Posted by Hugh Hughes
The Brighton Festival. Glorious sunshine, sea and art. It’s a cultural paradise. Playing Story of a Rabbit here is a big pleasure.
Audiences are incredibly polite, well-behaved and friendly. Their concentration is outstanding. They are significantly different from the audiences we found in Liverpool and Cambridge. Aled and I have become increasingly interested in audiences and how they differ from place to place and night to night.
Looking back on our performances in Bogota, we were moved by the warmth and generosity of the audience, their openness and involvement was breath-taking. Next week I go to Moscow with Sioned to present Floating. I’m very curious to see how we communicate the story over there.
We are becoming more interested in this relationship between the stage and spectator and beginning to wonder how it might be worth much further investigation. We are asking, “Why do people come into the theatre?”
We are always amazed when we see people walking into the space. It’s as if each night we don’t expect anyone to come and therefore we are surprised to see people come in. It’s the moment they walk in that gets me. As they enter one by one theatre begins.
It’s wonderful.
ps. I'm trying out some new technology that Hoipolloi have helped me buy and here's me being interviewed on the radio!
Sunday, 25 May 2008
Hugh speaks... Brighton Festival
Posted by Hoipolloi Theatre at 10:03 0 comments
Labels: Aled, audience, Bogota, Brighton Festival, Floating, Hugh Hughes, Hugh speaks, Moscow, Story of a Rabbit, XI Festvial Iberoamericano de Teatro
Friday, 23 May 2008
Rabbit reviews and radios...
Posted by Sara Green (Marketing and Admin Assistant, Hoipolloi)
It is official - the first UK tour of Story of a Rabbit is well and truly under way!
With a successful opening at the Norfolk and Norwich Festival, an exciting run at The Junction in Hoipolloi’s home town of Cambridge and great performances in Liverpool and Brighton, Hugh and Aled are over halfway through.
The show has been receiving very positive reviews and it's been exciting to receive them here at the office as we are able to see the success of the show on paper as well as from the enthusiastic phone calls from Hugh that we get every day.
One of the best reviews is from What’s on Stage which opens with “it takes nerve as well as skill to make a show about death into an entertainment".
The review goes on to explore the subject matter of the show and how people deal with death, something that affects everyone. After all, as the reviewer says:
“The rabbit died, for no particular reason. Rabbits do that. In April 2001, Hugh was woken by a telephone call from his brother. It was to tell him that their father had died suddenly, of a heart attack while winding the church clock. People do that. They have heart attacks, even fathers of families.”
To read the full review of the show click here.
Another great review is by Jakki Phillips from Brighton Argus. Here is a short excerpt:
"Hughes's twinkling optimism gives the show an incredible life force which is reinforced by the badges we are given as we leave. They say "Here one minute...gone the next," and, like the show itself, make you want to grasp life with both hands but most importantly, phone your dad.”
To read the full review click here.
As well as these there is the brilliant Guardian Blog which has recently featured a little discussion about the show and the unusual nature of the audience participation that Hugh encourages. To read the comments click here.
So two fantastic reviews and a mention on the Guardian Blog, what more could we ask for?
How about the radio interviews that Hugh has done that have gone down a treat across the country. We had Aled and Hugh being interviewed by Aled’s old primary teacher and well known actor Dean Sullivan which was hilarious and touching as well as the most recent clip on Classic FM in which Hoipolloi’s very own Simon Bedford (apparently known as "long-length"-because of his amazing height) gets a mention. To listen to the podcast click here.
All in all, we're very pleased!
Story of a Rabbit's having a short breaking from touring at the beginning of next week before it returns to Ipswich on 30 & 31 May. But things don't quieten down yet for Hugh. He's off to Moscow with Sioned for two performances of Floating.
For more information on the both shows and how to book tickets for the rest of the Story of a Rabbit tour visit our website.
Posted by Hoipolloi Theatre at 17:07 0 comments
Labels: Aled, Brighton Argus, Classic FM, Hoipolloi, Hugh Hughes, Interviews, Norfolk and Norwich Festival, Radio, Reviews, Story of a Rabbit, The Junction, Tour, Whatsonstage.com
Wednesday, 14 May 2008
Hugh speaks... Different Journey, Same Direction
Posted by Hugh Hughes (travelling from Cambridge to Liverpool)
Travelling from east to west across Britain today made me think of the journeys other people have made in this direction. The phrase, 'go west young man' sprang to mind. It made me think of cowboy films and the whole western movie genre and the music that went with it. Before I knew it I was in a wagon, pulled by horses, galloping across the Prairies, with some medicine in the back and a gun strapped to my hip. And it made me think of some of the extraordinary stories of people trying to cross the Berlin Wall, to escape a political regime they felt oppressed by. I was driving through Checkpoint Charlie with a false moustache and someone hiding in a false-bottomed boot in the back of the car.
In comparison my journey was calm and peaceful, especially as the M6 Toll helped me by-pass Birmingham and avoid heavy traffic.
This freedom I was experiencing dawned on me. I was not driving into unknown territory, anxious about what I might discover and I was not fleeing a country, leaving loved ones behind, hoping not to be caught and imprisoned. I was driving with an open mind, ready to take in the countryside as it rolled by, able to imagine. I was surrounded by space. The warmth of the sun and the colours the light illuminated were dazzling, the music was cheerful and my voyage became a technicolour dream. Everyone waved at each other from car to car. All travellers had their windows open and listened to the same radio station. The cars found auto-pilot and in our hands-free luxury we could lean back as we sped safely down the motorway, taking in the sunshine, relaxing and tanning ourselves as the cool breeze swept across our bronzing bodies. Life was perfect. Undisturbed and joyful. Moving at a pace, from east to west, under a blue sky without a care in the world.
The amount of lives that are lived, the amount of east to west journeys that are made – each one so different, even if their direction is the same.
Posted by Hoipolloi Theatre at 14:20 0 comments
Labels: Berlin Wall, Cowboys, east to west, Hugh Hughes, Hugh speaks, journey, Travelling, Westerns
Saturday, 3 May 2008
Hugh speaks... Norwich and Norfolk Festival
Posted by Hugh Hughes
I travelled from Hoipolloi’s home base in Cambridge, up to Norwich yesterday. It is a journey that normally takes 75 minutes. It took me 6 hours. I was stuck in a traffic jam caused by an accident involving a lorry.
Being trapped inside the car for 360 minutes made me think of submarines. I spent a long period of time watching the cars on the other side of the road, imagining them to be fish, sharks and other aquatic life forms. As the sun hit the bonnets and made them shine I saw their silvery skin swish past me.
The idea of labelling fish with registration plates seemed like a good idea – to avoid confusion. The reports coming in on the radio talked about life on land. A place far from my underwater world. Submerged, I found tranquillity away from the dry place. This wet place offered silent relief.
Another soundscape was emerging. One that drew me towards a colourful place with light and space. The initial feeling of entrapment was being replaced by the freedom of this newfound territory not far from Newmarket.
And then I thought that it was likely that I was rapidly becoming the person who had spent the most time on this particular spot on earth. Because, where my submarine was hovering, was normally passed through at 70 miles an hour by people in motor vehicles. When the traffic started to move, I felt the disruption that wildlife must feel when the builders move in to build the next housing estate for humans.
Posted by Hoipolloi Theatre at 15:57 0 comments
Labels: Hugh Hughes, Hugh speaks, Norfolk and Norwich Festival, Story of a Rabbit, submarine, traffic jam
Friday, 2 May 2008
Story of a Rabbit is off on tour...
Posted by Sara Green (Marketing and Admin Assistant, Hoipolloi)
Today is the official start of the first Story of a Rabbit UK tour as Hugh and Aled head to Norwich for the Norfolk and Norwich Festival.
The show then heads around the Country, visiting 7 venues in all, finishing in the Barbican centre in June for a two week run.
We are all really excited about the tour here at Hoipolloi, almost as excited as Hugh who cannot wait to make new connections all over the country as well as returning to places he has been to before.
Below is a full tour list with box office information in order to book your tickets for this curiously comic production that celebrates the complexities of death....
Tour Dates:
Norfolk and Norwich Festival
Norwich Playhouse
Fri 2 and Sat 3 May
Box Office: 01603 766400
http://www.nnfestival.org.uk/
The Junction
Cambridge
Wed 7 - Sat 10 May
Box Office: 01223 511511
http://www.junction.co.uk/
Everyman Theatre
Liverpool
Tues 13 - Sat 17 May
Box Office: 0151 7094776
http://www.everymanplayhouse.com/
Brighton Festival
Pavillion Theatre
Tues 20 - Fri 23 May
Box Office: 01273 709709
http://www.brightonfestival.org/
New Wolesy Theatre
Ipswich
Fri 30 and Sat 31 May
Box Office: 01473 295900
http://www.wolseytheatre.co.uk/
Drum Theatre Plymouth
Tues 3 - Sat 7 June
Box Office: 01752 267222
http://www.theatreroyal.com/
Bite08 at the Barbican Centre
Wed 11 - Sat 21 June
Box Office: 0845 1207556
www.barbican.org.uk/bite
For more information on the tour, or to find out about the show click here.
Looking forward to seeing you on our travels...
Posted by Hoipolloi Theatre at 16:21 0 comments
Labels: Hoipolloi, Hugh Hughes, Story of a Rabbit, Tour Dates, Venues