The Catastrophe Trilogy
22 April 10 - 24 April 10
The Catastrophe Trilogy
A unique collection of works by an ever-surprising international ensemble
 
ALICE BELL (22 APRIL)
A fictional character born into a fictional conflict, Alice seeks happiness in a divided land, finding love and companionship but at a terrible cost.  Part DIY musical, part fairy-tale, ALICE BELL offers a portrait of life as an act of hope, life as something to sing and dance about.
 
DANIEL HIT BY A TRAIN (23 APRIL)
Inspired by a Victorian collection of 53 true stories about people losing their lives in the act of saving another, this tells each tragedy in turn, in all their comedic, vaudevillian glory.
 
THE FESTIVAL (24 APRIL)
Continuing the company's playful approach to storytelling, narrative and song, THE FESTIVAL presents an episode in the life of a character where chance and coincidence leave an indelible mark.
 
 
Reviews
Reviews
Show

Alice Bell

‘Absolutely unique...Innovative, challenging and unforgettable.'
Three Weeks, UK

‘A fairy-tale of life over death over love over hate. A hope-filled story for the 21st Century.'
De Standaard, Belgium

Daniel Hit By a Train

‘Touchingly comic and oddly moving.'
The Guardian, UK

 



View larger version


Lone Twin Theatre: More Info
Lone Twin Theatre: More Info
Show

The Times 4 Star Review
The Times 4 Star Review
Show
THE CATASTROPHE TRILOGY
The Barbican
* * * *
 
This must be how they make theatre in a parallel universe.  And after a day watching these plays by the Lone Twin Company - ALICE BELL...DANIEL HIT BY A TRAIN and ..THE FESTIVAL - I may look at other shows in a different way.  I may wonder...why everyone doesnt' burst into song more often, with or without ukuleles in hand.  I may wonder why serious dramas don't all make room for choreography , mime, tricks with time. 
 
'...Lone Twin's directors, Gary Winters and Gregg Whelan, are all about extremes.  In less skilled hands ALICE BELL would be insuffereably arthouse.  characters do strange dances, address the crowd.  Alice's lover works with a lippy psychopath who wears a gimp mask. He's rant, funny yet scary too...
 
'For all the fireworks, we're made to care.  We're told a proper story.  As Alice faces up  to potential death, she lists the ordinary things she'll miss.  It's heart-wrenching.  Lone Twin use nimble alienation techniques that leave Brecht in the 20th Century. 
 
'...THE FESTIVAL is a triumph....its blend of song, silliness and emotional acuity is theatrical magic...Like all the plays, it's devised with the whole cast...Their dialolgue has a childlike air that makes adult games - talking about DVD box sets, having meetings, chatting someone up - look suitably daft. ..They take time out for a dance routine to hurdy - gurdy music.  Why not?  Somehow it plays as joyous rather than facetious....THEIR FORM IS BOLD AND DISTINCTIVE, BUT IT'S THE CONTENT THAT REALLY LINGERS IN THE MEMORY'
 
Dominic Maxwell


View larger version


The Guardian
The Guardian
Show
The Guardian
 
'Lone Twin save the best until last in this trilogy of intimate, unadorned shows...These fables of ordinary lives touched by extraordinary events are all insanely optimistic, and revel in the heroic failures of their improbable heroes, whose minidramas are offered to the audience with a direct gaze, a childlike smile and the twang of a ukulele.
 
'In ALICE BELL, a young woman caught up in civil war seeks happiness, but at a terrible cost.  The second part of the trilogy, DANIEL HIT BY A TRAIN, is inspired by the Victorian memorial in London's Postman's Park to 53 people who died saving the lives of others.  A drum roll of burning houses, drowning children and runaway horses, this spectacle of futility is like a ghastly comic panto of death that becomes a strangely affecting affirmation of life.  But it is in THE FESTIVAL a gloriously sunny not-quite-love story, that the ensemble really find their voice and a perofrmance style worth making a song and dance over...
 
'The story of middle-aged Jennifer and Oliver, who make a connection at a whal-watching festival in a tiny cafe on the Autstralian coast, The Festival is a piece in which nothing really happens, but lives are changed as the ordinary and the estraordainry rub aginast each other, and Bono and Burce Springsteen pop by...THE FESTIVAL is a delighhtful show from a company that seems to have optimism, rather than blood running through its veins. '


View larger version


What
What's On Stage Q&A with Lone Twin
Show
whatsonstage.com
Gary Winters on...The Catastrophe Trilogy

Date: 13 April 2010

Lone Twin are Gregg Whelan and Gary Winters. The duo is widely regarded as leading artists in the field of contemporary performance. Formed in 1997 the company’s work is met with critical and popular acclaim as national and international audiences enjoy an ever-diverse range of works for stage, studio and public space. We caught up with Gary to talk about the duo's latest project, The Catastrophe Trilogy which is at the Royal Exchange later this month.


 
Tell us about each installment

Alice Bell is the story of a woman’s life, from childhood to death. It’s a story we essentially  made up, but it is a very familiar shape/premise – the sense of a fated relationship between a couple from two warring sides or factions. The time/period or location is not named so there’s maybe a timeless sense to it, also something fairytale-like. Daniel Hit By A Train was inspired by a Victorian memorial in London. It details 53 true stories – each with the same event; that of someone trying to save somebody and dying in the attempt. We were attracted to the serial nature of these and trying to stage them all in one event. The Festival is again a story we made up – but loosely taking the shape of a short story we’d all read by Alice Munro. It is a very simple story that takes place over the timespan of a year – a year between an annual music festival held in a small coastal town in Australia. On the surface the story is very slight, almost nothing happens, but it speaks about a very important event in the main character’s life.

In each of the pieces we employ a pared down approach to theatrical storytelling: there are moments of direct address, of simple characterization and staging, there are songs and movement sections that represent complex moments in the stories.
 
What inspired you all to do a trilogy?
When we formed the group in 2005 we spoke about making three pieces – at that point we weren’t envisaging a trilogy per se – we just said we’d make three pieces, as that seemed a good enough go at making work together before we assessed if it was a good idea to carry on. In setting up the group we were interested in a developing an approach to theatrical storytelling with an inclination towards biography. So in making three pieces in this area of course they are linked thematically, and so can become a trilogy.
 
How do they work as stand alone pieces?
They all work as stand alone pieces – in fact the first two pieces were made without the ‘trilogy’ in mind. They all have a slightly different mood to them even though they employ similar modes of presentation. I like each of them on their own, without feeling they have to ‘compete’ with the other parts trilogy. Really it’s the thematic link of biographical storytelling, and the formal arrangement in the space that links them – so they work being seen in isolation; they have to.
 
You have received great reviews, but with cutbacks at many newspapers, how do you think this is affecting fringe theatre?
I’m not sure. To be honest I’m not sure I feel part of the fringe theatre scene. Of course it’s a great shame if work doesn’t get written about as there’s a lot of good things that happen on smaller stages – things that are truly experimental and stretch the rules of performance or entertainment. It’s always nice to get a good quote, but it’s not what it’s all about. It might be more about audiences taking risks also, in going out to support and see something that isn’t totally mainstream or known.
 
With so many plays to choose from in Manchester, why would you tell an audience to see any or all of the trilogy?
We are always conscious that we have to make work for all audiences: our families come to see the work as well as other artists, students, academics, other experienced theatre goers, and they are all sophisticated viewers in their own right. We really think there is something for everyone – entertainment, funny bits, sad bits, songs, dances that are good to watch, and at the centre a story to follow.  That’s really important, that amongst the modes we adopt – which might be quite familiar contemporary performance strategies – that there is a story or situation to invest in.
 
What's the funniest unscripted moment which has happened so far?
As we a have a fairly economical way of approaching many parts of our material, this continues into our props and staging. For Alice Bell we bought an Ikea table and chairs for the piece – we like the very everyday, available, ubiquitous nature of that stuff. The table is only used in one moment in the piece – it sits there for 65mins doing nothing - at the recent run at the Barbican during the ‘table scene’ one of the legs fell off. The performers paused for a moment and carried on as normal, including one of them standing up on the table – the three remaining table legs held out; who says you get what you pay for.
  
What are your plans as a company when the run is finished?
These pieces will continue to tour over the next few years – there will be international touring as well as other shows in UK. There is a sense that we can move away from the current project of biographical storytelling and the formal traverse arrangement of these three pieces. There may be opportunities to do some ‘one off’ performances that site-based or more interactive or community-based. It feels good to encapsulate these three works into a trilogy as it liberates what comes next. The nine members of the creative team each have other work and projects happening so we don’t exist as a company the whole time, we live a different countries across Europe too. There won’t be a new work until 2012, and what that will be we can’t say yet.



View larger version


Tickets
£9.50 / £6.50 / £4.75
Created and performed by Antione Fraval, Guy Dartnell, Molly Haslund, Nadia Cusimano, Nina Tecklenburg and Paul Gazzola.  Directed by Garry Winters and Gregg Whelan.

Suitable for ages 13+

See all 3 shows for £18 (not to be used with any other offer)
 
Production pictures
Alice Bell
Daniel Hit By A Train
The Festival
The Festival