Wiltshire Creative is a pan-arts organisation that brings together the energy and ambition of Salisbury Arts Centre, Salisbury International Arts Festival and Salisbury Playhouse. Wiltshire Creative has two venues: Salisbury Playhouse, which comprises a 517-seat auditorium and the 149-seat Salberg…
A dazzling adaptation of the greatest love story of all time. When a chance encounter in a train station tearoom kindles a timid, yet passionate, love affair between a married doctor and a suburban housewife, the two are forced to question if it's worth risking everything for the sake of love. Tender and joyous, this show has all the drama of the original masterpiece with added live music, comedy and spectacle, taking you on a rollercoaster ride through all of love's beautiful complications. Brief Encounter is adapted by award-winning theatre-maker Emma Rice, directed by the New Wolsey Theatre's new Chief Executive Douglas Rintoul (Made in Dagenham, Private Lives and All My Sons) and brought to you by the producers behind The Ladykillers and Guys and Dolls.
A dazzling adaptation of the greatest love story of all time. When a chance encounter in a train station tearoom kindles a timid, yet passionate, love affair between a married doctor and a suburban housewife, the two are forced to question if it's worth risking everything for the sake of love. Tender and joyous, this show has all the drama of the original masterpiece with added live music, comedy and spectacle, taking you on a rollercoaster ride through all of love's beautiful complications. Brief Encounter is adapted by award-winning theatre-maker Emma Rice, directed by the New Wolsey Theatre's new Chief Executive Douglas Rintoul (Made in Dagenham, Private Lives and All My Sons) and brought to you by the producers behind The Ladykillers and Guys and Dolls.
A dazzling adaptation of the greatest love story of all time. When a chance encounter in a train station tearoom kindles a timid, yet passionate, love affair between a married doctor and a suburban housewife, the two are forced to question if it's worth risking everything for the sake of love. Tender and joyous, this show has all the drama of the original masterpiece with added live music, comedy and spectacle, taking you on a rollercoaster ride through all of love's beautiful complications. Brief Encounter is adapted by award-winning theatre-maker Emma Rice, directed by the New Wolsey Theatre's new Chief Executive Douglas Rintoul (Made in Dagenham, Private Lives and All My Sons) and brought to you by the producers behind The Ladykillers and Guys and Dolls.
A dazzling adaptation of the greatest love story of all time. When a chance encounter in a train station tearoom kindles a timid, yet passionate, love affair between a married doctor and a suburban housewife, the two are forced to question if it's worth risking everything for the sake of love. Tender and joyous, this show has all the drama of the original masterpiece with added live music, comedy and spectacle, taking you on a rollercoaster ride through all of love's beautiful complications. Brief Encounter is adapted by award-winning theatre-maker Emma Rice, directed by the New Wolsey Theatre's new Chief Executive Douglas Rintoul (Made in Dagenham, Private Lives and All My Sons) and brought to you by the producers behind The Ladykillers and Guys and Dolls.
A dazzling adaptation of the greatest love story of all time. When a chance encounter in a train station tearoom kindles a timid, yet passionate, love affair between a married doctor and a suburban housewife, the two are forced to question if it's worth risking everything for the sake of love. Tender and joyous, this show has all the drama of the original masterpiece with added live music, comedy and spectacle, taking you on a rollercoaster ride through all of love's beautiful complications. Brief Encounter is adapted by award-winning theatre-maker Emma Rice, directed by the New Wolsey Theatre's new Chief Executive Douglas Rintoul (Made in Dagenham, Private Lives and All My Sons) and brought to you by the producers behind The Ladykillers and Guys and Dolls.
Three couples. Two dining rooms. One big mess. Alan Ayckbourn's classic comedy takes us into a chaotic world of dysfunctional marriages, domestic drama, and infidelity. The lives of three couples frantically intertwine in this classic Ayckbourn comedy of confusion and chaos. When one of the women arrives home suspiciously late one night, a chain of events unfolds drawing each of the couples ever deeper into hilarious misunderstanding. Join us for one of Ayckbourn's best loved plays, set in the 1970s - his follow up to Relatively Speaking, seen at Salisbury Playhouse in 2019.
Three couples. Two dining rooms. One big mess. Alan Ayckbourn's classic comedy takes us into a chaotic world of dysfunctional marriages, domestic drama, and infidelity. The lives of three couples frantically intertwine in this classic Ayckbourn comedy of confusion and chaos. When one of the women arrives home suspiciously late one night, a chain of events unfolds drawing each of the couples ever deeper into hilarious misunderstanding. Join us for one of Ayckbourn's best loved plays, set in the 1970s - his follow up to Relatively Speaking, seen at Salisbury Playhouse in 2019.
Three couples. Two dining rooms. One big mess. Alan Ayckbourn's classic comedy takes us into a chaotic world of dysfunctional marriages, domestic drama, and infidelity. The lives of three couples frantically intertwine in this classic Ayckbourn comedy of confusion and chaos. When one of the women arrives home suspiciously late one night, a chain of events unfolds drawing each of the couples ever deeper into hilarious misunderstanding. Join us for one of Ayckbourn's best loved plays, set in the 1970s - his follow up to Relatively Speaking, seen at Salisbury Playhouse in 2019.
A dazzling adaptation of the greatest love story of all time. When a chance encounter in a train station tearoom kindles a timid, yet passionate, love affair between a married doctor and a suburban housewife, the two are forced to question if it's worth risking everything for the sake of love. Tender and joyous, this show has all the drama of the original masterpiece with added live music, comedy and spectacle, taking you on a rollercoaster ride through all of love's beautiful complications. Brief Encounter is adapted by award-winning theatre-maker Emma Rice, directed by the New Wolsey Theatre's new Chief Executive Douglas Rintoul (Made in Dagenham, Private Lives and All My Sons) and brought to you by the producers behind The Ladykillers and Guys and Dolls.
1 AD Cinderella- Introduction by Wiltshire Creative
2 AD Cinderella- Setting Of The Production by Wiltshire Creative
3 AD Cinderella- Meet The Cast by Wiltshire Creative
4 AD Cinderella- Background Of Pantomime by Wiltshire Creative
5 AD Cinderella- Background Of Cinderella by Wiltshire Creative
Simon Butteriss reads Oscar Wilde's De Profundis in its entirety in daily episodes of around 20 minutes. While in prison, Wilde wrote his astonishing, book-length love letter to the young man who had destroyed his life. Allowed one piece of paper at a time and no revisions, he nevertheless produced an unfaltering, forensic analysis of their uniquely destructive relationship; part confession, part accusation. Listen in to discover how Wilde survived his long isolation through an unwavering belief in love and the resilience of art.
Simon Butteriss reads Oscar Wilde's De Profundis in its entirety in daily episodes of around 20 minutes. While in prison, Wilde wrote his astonishing, book-length love letter to the young man who had destroyed his life. Allowed one piece of paper at a time and no revisions, he nevertheless produced an unfaltering, forensic analysis of their uniquely destructive relationship; part confession, part accusation. Listen in to discover how Wilde survived his long isolation through an unwavering belief in love and the resilience of art.
Simon Butteriss reads Oscar Wilde's De Profundis in its entirety in daily episodes of around 20 minutes. While in prison, Wilde wrote his astonishing, book-length love letter to the young man who had destroyed his life. Allowed one piece of paper at a time and no revisions, he nevertheless produced an unfaltering, forensic analysis of their uniquely destructive relationship; part confession, part accusation. Listen in to discover how Wilde survived his long isolation through an unwavering belief in love and the resilience of art.
Simon Butteriss reads Oscar Wilde's De Profundis in its entirety in daily episodes of around 20 minutes. While in prison, Wilde wrote his astonishing, book-length love letter to the young man who had destroyed his life. Allowed one piece of paper at a time and no revisions, he nevertheless produced an unfaltering, forensic analysis of their uniquely destructive relationship; part confession, part accusation. Listen in to discover how Wilde survived his long isolation through an unwavering belief in love and the resilience of art.
Simon Butteriss reads Oscar Wilde's De Profundis in its entirety in episodes of around 20 minutes. While in prison, Wilde wrote his astonishing, book-length love letter to the young man who had destroyed his life. Allowed one piece of paper at a time and no revisions, he nevertheless produced an unfaltering, forensic analysis of their uniquely destructive relationship; part confession, part accusation. Listen in to discover how Wilde survived his long isolation through an unwavering belief in love and the resilience of art.
Simon Butteriss reads Oscar Wilde's De Profundis in its entirety in daily episodes of around 20 minutes. While in prison, Wilde wrote his astonishing, book-length love letter to the young man who had destroyed his life. Allowed one piece of paper at a time and no revisions, he nevertheless produced an unfaltering, forensic analysis of their uniquely destructive relationship; part confession, part accusation. Listen in to discover how Wilde survived his long isolation through an unwavering belief in love and the resilience of art.
Simon Butteriss reads Oscar Wilde's De Profundis in its entirety in daily episodes of around 20 minutes. While in prison, Wilde wrote his astonishing, book-length love letter to the young man who had destroyed his life. Allowed one piece of paper at a time and no revisions, he nevertheless produced an unfaltering, forensic analysis of their uniquely destructive relationship; part confession, part accusation. Listen in to discover how Wilde survived his long isolation through an unwavering belief in love and the resilience of art.
Simon Butteriss reads Oscar Wilde's De Profundis in its entirety in daily episodes of around 20 minutes. While in prison, Wilde wrote his astonishing, book-length love letter to the young man who had destroyed his life. Allowed one piece of paper at a time and no revisions, he nevertheless produced an unfaltering, forensic analysis of their uniquely destructive relationship; part confession, part accusation. Listen in to discover how Wilde survived his long isolation through an unwavering belief in love and the resilience of art.
Simon Butteriss reads Oscar Wilde's De Profundis in its entirety in daily episodes of around 20 minutes. While in prison, Wilde wrote his astonishing, book-length love letter to the young man who had destroyed his life. Allowed one piece of paper at a time and no revisions, he nevertheless produced an unfaltering, forensic analysis of their uniquely destructive relationship; part confession, part accusation. Listen in to discover how Wilde survived his long isolation through an unwavering belief in love and the resilience of art.
Simon Butteriss reads Oscar Wilde's De Profundis in its entirety in daily episodes of around 20 minutes. While in prison, Wilde wrote his astonishing, book-length love letter to the young man who had destroyed his life. Allowed one piece of paper at a time and no revisions, he nevertheless produced an unfaltering, forensic analysis of their uniquely destructive relationship; part confession, part accusation. Listen in to discover how Wilde survived his long isolation through an unwavering belief in love and the resilience of art.
Simon Butteriss reads Oscar Wilde's De Profundis in its entirety in daily episodes of around 20 minutes. While in prison, Wilde wrote his astonishing, book-length love letter to the young man who had destroyed his life. Allowed one piece of paper at a time and no revisions, he nevertheless produced an unfaltering, forensic analysis of their uniquely destructive relationship; part confession, part accusation. Listen in to discover how Wilde survived his long isolation through an unwavering belief in love and the resilience of art.
Simon Butteriss reads Oscar Wilde's De Profundis in its entirety in daily episodes of around 20 minutes. While in prison, Wilde wrote his astonishing, book-length love letter to the young man who had destroyed his life. Allowed one piece of paper at a time and no revisions, he nevertheless produced an unfaltering, forensic analysis of their uniquely destructive relationship; part confession, part accusation. Listen in to discover how Wilde survived his long isolation through an unwavering belief in love and the resilience of art.
Simon Butteriss reads Oscar Wilde's De Profundis in its entirety in daily episodes of around 20 minutes. While in prison, Wilde wrote his astonishing, book-length love letter to the young man who had destroyed his life. Allowed one piece of paper at a time and no revisions, he nevertheless produced an unfaltering, forensic analysis of their uniquely destructive relationship; part confession, part accusation. Listen in to discover how Wilde survived his long isolation through an unwavering belief in love and the resilience of art.
Simon Butteriss reads Oscar Wilde's De Profundis in its entirety in daily episodes of around 20 minutes. While in prison, Wilde wrote his astonishing, book-length love letter to the young man who had destroyed his life. Allowed one piece of paper at a time and no revisions, he nevertheless produced an unfaltering, forensic analysis of their uniquely destructive relationship; part confession, part accusation. Listen in to discover how Wilde survived his long isolation through an unwavering belief in love and the resilience of art.
Simon Butteriss reads Oscar Wilde's De Profundis in its entirety in daily episodes of around 20 minutes. While in prison, Wilde wrote his astonishing, book-length love letter to the young man who had destroyed his life. Allowed one piece of paper at a time and no revisions, he nevertheless produced an unfaltering, forensic analysis of their uniquely destructive relationship; part confession, part accusation. Listen in to discover how Wilde survived his long isolation through an unwavering belief in love and the resilience of art.
The Lemon Table - Characters by Wiltshire Creative
Lemon Table - How The Adaptation Was Devised by Wiltshire Creative
In conversation with Wiltshire Creative’s Further Education course leader Tom Sherman and two students on the Performing and Production Arts courses. For more information about our FE courses, visit www.wiltshirecreative.co.uk/take-part/fe/
In conversation with playwright Barney Norris and actor Reece Evans who were both in our Stage 65 Youth Theatre before starting their professional lives. They reminisce about the youth theatre and talk about Barney’s new adaptation of Blood Wedding in which Reece plays Rob the young groom. Blood Wedding runs in the Main House at Salisbury Playhouse from 6-22 February 2020.
Wiltshire Creative Artistic Director Gareth Machin and Associate Director Jo Newman chat about the writing and making of a musical adaptation of Beatrix Potter’s The Tailor of Gloucester
Breaking the Code actors Edward Bennett and Julian Firth chat about their preparations for the production
Director Jo Newman talks to set and costume designer James Button about the hilarious Alan Ayckbourn comedy Relatively Speaking which opens at Salisbury Playhouse on 4 September 2019