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Open season for amateur drama groups

The RSC is helping 86 amateur theatre groups across the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ to produce their own Shakespeare productions - including seven in the West Midlands. Catherine Vonledebur reports.

86 directors gathered for the first time in Stratford-upon-Avon for a skills workshop led by the RSC’s team of theatre practitioners

Measure for Measure set in the 1930’s Dust Bowl of America, a 1950’s rock ‘n’ roll version of Twelfth Night and a new play inspired by Shakespeare performed outdoors across a village are three of the Midland productions chosen as part of the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ’s biggest amateur project – Open Stages.

After receiving nearly 200 applications from across Britain, the Royal Shakespeare Company and six partner theatres chose to work and mentor 86 amateur theatre groups.

RSC Open Stages producer Ian Wainwright explains: “The RSC is once again excited to continue to collaborate with just some of the million amateur theatre-makers in the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ.

“The RSC understands the skill, commitment, energy and passion it takes to make theatre happen. We therefore have a huge respect for those DIY, grassroots theatre-makers who create theatre in their spare time often on very limited resources.

“Open Stages looks to share some of the processes, techniques and ideas of professional theatre making, while allowing the RSC to learn about, and be inspired by, the work of people with a real passion for the craft of theatre.”

Seven projects were selected from across Warwickshire and the West Midlands including The Chrysalis Collective set up by two Birmingham University graduates, Stratford-upon-Avon’s Consensus Opera, Lighthorne Drama Group, Rugby Theatre, Side-by-Side Theatre Company in Norton, Stourbridge, Birmingham’s Crescent Theatre and The Shakespeare Institute Players, also in Birmingham.

All 86 directors gathered for the first and only time in Stratford-upon-Avon last September for a skills workshop led by the RSC’s team of theatre practitioners.

The Chrysalis Collective, established earlier this year by 23-year-old Christa Harris and Lucinda Lee, was chosen for its 1957 version of Twelfth Night, set in an English seaside port town as rock ‘n’ roll sweeps the country.