Saturday, May 30

Tag: John Tiffany

Once – Pitlochry Festival Theatre
Scotland

Once – Pitlochry Festival Theatre

Marking Pitlochry Festival Theatre’s 75th anniversary and the inaugural season of new Artistic Director, Alan Cumming, Once, the hit West End and Broadway musical, has its Scottish premiere. Bringing back the original team, including designer, Bow Crowley, and director, John Tiffany, this production is very exciting to have opening the theatre programme and start a new chapter for Pitlochry Festival Theatre. Once follows Guy, a Dublin-based musician used to playing in bars who dreams of success but is ready to abandon his hope and give up. He meets Girl, a Czech immigrant, who attempts to bring back his hope and inspires him to keep going. The pair meet a group of quirky individuals, coming together to create an album filled with Guy’s original music. From the outset of this producti...
She’s Behind You – Traverse Theatre
Scotland

She’s Behind You – Traverse Theatre

She's Behind You, a Johnny McKnight script and a John Tiffany direction, is a seasonal yet contemplative dive into the world of pantomime. In a co-production between the Traverse Theatre and the National Theatre of Scotland, the play grabs the art form's sense of enjoyment while nipping at its deeper cultural importance. From the moment McKnight—portraying his alter ego character, Dorothy Blawna-Gale—appeared on stage, the audience was mesmerized. The laughter was almost continuous, with spontaneous applause in rhythm to music and dance. Audience participation was a whopping 100%, with bystanders caught up in the infectious energy from start to finish. Visually, the production dazzled. Bright, sparkly, and totally immersive, the lighting and stage design contributed both to the c...
Wild Rose – Royal Lyceum Theatre
Scotland

Wild Rose – Royal Lyceum Theatre

Rose-Lynn Harlan loves country music and is pretty good at singing it too.  Her burning ambition is to sing at The Grand Ole Opry in Nashville.  The trouble is, she’s just been released from prison and has a tag on her ankle.  Whilst Rose-Lynn was incarcerated, her mother has been looking after her two children and now thinks her family deserve her presence and attention.   Set in Glasgow, it turns out that Glasgow has its own Grand Ole Opry, (who knew?) and Rose-Lynn gets a job as a cleaner.   The rest is fairly standard and predictable.  Mother give Rose-Lynn the money to go to Nashville, Rose-Lynn realises what’s really important and the final song, “Glasgow (no place like home)” says it all. But this show isn’t about the narrative, it’s about the music, and if you like country m...