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Synopsis
In
Rough for Theatre II, written in French
in the 1950s, two men, 'A' and 'B', try to assess the life of 'C',
who is standing motionless, with his back to the audience, ready
to jump out of the window. A and B review his life with mass documentation
as though he were not present. The documents are mainly quotations
from C's acquaintances. A and B consider the flotsam and jetsam
of C's life including his confessed 'morbid sensitivity to the opinions
of others'. Distracted by the electric light and the love-birds
they find in a cage, they do not appear to be giving their task
due concentration. They finally decide to let him jump, only to
discover he is already dead.
'Ah
if I were only twenty years younger I'd put an end to my sufferings!'
'C', Rough for Theatre II
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Director
Award-winning
director Katie Mitchell has worked with many of the UK's
most renowned theatre companies. She directed the Royal Shakespeare
Company productions of Uncle
Vanya; Stars in the Morning Sky; Henry IV, and Phoenician Women, which earned her the 1996 Evening Standard Award for Best Director. For the Royal National Theatre
she directed Rutherford and
Son and The Machine Wreckers.
She also directed Live like
Pigs and The Country at the Royal Court Theatre.
In 1996 she directed Endgame
at the Donmar Warehouse, for which she received the Time Out Best Director Award.
'Beckett
has that rare ability to capture our fleeting perceptions of the
ridiculous and the despairing in a very taut form,' says Mitchell.
'We need a mirror to reflect our darker selves back to us and he
is one of the few people who can do that. Film is an extraordinary
medium which potentially allows you an increased palette with which
to communicate this.'
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Cast
Jim
Norton ('A') has worked extensively in television, theatre and
film in Europe, the US and Australia. His many theatre credits include
the highly acclaimed Royal Court's production of The
Weir, by Conor McPherson (which won the Laurence Olivier Award
for Best Play) as well as Royal National Theatre productions of
Hamlet, St Joan, and
Playboy of the Western World. He has also performed at all the
major theatres in Ireland. His film credits include Wild
Horses, Hidden Agenda and Into the West. His numerous television performances include Rumpole of the Bailey, Father Ted, LA Law and Frasier.
Award-winning
actor Timothy Spall ('B')
has a vast credits list in theatre, television and film. The films
in which he has appeared include: Love's
Labour's Lost and Hamlet,
both directed by Kenneth Brannagh; Mike Leigh's Topsy-Turvy,
Life is Sweet and Secret and Lies; Bernardo Bertolucci's
The Sheltering Sky; and Clint Eastwood's
White Hunter Black Heart.
For television he has performed in Shooting
the Past, for which he earned a BAFTA nomination for Best Actor,
and Our Mutual Friend, which won him a Broadcasting
Press Guild award for Best Actor.
Hugh B O'Brien ('C')
has worked in theatre both as an actor and as a director of a local
theatre. He has also worked
in film, television and radio. His credits include: Ordinary
Decent Criminals; The Run of the Country; Korca and the Channel 4 television series
Father Ted. His stage credits include Molly Sweeney, The Salvage Shop, and Beckett's Play
and Endgame, among many
others.
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