTING CV
      • CAPT CORELLI'S MANDOLIN
      • THE TEMPEST
      • THE BEEKEEPER
    • AUDIO
    • CORPORATE
    • BLOG
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EN

  • Home
  • PAST SHOWS
    • CHEKHOVS SHORTS
    • 1001 NIGHTS UK TOUR
    • CHEKHOV'S SHORTS UK TOUR
    • CHEKHOV'S SHORTS R&D
    • THE TEMPEST EUROPEAN TOUR
    • FRANKENSTEIN UK TOUR
    • THE GREAT GATSBY UK TOUR
    • NOT ABOUT HEROES UK TOUR
    • THE IMPERFECT PEARL
    • WEST SIDE STORY
    • DRACULA UK TOUR
    • KNACKERMAN
    • BAROQUE AROUND THE BLOCK
    • MONTEVERDIS FLYING CIRCUS
  • ACTING & DIRECTING
    • BIOG & PHOTO GALLERY
    • HEADSHOTS
    • DIRECTING CV
    • CAPT CORELLI'S MANDOLIN
    • THE TEMPEST
    • THE BEEKEEPER
  • AUDIO
  • CORPORATE
  • BLOG
  • CONTACT
Dragonboy Productions

CAST AND CREATIVES

Eliot Giuralarocca - adaptor, performer, director

Eliot Giuralarocca - adaptor, performer, director

Eliot Giuralarocca - adaptor, performer, director

Elizabeth Snegir - Performer

Eliot Giuralarocca - adaptor, performer, director

Eliot Giuralarocca - adaptor, performer, director

Graeme Dalling - Performer

Eliot Giuralarocca - adaptor, performer, director

Graeme Dalling - Performer

Verity Bajoria - Performer

Eliot Giuralarocca - adaptor, performer, director

Graeme Dalling - Performer

Claire Childs - Lighting Designer and TSM

Claire Childs - Lighting Designer and TSM

Claire Childs - Lighting Designer and TSM

Chris Agha - Performer

Claire Childs - Lighting Designer and TSM

Claire Childs - Lighting Designer and TSM

Samantha Warner - Production Design

Claire Childs - Lighting Designer and TSM

Samantha Warner - Production Design

Tom Neill - Original Music

Claire Childs - Lighting Designer and TSM

Samantha Warner - Production Design


Chekhov is one of the great writers of the 20th Century and these tales, adapted and directed by Eliot Giuralarocca remain as memorable and bracing as jumping into a cold plunge pool after a hot sauna!


Performed by a company of five actor/musicians and featuring original live music and the stylish ensemble story-telling that Dragonboy Productions have become known for, In and Out of Chekhov’s Shorts is a fun and exhilarating romp through some of the best of Chekhov’s short stories including The Lady with the Little Dog, The Chemist’s Wife, At a Summer Villa, An Avenger and The Bear.


Director Eliot Giuralarocca said


These wonderful hymns to the absurdity of everyday life, are by turns hilarious, romantic, poignant, odd and memorable. They hold the mirror up to the half-comic, half-painful experience of love and relationships and create a world in which the tender and the grotesque are inextricably linked. Ludicrous situations and larger than life characters abound in an evening that simply cannot be missed...

We’re delighted to be bringing this work to the Southwark Playhouse and very much hope that you’ll join us there


TICKETS & PERFORMANCES

Tue 19 March, 7.30pm

Wed 20 March, 7.30pm

Thu 21 March, 7.30pm

Fri 22 March, 7.30pm

Sat 23 March, 3pm and 7.30pm


Standard £25, Concessions £20, Pioneers Preview (19 Mar) £10 

Running time 1 hour 45 hours plus interval

Recommended for age 11+ 

#ChekhovShorts


SOUTHWARK PLAYHOUSE BOROUGH 

Theatre : The Large : 19th-23rd March


DIRECTIONS

77-85 Newington Causeway, London SE1 6BD

Closest Tube Station: Elephant & Castle (Northern Line & Bakerloo Line) : Take the London Southbank University exit.

Click link for map & directions: https://w3w.co/spicy.nature.slang


SOUTHWARK PLAYHOUSE

Southwark Playhouse is a registered charity that delivers a year-round programme of entertaining and enriching work. Southwark Playhouse operates two separate venues ‘Southwark Playhouse Borough’ and its newest theatre ‘Southwark Playhouse Elephant’ which opened in January 2023. Southwark Playhouse has always prided itself in telling stories and inspiring the next generation of storytellers and theatre makers, where support for the community has been rooted at the core of the organisation.


Website: southwarkplayhouse.co.uk

X: @swkplay Facebook: SouthwarkPlayhouse

Instagram: @swkplay TikTok: swkplay YouTube: southwarkplayhouse

⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️ FRINGE REVIEW In and Out of Chekhov's Shorts | Southwark Playhouse

A five-strong musical gypsy band rove Russia performing five Chekhov short stories. Eliot Giuralrocca’s adaptation editing and directing In and Out of Chekhov’s Shorts delivers the earthiest of Chekhovian tangs at the Southwark Borough Large for the briefest of revivals. 


This tour really ought to continue though. It’s outstanding and revelatory. Five stories, refracted through music and Victoria Spearing’s superbly stylised portable set. A piano with a dust sheet hiding its function, two barrels and a plank for a seat, a range of brilliantly stylised props. 


But it’s the actors who become the biggest ones, and this ensemble are in complete synch in prop-and-prat-falls: it’s theatrical platinum. A husband in memory pops up in a picture frame, a black-cloth-beheaded actor becomes an inkstand, or swivels as a door with a shop-bell on it. 


Everything’s as kinetic, engrossing visually and aurally. Nothing of Chekhovian ennui here: it’s like fire seen through a vodka bottle. Claire Childs’ lighting suggests that too, sometimes red, a glowing book at one point. 


Chekhov’s inherently dramatic tragi-comic stories, often acclaimed the world’s finest, aren’t his plays. They’re different in temper, kind, even class: more peasants and poor people throng them. There’s primary colours and broader comedy. They’re more intimate, telegraphic, more  story, less nuanced dialogue and more twist: uniquely poised on the cusp  of change. In unfulfilled lives, thwarted women and men glimpse – through brief joy in adultery and love-affairs, drink – a larger, possible being. 


So forget Trevor Nunn’s magnificent Uncle Vanya currently at the Orange Tree. If anything, Andrew Scott’s Vanya enjoys kinship here. Five unrelated stories connected in one arc from  youth to experience through premature cynicism. And one story is masquerading. 


The Chemist’s Wife features Elizabeth Snegir, a young wife married to a man she doesn’t love: “God how unhappy I am, and nobody  knows” is a Chekhov signature tune. Soon an army doctor Graeme Dalling, and his companion Chris Agha who’ve noticed how attractive the young  woman is, make an excuse to enter the shop whilst the chemist sleeps. Soon they’re flirting and singing, consuming the purchased drink with her. But can it last? 


It’s quietly heartbreaking. The moment the young wife, with the husband woken, lets fly a note out of the window immediately taken up is one of those breathtaking pieces of theatre: a love note? It is, but not from her, and it is, but it isn’t. We’re into the second story, At a Summer Villa, and Giuralrocca’s cleverly reworked tiny details to suggest a kind of DNA through the tales if the same people experience things in a parallel universe or different time. It’s subtle too, doesn’t need taking literally. 


Subtlety isn’t the hallmark in this tale though, but hilarious guile. Verity Bajoria as the irritated eight-years-wife of Dalling’s Pavel Ivanitch might know more than she lets on when he receives a mysterious  note, perhaps from that same young woman in a blue beret (take from the next story), trilling a flute. Snegir again. But Pavel’s brother-in-law Mitya (Agha) turns up to the tryst too. The denouement’s abruptly comic. 


The cores of Giuralrocca’s work though are the third story and fifth piece, actually a short play. The Lady with a Little Dog is split over the interval, relating the attraction and lazy seduction by  Giuralrocca’s Gurov, pushing 40, of Sengir’s 22-year-old Anna Sergeyevna. It becomes significantly more. After their brief affair Gurov follows her to her home town. 


It’s beautifully realised between the actors, Snegir’s ardent impulsiveness and drawing-back, Giuralrocca’s easy seduction crumbling in the face of real passion, as each contemplates what to do about their unhappy marriages. 


An Avenger involves most of all Dalling’s shopkeeper desperately trying to sell cuckolded husband Sigaev (Agha) the right pistol to kill his wife and her lover – Snegir and Giuralrocca -who obligingly repeat their sexual excesses on rewind every time he contemplates who to kill. And the pistols? They’re all bound twigs. 


Ultimately though it’s Dalling’s magnificent frustration trying to push Agha to the supreme Smith and Wesson and the denouement, that’s the killer here. Dalling’s reserves of comedic energy and micro-inflection seem boundless. 


The Bear, a short play almost as long as The Lady, doesn’t need much adapting, and is often played (it’s even a one-act 1967 opera by Walton). Despite this it has more in common with the  stories and is quite early. 


Barjora’s a young widow Elena Popova, who refuses to see anyone after her faithless husband’s death. But Giuralrocca’s Smirnov’s arrived with a 1200 rouble IOU from her husband she must pay back, and it ends with  pistols (cue the Smith and Wesson repeater joke). The rest of the cast (Agha’s servant Luka) are brought in, ordered to fed the horses another bag of oats, or none at all. And Smirnov has the oats. 


Tom Neill’s musical adaptations mean actors play double or triple  instruments over the five stories, Snegir is a fine flautist,  accordion-player, and consummate pianist, in the shrouded piano that Bajoria mostly plays with thrilling octaves (more on that later too), when not whirling on the violin or guitar. There’s Dalling’s folksy clarinet too. 


Neill’s tangy adaptations take from several folk sources including  the famous ‘Kalinka’, some Pushkin settings and rare Glinka. But most of all in The Lady and the Little Dog there’s Aleksandrovina  Kashperova (1872-1940), Stravinsky’s teacher whose late-romantic works are being rediscovered: her Piano Trio and two Cello Sonatas are regularly played. Here there’s her Piano Suite In Nature’s Realm refracted mainly through piano, but echoed hauntingly elsewhere. 


Dalling’s the most protean of the ensemble, given roles where he shapeshifts and riffs on exaggerated despair or exasperation: but all are superb. That’s whether it’s Barjora’s humorous realism and self-defeating fury at her own desire; Agha’s stentorian roars the most physically imposing and yet blindsided; the pathos yet burning desire for something better in Snegir who yet brings twirls of humour; or writer/director Giuralrocca and his reflective characters measured by how far they question their own cynicism. 


This is outstanding. It reframes Chekhov, renders his stories as cousins not siblings of his plays, The Bear and other early shorts excepted. And in a fluidity of new connections  renders them kin. After this, there’s no other way to tell Chekhov dramatically that he’s not already nailed down in a play himself. Chekhov would have loved it. 


Published March 24, 2024 by Simon Jenner



⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️  ADVENTURES IN THEATRELAND


Eliot Giuralarocca’s In and Out of Chekhov’s Shorts is a highly creative, ensemble led production that uses live music and innovative storytelling devices to plunge the audience into the very heartfelt and hilarious stories of Chekhov’s men and women. 


The humour of Chekhov’s writing is brought out with skilled ability and timing by all of the cast, which although has the audience laughing in aplomb, also rings very true. Tales of love, sex and fights between the genders all unravel over two hours which fly by. 


The cast should be commended for performing Russian characters with bold temperaments, and not doing what British theatre so often does with Chekhov by anglicising the behaviour. Chris Agha and Graeme Dalling work marvellously as a comedic duo in the first story ‘The Chemist’s Wife’, which culminates in an effectively joyful and randy rendition of ‘Kalinka’. ‘The Lady with the Dog’ follows, which is performed with depth and subtlety by Elisabeth Snegir and Eliot Giuralarocca who bring the romance to life. Verity Bajoria has great musical flair and shines in the final story ‘The Bear’ with dry humour and steely eyes. Through cleverly linking these short stories, Giuralarocca reveals the great theatrical potential that they pose. 


Strong atmospheres are created by the cast who effortlessly manoeuvre between musical instruments to create a clever live underscore, and there is creative use of minimal props and set. At one point a letter flutters by on a branch as a bird in flight, thrown into the air by a woman hidden behind a wooden frame to symbolise a window. Victoria Spearing’s brilliant set is memorable and provides a playground in which the cast are able to create such vivid scenes. The evening is filled with creative moments like this, where Dragonboy Theatre shines through with their intelligent and unique creative vision. 


This is a company to watch out for and hopefully, they will be back soon with more.



⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️  THE PLAY'S THE THING


For five performances only (sadly this not a full run), Dragonboy  Productions have produced this adventurous adaption of five Chekov short  stories: The Lady with the Little Dog, The Chemist’s Wife, At a Summer Villa, An Avenger and The Bear.  


Eliot Giuralarocca has skilfully adapted and directed these five  stories. A brilliant cast of five, including Giuralarocca himself, give  the stories a dynamic, farcical structure which plays brilliantly in the  large space at Southwark Playhouse 


The stage is sparse. The premise is that this is a group of Russian  travelling performers. Nothing is naturalistic. Instead, small props are  used to indicate doorways, windows, and so forth. Impressively, all sound effects are also live and analogue; nothing is pre-recorded. eautifully incorporated throughout, most of the pieces include the cast  singing Russian folk songs. Elisabeth Snegir in particular sings  beautifully in Russian. Each of the actors ends up playing multiple  characters throughout each of the stories as well as each playing  musical instruments to accompany the songs. One criticism is that the  singing isn’t used consistently throughout all the stories, which is a  pity as they’re brilliantly performed. 


It’s a show that makes huge demands of the cast, and they all perform to the highest standard. At a post-show Q&A, it is revealed that two  of the cast members only had ten days to learn the entire show.  Amazingly, I don’t think anyone could tell which two of the performers they were. 


What’s most refreshing about this adaptation is that Giuralarocca has been faithful to Chekhov without being deferential to him. This adaptation brings out the farce in Chekhov’s writing, and the strong emotional neuroses of the characters. Some British productions in the past have been guilty of taking his plays too seriously, but this is a very enjoyable evening of escapist fun. 


I look forward to seeing more of  this company’s work in the future

 

THERE OUGHT TO BE CLOWNS


In and Out of Chekhov’s Shorts offers a playfully different take on the Russian playwright at Southwark Playhouse 


"God how unhappy I am, and nobody knows." In and Out of Chekhov's Shorts certainly has a great title but presented here by Dragonboy Productions, it also has a unique take on the great Russian dramatist. Adapted by Eliot Giuralarocca, this collection of five short stories has been structured into a single experience, a group of Russian travelling players gathered for our pleasure and bringing a lightness to this Chekhovian world that we don’t often get to see in his plays.


That’s not to say that we’re looking at Chekhov’s stand-up era here. The people who populate The Lady with the Little Dog, The Chemist’s Wife, At a Summer Villa, An Avenger and The Bear are entirely recognisable in their endless ennui and vexation at life. But Giuralarocca, who also directs, increasingly focuses on the farce of it all, never letting the neurotic behaviour be taken too seriously as  he subtly links the tales as all different facets of the human  experience.


Using an actor musician company of five proves a canny move. Chris Agha, Verity Bajoria, Graeme Dalling, Elisabeth Snegir and Giuralarocca  who performs on top of all his other roles relish the opportunity to  both multi-role across all the stories but also to carry some of those  characters from one to the other, creating connective tissue across the  show. The script sometimes has its challenges as it seeks to meld  dialogue and narration with some heavy-duty monologuing but they pretty much sell it.


The real joy comes through Tom Neill’s original songs, drawing deeply  from the well of Russian folk traditions. Not only are they covering  multiple roles but the company also play multiple instruments, bringing  in clarinet, accordion, flute, fiddle, guitar and more alongside some  cracking piano playing and stunning choral work to really flesh out the  complex emotional worlds underscoring the storytelling here. 



⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐ Short stories like never before...Heartwarming, humorous, lyrical and utterly delightful...A Celebration of life's unpredictability. Not one to miss! VISIT LEEDS


⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐ A beautifully interweaving set of fleeting tales. ALWAYS TIME FOR THEATRES


⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️ Exhilarating, fun and accessible with an absolutely joyful playfulness, the production sparkles with wonderful touches DORSET ECHO


⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️ Compelling, original..funny..it flows along like a well oiled machine. 

SARDINES MAGAZINE


⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️  Bravo!...The cast played a blinder..What a witty whip-smart production this is. 

THE GREENWICH VISITOR


⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️ Unusual artistic cohesion...complex and very skillfully thought out. THE STAGE


PRODUCTION SHOTS

REHEARSAL SHOTS

REHEARSAL SHOTS
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In and Out of Chekhov's Shorts at Southwark Playhouse

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Eliot Giuralarocca - Writer, Performer and Director

After studying for a degree in English Language and Literature at Christ Church, Oxford, Eliot trained as an actor at the Guildford School of Acting. Over the past 30 years he has worked as an actor in Theatre, Film, T.V. and Opera while also creating his own work, devising and developing projects as a Theatre-maker and working as a freelance Theatre Director. As Artistic Director of Dragonboy Productions, he brings this experience together to focus on creating and developing new work for the theatre.


Recent work for Dragonboy Productions includes In and Out of Chekhov’s Shorts, which he adapted from some of the best of Anton Chekhov’s short stories. Eliot performed in and directed the show which toured to 27 theatres across the country before enjoying a short and critically acclaimed run at Southwark Playhouse where the production was awarded an OffComm. He wrote and directed Tales from a Thousand and One Nights which toured nationally and prior to this, Eliot played the role of Prospero in The Tempest - which he adapted and created with the Spanish company, Le Tendre Amour. The show opened the International Festival of Theatre in Malaga and subsequently played in France at the Théâtre de L'Oulle, Avignon and the Palace of Versailles as part of Festival Mois Moliere. It was performed at the Abbaye de Neumünster in Luxembourg as part of the British Council's Shakespeare Lives programme and at the International festival of theatre in Alaca, Madrid, the Teatro Real Coliseium Carlos III in El Escorial, the Auditori l´Atlàntida in Vic and at the Auditori Sant Cugat in Barcelona. The production was subsequently nominated for the Gran Premio de España de Artes Escénicas. 


Other acting credits include William Hawkins in The Hamlet Voyage (Bristol Harbour Festival/Bridewell Theatre), Witness for the Prosecution (London County Hall), Captain Corelli’s Mandolin, (Harold Pinter Theatre, West End and tour), playing the title role in The Beekeeper (Blackeyed Theatre/Waterloo East) for which he received an OFFIE Best Actor nomination, Alice in Wonderland (Guildford Shakespeare Company), Alarms and Excursions (Chipping Norton), The Resistible Rise of Arturo Ui (Liverpool Playhouse Nottingham Playhouse), Il Turco In Italia (Royal Opera House); Measure for Measure (Thelma Holt Productions); A Small Family Business(Watford Palace Theatre); Don’t Look Now (Lyric Hammersmith); The Comedy of Errors, Titus Andronicus (Shakespeare's Globe); Twelfth Night (Royal Exchange Manchester); Rosencrantz & Guildenstern are Dead, Horse & Carriage (West Yorkshire Playhouse); The Black Dahlia, Buried Alive, The Cherry Orchard, Demons and Dybbuks (Method & Madness); A Midsummer Night's Dream (Nuffield Theatre Southampton); The Government Inspector (Salisbury Playhouse); Man for Hire (Stephen Joseph Theatre Scarborough); The Lion the Witch & the Wardrobe (Library Theatre Manchester); Oxygen (Tricycle Theatre).


TV work includes Mind Games (ITV) and Egypt (S4C) and Film work includes Slow Horses (Apple TV) Nine (Lucamar/ Weinstein); Night Swimming (Tri-Star); DIY Hard (British Film Foundation); Cake (Subrosa Films); The Security Control Room (Pukka Films)


Eliot directed Blackeyed Theatre's productions of Frankenstein, (which won the IKE Award for outstanding theatre), The Great Gatsby, Dracula and Not About Heroes, all of which toured nationally. For Armonico Consort he directed Baroque Around the Block and Monteverdi's Flying Circusas well as a production of West Side Story that played at the Belgrade Theatre, Coventry. Other directing credits include The Imperfect Pearl for Latimer Productions about the life of the Baroque composer Domenico Zipoli, the world premier of Knackerman by Rosanna Negrotti (White Bear Theatre) and Stephen Sharkey’s minaturist piece Retrospective (Arcola Theatre).


What was you first role and what first attracted you to theatre?

My Archangel Gabriel in the School Nativity play, aged 5 was, I’m reliably informed, a sight to behold. I think I probably realised from an early age that acting was something you could do to show off without getting into trouble! I also had a really inspiring English teacher at school - Dave Smith - who suggested that I audition for the National Youth Theatre. I did audition, got a place and had a wonderful summer performing and after that there was no looking back.


What shows and performances have you most enjoyed?

As a young actor, Complicite’s The Street of Crocodiles and Phelim McDermott and Julian Crouch’s Shockheaded Peter were productions that blew me away and changed my perceptions of what theatre could achieve. In the last few years, Conor McPherson’s Girl from the North Country and the Old Vic production of Fanny and Alexander were both stunning productions while The Inheritance by Mathew Lopez was a tour de force that I felt grateful to have seen.


What has been the biggest challenge in your career to date?

As a young actor, playing Bucky Bleichert in Mike Alfred’s production of The Black Dahlia was a huge challenge. It was a wonderful rollercoaster of a role; 2.5 hours on stage without an exit. Waiting in the wings on the first night was probably the most nervous I’ve ever been! Getting used to the physical and mental stamina of performing that role every night of the week and week in-week out was a challenge that I relished.


What do you enjoy most about your job?

I love the fun, the camaraderie and the friendships that are forged and the fact that no two days are ever the same. The life of an actor or a director is always a series of ups and downs. I believe the trick is to relish and embrace that sense of unpredictability rather than dread it! I love the process and challenge of creating a piece of theatre and being challenged by others to do that as well as possible. It keeps you young or at least allows you to cling on to the illusion that you are still young! Being around talented, passionate and creative people is good for the soul. In many ways acting isn’t really a job for grown-ups at all. But it is fun. I’ve also been very lucky to have been able to travel and perform in different countries around the world as well as visiting towns and cities the length and breadth of the UK. Being paid to do that still feels like a privilege.


If you could pick any theatre company to work with on your next project which would it be?

I’ve had the great good fortune to have performed at Shakespeare’s Globe as an actor. I adore Shakespeare so if I could wave a wand I’d love to act there again or direct a show there; there’s something about the space with the actors sharing the same light as the audience that just has a bit of magic about it.


Which director do you most respect?

I hope I’ve learned something from everyone I've worked for, but I'd say that Mike Alfreds was an important influence on my directing work. I had the good fortune to work with him for a couple of years as an actor in his Method and Madness company and learned a great deal about the rigours of Directing and the mechanics and techniques of storytelling and narration.


What ambitions do you have?

I think my ambition has always been the same; to do good work with good people. Everything and anything else flows from that really.


If you weren’t an actor and a director what job would you like to do?

I’ve spent at least 35 years pondering this very question! I haven’t come up with an answer yet which is probably why I’m still doing it!

Interview with Adaptor & Director, Eliot Giuralarocca

Tell us about your production, In and Out of Chekhov's Shorts

In and Out of Chekhov’s Shorts brings to life some of Anton Chekhov’s celebrated short stories. I wanted to create a dynamic, exhilarating piece of theatre, with original live music and presented in a style that celebrates and relishes the theatricality of storytelling itself. I started working on adapting these by thinking of them as a bit like folk tales to be spoken aloud as if sat around a fire on a winter’s night. I’ve created an ensemble of 5 actor/musicians to perform them and we’ll play a troupe of nomadic Russian Gypsies that arrive in front of the audience pulling their carts behind them, carts that contain everything needed to tell the stories, - costumes, props, musical instruments, chairs, rugs and so on. We want the audience to feel that when the evening is finished, we will simply pack up and move on to tell our stories somewhere else.


Which of Chekhov's stories are you bringing to the stage and why?

I’ve always loved Chekhov’s short stories, I first read them about 20 years ago and since then they have always stayed with me. They are wonderful hymns to the absurdity of everyday life, as memorable and bracing as jumping into a cold plunge pool after a hot sauna! The five stories that I have chosen to bring to the stage are The Chemist’s Wife, At a Summer Villa, The Lady with a Little Dog, An Avenger and The Bear. By turns romantic, hilarious, odd and memorable, at their heart, these are stories about people desperately trying to connect with each other sometimes comically, sometimes poignantly. Each story is complete in itself, but seen together they map out the arc of a relationship, following the progress of idealised youthful love with all it’s excitement, yearning and disappointments, through mid-life cynicism and infidelity, to the results of jilted love and vengeance.


The very best stories can shape how we see the world and offer us a glimpse of our own reflections. They encapsulate a particular moment in time that is at once personal and universal. I’ve always believed in the enduring power and importance of storytelling; actors and audience sharing together in an act of communal imagination. It is theatre at it’s purest, offering us the potential to transcend the moment we chance to live in and to imagine what it’s like to be in someone else’s time and space, providing a window to see how other people live, how they react in different situations and maybe in turn helping us to imagine how we would feel and what we would do.


You're working with Chekhov's short stories as opposed to his plays. How have you found adapting these for the stage?

Chekhov's stories are intrinsically dramatic, with interesting scenarios, bold characters and subtle and often surprising dialogue that needed very little embellishment from me. I’ve really enjoyed the process of adapting them for the stage. I wanted to keep the ‘storytelling’ form of characters talking to the audience directly which allows them to share their thoughts, feelings and attitude to what unfolding and to comment on the action and I have tried to stay as close to the original source material as possible while being quite bold in editing and making things work dramatically, - if part of a story can be better told musically or visually we’ve done that. We’ve added music, underscore and songs and I’ve adapted the material very much with a cast of five in mind. I’ve also tried to interweave the stories whenever possible to give a sense that characters can travel through one story and appear in another.


How has the creative process been? Were you solely responsible for devising the production, or did it come about in a collaborative way with the cast?

I formed Dragonboy Productions to focus on creating and developing new work for the theatre with a particular interest in storytelling, adaptations and working with actor/musicians to create exciting and engaging theatre performed with original live music. I strongly believe in utilising all the talents of the people involved in a project to create work that could only have been brought into being by this particular group of people working together at this particular time. I conceived the idea for the show, adapted the stories, briefed the designers and so on so in that sense the vision for the piece was mine but creating a piece of theatre never happens in isolation and I have had the great good fortune to work with some wonderfully patient and creative collaborators. My creative team are a tight unit that I have worked with on many occasions, and I was also careful to cast actors who I felt would work well in an ensemble and who brought something unique to the project, performers that took the work seriously as well as possessing a sense of fun and playfulness. 


Tom Neill has written, created and orchestrated the music beautifully and I believe theatre is often most potent when it is most simple and one of the most important aspects in creating this show was to find the most economical but theatrically inventive way to tell each story. Because I’m performing in the show as well as directing it, I have also tried to create a dynamic environment in which the actors feel that they can really play, discover, create and ultimately take ownership of the material themselves.


What do you hope your audience take away from seeing your production of Chekhov's Shorts?

We’ve taken a dynamic approach to presenting Chekhov with a storytelling ensemble of actor/musicians and the plan was to create a show filled with vibrant theatricality, full of music and memorable visual images while bringing out the humour and romanticism of Chekhov's stories and challenging any preconception that his work is inaccessible or sombre. We want to engage and excite our audience and have them comes out of the theatre on a high!

The composer Tom Neil on creating the music in the show

What a joy to compose music to accompany one of the world's great writers. Inspired by the tales and the prevailing musical fashion of thetime, we chose the Romantic era as our springboard, and Anton Chekhov's wonderful poetic passages describing ‘the heat and sea air’ and ‘how strangely the sea was lit’ proved immediately inspirational.


I composed these pieces in a new way for me, by having the script read back and improvising extended melody lines that complemented the mood and action of the story. Sometimes I could hear already the harmony in the tune, other times this came later. I developed the ideas in toa style often played high in the piano’s register, giving space for the spoken performance to come through. Susan Relph, an artist friend, invited me in to her next-door studio, to compose during one of her portrait sittings. The careful stillness of her portrait practice and the air of relaxed focus, allowed me also to work with subtlety and detail. A creative afternoon for all involved.


Keen to include the riches of Russia's musical heritage, I hope our interlinked stories and motifs will, for example, remind you of Mussorgsky's Pictures at an Exhibition. I was thrilled to discover Leokadiya Aleksandrovna Kashperova (1872-1940), pupil of Rubenstein, tutor to Stravinsky, and Russia’s earliest-known female composer of international stature. She graduated from St Petersburg Conservatoire in 1895, and composed for orchestra, choir, chamber ensembles, piano solos, and was celebrated at home and on concert tours in Berlin and London.


In our central story The Lady with the Little Dog, we use two excerpts from her piano suite In The Midst of Nature, the first, entitled Two Roses, to represent Anna and Gurov's blossoming romance and the second, Two Autumn Leaves which we use as a reminiscence. Her music has an open beauty and ease that complements the action in a serenely untroubled way, a quality Kashperova scholar Dr Graham Griffiths better describes as 'unpretentious refinement'.


I’ve also included Vasily Ivanovich Agapkin's song Farewell of Slavianka. Originally a First World War mobilisation song, it has thankfully been repurposed several times and its lyrics re-written accordingly. We follow the tradition and give the tune words inspired by Alexander Sergeyevich Pushkin's famous poem It's Time, My Friends: It's time, my friends, it is time Now peace is craved by our hearts. You will also hear excerpts from Ah Kindly Star, a little known song by Mikhail Ivanovich Glinka (d.1857) and a classical rhapsody Berceuse Estonienne by internationally-based Ella Georgiyevna Adayevskaya (d.1926).


Kalinka, Russia’s most famous traditional folk song, is re-imagined as a drinking song, furnishing our story of revelry and curiosity The Chemist's Wife. Its lyrics 'Little red berry, mine' fit the wine glass well and the outrageous extremities of its tempo and dynamics will remind you of some of the worst excesses of your closest friends!


Following the lead of Chekhov, who sent over 2,200 books to the Siberian penal colonies after an investigative journey there, and Pushkin, whose influence on the population was considered so great that the Tsar personally vetted all his work, I hope our musical choices clearly present the best side of Russian society, the compassion of its artists.


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