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Black Swan State Theatre Company presents twelfth night By william shakespeare 24 july - 8 August theatre playhouse Duration approx 2 hours 45 minutes [including interval] W i n e Pa r t n e r www.bsstc.com.au A s s o c i at e Pa r t n e r P r i n c i pa l Pa r t n e r Featuring ................................................................ Renée Hale (McIntosh), Stuart Halusz, Brendan Hanson, Luke Hewitt, Kirsty Hillhouse, Geoff Kelso, Ingle Knight, Samantha Murray, Will O’Mahony, Kelton Pell, Kenneth Ransom, Kazimir Sas, Steve Turner, Amanda Woodhams Director................................................................... Roger Hodgman Set Designer........................................................... Christina Smith Costume Designer................................................ Alicia Clements Lighting Designer................................................. Jon Buswell Composer/Sound Designer.............................. Ash Gibson Greig Assistant Director.............................................. Stuart Halusz Fight Director....................................................... Andy Fraser Casting Director................................................. Annie Murtagh-Monks Stage Manager...................................................... Hugo Aguilar López Assistant Stage Manager................................. Nicole Gillespie Wardrobe Manager............................................. Sacha Mahboub Wardrobe Assistant/Head Cutter................ Penny Mazzuchelli Directing Secondment....................................... Gemma Gurney (NIDA) Daniel Monks Design Secondment............................................. Lauren Clark (WAAPA) Stage Management Secondment................... Erin Coubrough (WAAPA) Stephen Moore (WAAPA) If you would like to find out more about Black Swan State Theatre Company productions, visit www.bsstc.com.au and sign up to our mailing list or become our fan on Facebook. Synopsis This beguiling comedy follows the romantic adventures of Viola and her identical twin Sebastian, both shipwrecked in the enchanted dukedom of Illyria. After being washed ashore in Illyria, Viola has lost contact with Sebastian and believes that he has drowned. Disguising herself as a young man named Cesario, she gains employment as a page with Duke Orsino. The Duke sends “Cesario” to court the beautiful Countess Olivia for him, but when Olivia falls for “Cesario” instead of Duke Orsino, an intricate love triangle between Duke Orsino, “Cesario” and Olivia is created which sets in motion a chaotic chain of events. Entering into this intricate plot are members of Olivia’s household. Her rowdy drunkard uncle, Sir Toby; his foolish friend, Sir Andrew, Olivia’s witty and pretty waiting-gentlewoman, Maria, and Feste, the clever clown of the house. Together they conspire against Malvolio, the pompous steward who always attempts to spoil their fun, by engineering a practical joke to make Malvolio think that Olivia is in love with him. Sebastian reappears, arriving in Illyria with his friend and protector Antonio and they set off for Orsino’s domain, in spite of the fact that Antonio and Orsino are old enemies. Meanwhile, Sir Andrew becomes aware that Olivia has fallen in love with “Cesario” and challenges the young page to a duel. However when Sebastian, who looks just like the disguised Viola appears, a case of mistaken identity occurs and Sir Andrew and Sir Toby end up coming to blows with Sebastian, rather than “Cesario”. Olivia enters amid the confusion and seeing Sebastian she thinks he is “Cesario” and asks him to marry her. Sebastion is baffled by this proposal, as he has never met Olivia before, but is willing to go along with it as he can see she is both wealthy and beautiful. To make matters more complicated, Antonio has been arrested by Orsino’s officers and begs “Cesario” for help, mistaking him for Sebastian. The practical joke played on Malvolio has lead Olivia to believe he is mad and he has been locked away for treatment. Kindly, Sir Toby begins to think better of the joke and a letter is sent to Olivia asking for Malvolio to be released. Eventually, all characters meet and it is revealed that “Cesario” and Sebastian are two separate people and the twins are joyfully reunited. Now that it is known that “Cesario” is actually a woman, Orsino realises he loves Viola and asks her to marry him. The practical joke played on Malvolio is revealed to him, mistaken identities are corrected and the happy couples are left to celebrate. Excerpts taken from: SparkNotes Editors (2003). SparkNote on Twelfth Night. Retrieved July 5, 2010, from http://www.sparknotes.com/shakespeare/twelfthnight/. WILLIAM SHAKESPEARE PLAYWRIGHT William Shakespeare was born in Stratfordupon-Avon, presumably on April 23, 1564. Church records from the Holy Trinity Church indicate that he was baptized there on April 26, 1564. Young William was born of John Shakespeare, a glover and leather merchant and Mary Arden, a landed local heiress. It was documented that Shakespeare was married to Anne Hathaway on November 28, 1582. William was 18 at the time and Anne was 26 - and pregnant. Their first daughter, Susanna, was born on May 26, 1583. The couple later had twins, Hamnet and Judith, born February 2, 1585. Hamnet died in childhood at the age of 11, on August 11, 1596. Shakespeare produced most of his known work between 1589 and 1613. His early plays were mainly comedies and histories, genres he raised to the peak of sophistication and artistry by the end of the sixteenth century. He then wrote mainly tragedies until about 1608, including Hamlet, King Lear and Macbeth, which are considered some of the finest works in the English language. In his last phase, he wrote tragicomedies, also known as romances, and collaborated with other playwrights. Many of his plays were published in editions of varying quality and accuracy during his lifetime. In 1623, two of his former theatrical colleagues published the First Folio, a collected edition of his dramatic works that included all but two of the plays now recognised as Shakespeare’s. Shakespeare wrote his will in 1611, bequeathing his properties to his daughter Susanna (married in 1607 to Dr. John Hall). To his surviving daughter Judith, he left £300 and to his wife Anne left, “my second best bed.” William Shakespeare allegedly died on his birthday, April 23, 1616. This is probably more of a romantic myth than reality, but Shakespeare was interred at Holy Trinity in Stratford on April 25, 1616. Shakespeare’s company was the most successful in London in his day. Never before had a playwright enjoyed sufficient acclaim to see his works published and sold as popular literature in the midst of his career. In addition, Shakespeare’s ownership share in both the theatrical company and the Globe itself made him as much an entrepreneur as an artist. William Shakespeare’s legacy is a body of work that will never be equalled in Western civilisation. His words have endured for 400 years, and still reach across the centuries as powerfully as ever. Information courtesy of Pressley, J. M., Shakespeare Resource Center, June 6, 2010, http://www.bardweb. net/man.html. ROGER HODGMAN DIRECTOR Black Swan: The Memory of Water, Closer, Art, Copenhagen, Private Lives (Melbourne Theatre Company’s touring production). Other Theatre: Roger has directed numerous productions for Melbourne Theatre Company, Vancouver Playhouse, Shaw Festival (Canada), Sydney Theatre Company, Queensland Theatre Company, State Theatre Company of South Australia, The Production Company, IMG, Victorian Opera, NZ Opera, Queensland Opera and Oz Opera. Plays: Numerous productions of a range of plays. Musicals: She Loves Me, Guys and Dolls, Annie Get Your Gun, Kiss Me Kate, Thoroughly Modern Millie, The Gilbert and Sullivan Show, Follies, She Loves Me, Wonderful Town, Respect, Dirty Rotten Scoundrels. Opera: Rigoletto, La Cenerentola, Xerxes. TV: Lockie Leonard, The Secret Life of Us, MDA, Holly’s Heroes, Wicked Science, CrashBurn, White Collar Blue, Blue Heelers, Stingers, Stepfather of the Bride, Elephant Princess, City Homicide. Positions: Roger began his career with the ABC, where he directed a range of programs. He worked in England and Canada between 1971-1983 where he taught acting at East 15 Drama School and the Vancouver Playhouse Acting School, conducted acting workshops, taught university and directed numerous theatre productions. He held the position of Artistic Director of the Vancouver Playhouse for three years. A highlight of his time in Vancouver was working closely with Tennessee Williams on two premieres of Williams’ plays. In 1983 Roger became Dean of the School of Drama at the Victorian College of the Arts. In 1988, he was appointed the Artistic Director of Melbourne Theatre Company. Among the over fifty productions he directed for Melbourne Theatre Company, highlights included a series of modern dress Shakespeare and four critically acclaimed productions of Stephen Sondheim musicals. He left Melbourne Theatre Company in 1999 and has since conducted a busy freelance career directing plays, operas, musicals and numerous TV dramas in Canada and New Zealand as well as throughout Australia. Awards: Roger received two Green Room Awards for Best Director for Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf? and A Little Night Music, the Sydney Theatre Critics Awards for Best Music Theatre Production for Sweeney Todd and the Silver Bear for Best Telemovie at Chicago Film festival for Stepfather of the Bride. A NOTE FROM THE DIRECTOR Twelfth Night is one of Shakespeare’s most performed and loved plays and for good reason. I was delighted to accept Kate Cherry’s offer to have another go at it. I’ve admired Black Swan from its birth nineteen years ago and enjoyed the other productions I’ve done for the Company. One of the greatest pleasures is to work with a number of Perth’s talented acting community. The play’s subtitle What You Will gives some clue to the number of possibilities in approaching it. It has scenes of great romanticism, others of high and low comedy, melancholic songs and very dark aspects as well. No one production can fully exploit all these elements but we hope to touch on all of them. Most of the characters of the play begin their journey in a state of unhappiness or sadness. The two great houses of Illyria are in a dysfunctional state – the one being dominated by the Duke (or Count) Orsino’s obsessive and hopeless love for the wealthy Olivia. She in turn is obsessively mourning her dead father and brother and presides over a house with little joy. Into this world comes an adventurous young woman, Viola, herself mourning the recent probable drowning of her twin brother. By the end of the play most of the characters have found peace of mind and happiness – at least, as a cast member said on our first rehearsal day, the good characters are happy! A couple of the others are not. An early task in approaching a play by Shakespeare is to consider its setting and costuming. In his day there was a more or less bare stage with a couple of doors and maybe an upper level. Props were minimal. The audience was asked to use its imagination, helped of course by the brilliant images in his writing. Our Set Designer Christina Smith and I decided very early on that we would follow this approach, with a very simple space to create, with the cast, an imaginary world in which the play could take place. There are subtle references to the sea coast nearby and to Elizabethan England. The ‘costumes’ in the Elizabethan theatre were the clothes of the day, probably handed down from great aristocratic houses and almost certainly having no reference to place and time. The audience recognised aspects of the character from the clothes they wore and this practice of costuming the plays with clothes contemporary to the particular production continued to the early nineteenth century. It’s a practice Alicia Clements, our Costume Designer, has adopted for this production. The play is set in Illyria, a place on the Adriatic coast. I think it’s fair to say Shakespeare knew no more about Illyria than we do, possibly choosing it for its similarity to the word ‘Elysium’ and the pleasing sound (not that far from his key female characters Viola and Olivia). Many of the references in the play are to Elizabethan places and habits and I have no doubt that the Elizabethan audience felt they were seeing people and behaviour that they recognised. I hope you do too. Roger Hodgman Black Swan’s 1991 production of Twelfth Night Front cover to the 1991 Twelfth Night programme 1991 Twelfth Night poster Black Swan’s production of Twelfth Night, 1991 Black Swan’s production of Twelfth Night, 1991 Shakespeare’s Development of the English Language The most striking feature of any of Shakespeare’s work is his command of language. His effect on the development of the Early Modern English language is unsurpassed. Without even being aware, our everyday speech is full of words and phrases invented by Shakespeare. It is all the more astounding when we not only consider Shakespeare’s sparse formal education but also the limited curriculum available to Shakespeare in his time. In spite of these factors, Shakespeare is credited by the Oxford English Dictionary with the introduction of nearly 3,000 words into the language. His vocabulary, as collected from his works, numbers upward of 17,000 words. In Shakespeare’s time, English was wonderfully flexible as a language. Couple this with Shakespeare writing as a dramatic poet and playwright and you can gather that writers of the time were able to invent new words and new phrases with great colloquial freedom. It allowed endless possibilities for Shakespeare in his artistic license. Shakespeare’s English, in spite of the calamitous cries of high school students everywhere, is only one linguistic generation removed from that which we speak today. The Elizabethan dialect slightly differs from Modern English but the principles are relatively the same. This facility with language and the art with which he employed its usage, is why Shakespeare is such an enduring writer and his works still remain relevant today. As if all the words and literary works that Shakespeare produced were not enough, his command of the English language can be seen in the creation of sayings by putting common words together. Many of these phrases are still commonly used today: • all that glitters isn’t gold • method in his madness • be all and end all • mind’s eye • break the ice • one fell swoop • catch a cold • to thine own self be true • green eyed monster • too much of a good thing • heart of gold • wear one’s heart on one’s sleeve Excerpt taken from No Sweat Shakespeare: http://www.nosweatshakespeare.com/resources/ shakespeare-early-middle-english.htm. Costume Design for Twelfth Night Given that Shakespeare can be transported into virtually any time period or setting, designing the costumes for Twelfth Night allowed me to have a completely unique kind of artistic freedom. For this production we have imagined the characters as wealthy jetsetters who inhabit a resort-like island, in the manner of the French Riviera or Greek Islands. Inspired by the specially designed ‘resort’ collections of many high-end designers, the Count Orsino and Countess Olivia are dressed in the manner of Armani and Chanel, while the servants, dressed in tennis whites, have become personal assistants, sports trainers and stylists. The tightly controlled colour palette reflects the natural environment and the fabrics are light and breezy in the manner of linens and silk chiffons. By contrast, the dark eccentricity of the fool, Feste or Sir Andrew’s stuffy tweed costume highlights their displacement within this world. ALICIA CLEMENTS COSTUME DESIGNER Set Design for Twelfth Night One of the more potent images that remained with me upon reading Twelfth Night was that of the shipwreck. What if Illyria itself was the result of a shipwreck, an island created by the impact of natural forces upon a man-made environment? I wondered what a classical ‘set’ would look like, should it find itself violently wrecked upon the stage of the Playhouse Theatre in Perth. The idea of a space that was once whole being torn into two parts, serves not only as distinct parts of the ‘island’ representing Olivia and Orsino’s houses but also as a metaphor for the separation of the twins at the start of the play. The sharp and ever present division of the back wall acts as a constant reminder that the siblings are apart and ‘halved’. Just like the forces of a storm, there are many influences that have converged to inspire this design; Coney island boardwalks, traditional Elizabethan sets, the tempestuous brushwork of Joseph Mallord, William Turner and the wonderful rope installations of architect and designer Luis Longhi are among many. CHRISTINA SMITH SET DESIGNER RENÉE HALE (Mcintosh) Valentine Black Swan: Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf?, Honour, Uncle Vanya, Educating Rita. Other Theatre: Black Swan/Happy Dagger Theatre: Cyrano de Bergerac. ThinIce/ Sydney Theatre Company: The Duel. Happy Dagger Theatre: The York Crucifixion, Oleanna. Perth Theatre Company: Charitable Intent, Amadeus, The Corporal’s Wife. Deckchair Theatre: Much Ado About Nothing,The Comedy of Errors. Hole in The Wall: Long Day’s Journey into Night, Ghosts. Barking Gecko: The Buzz. ThinIce: The Gathering, Bed. Gossip’s Feast Productions: Construction of the Human Heart. Entropy Productions: Under Milk Wood. Film: Edgar and Elizabeth, What About James, Exit Strategy, FB Holden, Sleeper. TV: Wormwood, The Sleepover Club. Positions: Happy Dagger Theatre Producer, PACS Board member. Other: Renee is a proud member of Equity. Awards: Renée was the 2008 winner of the Member’s Choice Award for Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf?. Training: 2002 WAAPA Graduate. STUART HALUSZ Fabian/Sea Captain Black Swan: Much Ado About Nothing, The Memory of Water, Far Away, Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf?. Other Theatre: Red Ryder Productions: Loveplay. Perth Theatre Company: The Big Picture, Taking Liberty, Marmalade and Egg, Skin Tight, Noble Rot for Uncut Gems. Deckchair Theatre: The Comedy of Errors, As You Like It. Shakespeare Globe Centre: King Lear, Sonnet Stroll. Australian Shakespeare Company: A Midsummer Night’s Dream. Agelink Theatre: Dear Heart, As Ships Pass By, Here to Stay, Christmas Spirit. Belvoir Street Theatre: Essington Lewis: I Am Work. Performing Arts Productions: Homme Fatale – The Joey Stefano Story, Lady Chatterley’s Lover, Anne of Green Gables. Ensemble Theatre: Dags. Downstairs at the Maj: Pinter’s People. TV: Cloudstreet, The Great Escape, Air Australia, CNNNN, The Secret Life of Us, Blonde, Blue Heelers, Thunderstone, Big Sky, Fallen Angels. Film: Victim. As Director: Midnite Youth Theatre: Troilus and Cressida. WA Youth Theatre Company: Romeo and Juliet. Other: Stuart has done extensive narrating for the Royal Blind Society, Performing Arts Perspectives, Radio Drama for the ABC and narration for Vision Australia Audio Books among others. Stuart has been a proud member of Equity since 1995. Awards: Stuart received the 2000 Narrator of the Year Award. Training: Stuart trained at WAAPA. He has also completed SAFDi Basic Stage Combat and represented Australia at the inaugural International Artistic Fellowship, Shakespeare’s Globe Theatre, London. BRENDAN HANSON Curio/Priest Black Swan: Much Ado About Nothing. Other Theatre: Brainbox Productions: The Last Five Years, Lebensraum. Deckchair Theatre: Checklist for an Armed Robber, The Lonely Hearts Club, Twelfth Night, The Comedy of Errors, As You Like It. Logos Productions: The Spook. Shakespeare Festival NSW: A Midsummer Night’s Dream. Sydney Theatre Company: Neon Street. Mildura Arts Festival: Water to Wine. Brainstorm Theatre: Misfits. Agelink Theatre: As Ships Pass By. TV: Air Australia, Under One Roof. Film: South Pacific. Opera: Opera Australia: Tristan und Isolde. WA Opera: Carmen, Orpheus in the Underworld, The Magic Flute. Singapore Lyric Opera: Die Fledermaus. Musicals: David Atkins: Singin’ in the Rain. Cameron Macintosh: Les Miserables. Production Company: Mame, She Loves Me. Action Theatre, Singapore: Chang & Eng – The Musical. Gordon Frost: Grease. Other: Brendan is a regular on the Perth cabaret scene and has appeared in Sharing’s Not for Everyone, Who threw that Jaffa? and Are We There Yet? for the Brainbox Project, Downstairs at the Maj. He toured his one man show Homeward Bound and Gagged around Australia in 2000. Brendan has been a proud member of Equity since 1990. Training: WAAPA graduate. LUKE HEWITT Sir Toby Belch Black Swan: Much Ado About Nothing, Red Dog, One Destiny. Other Theatre: Black Swan/Happy Dagger Theatre: Cyrano de Bergerac. Perth Theatre Company: Speed-the-Plow, Face to Face, Milk and Honey. Deckchair Theatre: Krakouer!, Wonderlands, Twelfth Night, Much Ado About Nothing, A Midsummer Night’s Dream, Romeo and Juliet. kompany M: Bone Dry, Tours of the Gun, Roadtrain. Sydney Theatre Company: One Day in ’67. Yirra Yaakin: One Day in ’67, King Hit. EHJ Productions: Twelfth Night, Much Ado About Nothing, The Taming of the Shrew, Romeo and Juliet, The Wind in the Willows. Jedda Productions: Windows. Make a Mile Productions: Road Train. Mark Turton: Strong Left Hand. White Crow Productions: Bombs and Suitcases. The Blue Room: The Monkey Bomb, Green Meat is for Takeaways. Handzon Theatre: Chat – The Musical. Shining Wit: Bouncers. Fairweather Productions: Thermophobia. Hole in the Wall Theatre: A Tuna Christmas. Swy Theatre: 1959 Pink Thunderbird Convertible. TV: Pipe Dreams, Streetsmartz, Parallax, Shark Net, Bush Patrol, Ship to Shore, The Copopple. Film: Two Fists One Heart, To Hell and Back, Crush, Wormwood, Wait Till Your Father Gets Home. Other: Luke is a founding member of kompany M and has appeared in TV commercials and countless voice-over roles for both TV and radio. Luke has been a proud member of Equity since 1986. KIRSTY HILLHOUSE Olivia Black Swan: Much Ado About Nothing, The Merry-Go-Round in the Sea, Last Cab to Darwin. Other Theatre: Perth International Arts Festival/Deckchair Theatre: Grace. Deckchair Theatre: Twelfth Night, Love, Much Ado About Nothing, A Midsummer Night’s Dream, Hysteria, Romeo and Juliet. Perth Theatre Company: Talk About the Passion, Tango, The Vagina Monologues, The Return. Sydney Theatre Company: Gift of the Gorgon. Bell Shakespeare: Actors at Work (Hamlet, Twelfth Night, Romeo and Juliet, King Lear). Belvoir Street: Girls Night Out, GNO Reprieve. Perth International Arts Festival: Dennis Cleaveland. Porkchop Productions: Night of the Seamonkey, Wank. Australian Shakespeare Company: Twelfth Night. Effie Crump Theatre: Irish Stew. Shakespeare in the Vineyards: A Midsummer Night’s Dream. Theatre of Plants: Linnaeus Prince of Flowers. TV: Cloudstreet, The Circuit I, The Circuit II, The Sleepover Club, Foreign Exchange, Water Rats, GP, E Street. Radio: The Return. Kirsty also has an established career as a voice over artist. As Movement Designer: Black Swan/Porkchop Productions: Ruby’s Last Dollar. As Director: Delira Productions/Perth Theatre Company: The Haunting of Daniel Gartrell. Other: Kirsty has worked extensively in physical theatre performance, choreography and stunt coordination, working with Legs on The Wall, NIDA, Bell Shakespeare, Xena, Porkchop Productions, Two Planks and a Passion, Icarus Stilt Theatre, Black Swan and Deckchair Theatre among others. She has made four animated multi-path movies for CD Rom and worked as a director and dramaturge. She has initiated and run several performance companies, developing new performance in alternative performance spaces. These companies have performed for Sydney Festival, Canberra Festival, Floriade Festival, Powerhouse Museum and Natural Museum. The performances included installation work, aerial performance, musicals, interactive performance and cabaret. Kirsty represented Australia in ‘new performance’ at the Istrapolitana Project in Bratislava and the World Theatre Training Festival in USA in 1992. Kirsty has been a proud member of Equity since 1992. GEOFF KELSO Malvolio Black Swan: Much Ado About Nothing, The Memory of Water, Jandamarra, Accidental Death of an Anarchist, Uncle Vanya, Art, Copenhagen, Welcome to Broome, The Floating World, Waiting for Godot, Sister Girl, Twelfth Night. Other Theatre: The Pinjarra Project: Bidenjarreb Pinjarra (touring Australia since 1994). Sydney Theatre Company: Ying Tong: A Walk with the Goons, Democracy. Company B: As You Like It, Up the Road, Dead Heart, The Royal Commission into the Australian Economy. Perth Theatre Company: Shadow of the Eagle, Soulmates, Brilliant Lies. State Theatre Company of Western Australia: Model Citizen, The Country Wife. Hole in the Wall Theatre: The Recruiting Officer, Our Country’s Good, Seasons Greetings. Opera: Opera Australia: Die Fledermaus. TV: Cloudstreet, Murder in 3 Acts, Sharknet, Streetsmartz, Ship to Shore, Bush Patrol, The Gillies Report, Good News Week, A Country Practice, Rafferty’s Rules. Other: This is the second time Geoff has played Malvolio for Black Swan. The first time was in Black Swan’s inaugural production of Twelfth Night alongside Kelton Pell in 1991. Geoff has been a proud member of Equity since 1976. Awards: Geoff won the 2003 Best Actor WA Equity Award for Shadow of the Eagle, the 1991 Swan Gold Award for Best Actor for Twelfth Night and the 1977 National Theatre Awards for Best Actor WA and Best New Talent WA. INGLE KNIGHT Sir Andrew Aguecheek Black Swan: Uncle Vanya, The Crucible, Educating Rita. Other Theatre: Perth Theatre Company: The Matchmaker, Amadeus, Silly Cow, Dead Funny, Hedda Gabler, Under Milkwood, Crystal Clear, Cheapside, Gasping. Barking Gecko: Alice in Wonderland, Don Quixote, The Emperor’s New Clothes, Golden Valley. Including the above, Ingle has appeared in over 40 professional theatre productions. Film: Under the Lighthouse, Dancing, Two Fists One Heart. TV: Wormwood, The Sleepover Club, Ship to Shore, Prisoner, Neighbours. As Writer: Ingle has had more than thirty of his plays, musicals and films produced for theatre, radio and television. Other: Ingle has written and performed two solo shows, The Getaway Bus and The Exploding Breakfast, both of which have received national and international tours. Awards: In 2009 Ingle won a WA Equity Guild Award for Best New Play for his script, Taking Liberty. In 2000, Ingle received the WA Fringe Best Drama Award for The Getaway Bus. In 2003 Ingle’s script Shadow of the Eagle received the Best Play of the Year Award at the WA Equity Awards. He also won the 1999 Premier’s Award for Best Script for Milk and Honey. SAMANTHA MURRAY Maria Black Swan: The Lady Aoi, Proof, A Man with Five Children, Meekatharra. Other Theatre: The Blue Room: October. Deckchair Theatre: Wonderlands, Shakespeare in the Park (Twelfth Night, A Midsummer Night’s Dream, Romeo & Juliet), Too Far to Walk. Steamworks/Deckchair Theatre: The Danger Age. Perth International Arts Festival/ThinIce: Antigone. Perth Theatre Company: The Turning, The Heidi Chronicles. Prickly Pear Ensemble: Tough Love. Film: Needle, All the Way, Love in Limbo, Holy Smoke, The Director, Little Man, My Shout. TV: 3 Acts of Murder, MDA, A Country Practice, Creative Spirits. Other: Samantha is a founding member of Southern Edge Arts and a proud member of Equity. WILL O’MAHONY Sebastian Black Swan: The HotBed Ensemble: pool (no water), The Dark Room. Other Theatre: Perth Theatre Company: The Haunting of Daniel Gartrell. Shakespeare WA: The Taming of the Shrew, A Midsummer Night’s Dream. Riverside Theatre: Shakespeare’s R&J. Other: Will is a proud member of Equity. Training: Will graduated from Acting at WAAPA in 2007 and has returned this year to study Directing. KELTON PELL Antonio Black Swan: Jandamarra, The Island, Cosi (2000 & 1995 productions), Welcome to Broome, Dead Heart, Waiting for Godot, Tourmaline, Twelfth Night. Other Theatre: The Pinjarra Project: Bidenjarreb Pinjarra (touring Australia since 1994). Urban Theatre Projects: The Fence. State Opera of South Australia: Ingkata. Deckchair Theatre: Strategy for Two Hams, The Removalists, King for this Place, The Silent Years. Yirra Yaakin: Inside Out, Solid, Cruel Wild Woman, Runumuk, King Hit. South Australian Theatre Company: Crow. Swy Theatre: Wild Cat Falling. Kelton has also appeared in No Sugar, Honey Spot, Barungin, The Dreamers, First Born Trilogy and Our Town. TV: Cloudstreet, The Circuit II, Bush Patrol. Film: Mad Bastards, Aunty Maggie and the Womba Wagkun, The Last Ride, Bran Nue Dae, Stone Bros, September, Cold Turkey, Confessions of a Headhunter, Where Two Rivers Meet, Australian Rules, One Night the Moon, Blackfellas. Other: This is the second time Kelton has performed Twelfth Night for Black Swan. The first time was in Black Swan’s inaugural production of Twelfth Night alongside Geoff Kelso in 1991. Awards: Kelton won the Contemporary Performing Arts Award for Best Collaboration in 1996, the Swan Gold Award for Best West Australian Actor in 1994 and the WA Aboriginal Artist of the Year Award in 1991. KENNETH RANSOM Orsino Black Swan: The Sapphires, Much Ado About Nothing. Other Theatre: Ensemble Theatre: McReele. Company B Belvoir: Stuff Happens. Queensland Theatre Company: The Female of the Species. Melbourne Theatre Company: Boy Gets Girl, Take Me Out, Metamorphoses, Twelfth Night, Measure for Measure, The Duchess of Malfi, Macbeth, Hamlet Explorations. Shakespeare & Co: As You Like It, The Tempest, Julius Caesar, A Midsummer Night’s Dream, The Comedy of Errors. Mark Taper Forum: Julius Caesar, Life Without Men. Opera and Musical Theatre: Opera Australia: The Abduction from the Seraglio. Theatreworks: Rigoletto. TV: Nightmares & Dreamscapes, Scooter Secret Agent, Code 1114, Counterstrike, The Secret Life of Us, Border Patrol, Crash Zone, Backberner, China Beach, Hotel, Fame. Film: Voodoo Lagoon, Crocodile Hunter – Collision Course, Crocodile Dundee in LA, Dead End, There Goes My Baby. Other: Kenneth has been a proud member of Equity since 1996. KAZIMIR SAS Court Male/Police Officer 2 Black Swan: The HotBed Ensemble: pool (no water), The Dark Room. TV: Storm World, Time Trackers, All Saints, The Alice, Parallax, The Shark Net, The Gift. Film: Teesh and Trude. As Writer/Director: Film: Little Charmer. Other: Kazimir is a proud member of Equity. STEVE TURNER Feste Black Swan: Much Ado About Nothing, The Glass Menagerie, The Crucible, The Carnivores. Other Theatre: Black Swan/Happy Dagger Theatre: Cyrano de Bergerac. Perth Theatre Company: Speed-the-Plow, The Turning, Tango, Talk About The Passion, Relatively Speaking, Italian American Reconciliation. Deckchair Theatre: Grace, Much Ado About Nothing, The Comedy of Errors, Twelfth Night, Bell in the Storm. kompany M: The Gun, Luv Struk, Bone Dry, Road Train, Jeepers Creepers. The Blue Room: October, Killer Joe. Positions: Steve is a founding member of kompany M. Other: Steve has been a proud member of Equity since 1987. Awards: Steve won the 2001 WA Equity Guild Award for Best Actor for To Whom It May Concern and the 2002 WA Equity Guild Award for Best Actor for Below. In 2007 Steve was given WA Equity Guild Award Members Choice for The Crucible. AMANDA WOODHAMS Viola Black Swan: The HotBed Ensemble: Portraits of Modern Evil, The Caucasian Chalk Circle. Other Theatre: Black Swan/HotHouse Theatre: The Web. The Blue Room/This One Show Productions: Motortown. Film: Goodbye Cruel World, The Toll. TV: Cloudstreet (in the role of Red Lamb), Stormworld. Other: Amanda is a Board Member of WA Youth Theatre Company. She recently worked as the Assistant Director on WA Youth Theatre Company’s production DNA. Awards: Amanda received the 2008 Actor’s Equity Award for Best Newcomer. Amanda would like to dedicate her performance to Maggie Anketell, her first acting mentor at age 11. CHRISTINA SMITH SET DESIGNER As Set and Costume Designer: Black Swan: The Swimming Club, Much Ado About Nothing, The Year of Magical Thinking. Other Theatre: Melbourne Theatre Company: Blackbird, Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf?, The Clean House, Things We Do For Love, The Daylight Atheist, Honour. Frank Woodley/Token Events: Possessed. Queensland Theatre Company: The Female of the Species. Sydney Theatre Company: Troupers. Jim McPherson Inc: Respect. Belvoir St/Malthouse Theatre: Black Medea. Bell Shakespeare: The Two Gentlemen of Verona. Victorian Opera: The Turn of the Screw. Cosi Fan Tutte. Ilbijerri Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Theatre Company: Rainbow’s End. Playbox: Julia 3, Ruby Moon, Svetlana in Slingbacks, Post Felicity, Inside 01. Red Stitch: Jesus Hopped the A Train. Store Room: A Poor Student. La Mama: The Babe, She, Believe Me Oscar Wilde. Neonheart Theatre: The Eskimo. As Costume Designer: Black Swan: Blackrock. Other Theatre: Melbourne Theatre Company: Realism, Humble Boy, Proof, Sweet Bird of Youth, Three Days of Rain. The Australian Ballet: Personal Best. Victorian Opera: Don Giovanni. West Australian Ballet: The Nutcracker. As Set Designer: The Hoist: The Government Inspector. La Mama: The Barbeque. Melbourne Theatre Company: Boy Gets Girl. Other: In addition to her theatre work, Christina’s other projects include the design of the scenic elements for the Tim Burton exhibition at ACMI, the redesign of the Circa theatrette installation at the National Museum of Australia, and the 2006 Commonwealth Games Opening and Closing Ceremonies (as part of the design team). Awards: Christina was awarded the 2005 Green Room Award in theatre design for her work on Honour, The Daylight Atheist and Julia 3. Training: Christina studied Set and Costume Design at WAAPA, where she was the recipient of the Town and Country Scholarship. ALICIA CLEMENTS COSTUME DESIGNER Black Swan: The Clean House. The Hotbed Ensemble: pool (no water), The Dark Room. As Set and Costume Designer: Steps Youth Dance Company: Powdermonkey. As Costume Designer: Deckchair Theatre: Krakouer!. Onward Production: Singular Women. As Set Designer: John Curtin College of the Arts: The King and I. As Assistant Designer: Deckchair Theatre: Checklist for an Armed Robber, The Lonely Hearts Club. Awards: Alicia received the David Hough Award for Outstanding Achievement in 2008 at WAAPA. Training: Alicia graduated from WAAPA in 2008. JON BUSWELL LIGHTING DESIGNER Black Swan: The Glass Menagerie, The Female of the Species. Other Theatre (Australia): Melbourne Theatre Company: All My Sons, The Clean House, Ray’s Tempest, Cheech, Boy Gets Girl, Things We Do for Love, The Glass Menagerie, Love Song, The 39 Steps. Sydney Theatre Company: A Midsummer Night’s Dream. Tinderbox Productions: Talking Heads. Theatre (Britain): Royal Exchange Theatre, Manchester: Twelfth Night, Sherlock Holmes in Trouble, A Midsummer Night’s Dream, Port. Theatre Royal Haymarket, London: Lady Windermere’s Fan, The Royal Family. Chichester Festival Theatre: Stairs to the Roof, The Accrington Pals, Wild Orchids, The Coffee House. Apollo Theatre: My Brilliant Divorce. Lyric Theatre: Al Murray – Who Dares Wins. Ballet: West Australian Ballet: La Bohème, Ballet at the Quarry, The Nutcracker, Ballet at the Regal. The Australian Ballet: Raymonda, Constant Variants, Symphonie Fantastique, Interplay. Royal New Zealand Ballet: Giselle, Swan Lake, Don Quixote. Opera: Victorian Opera: Cosi Fan Tutte, The Coronation of Poppea. Lyric Opera of Chicago: Otello. The Royal College of Music: Gianni Schicchi, Oedipus Rex, Die Zauberflöte. ASH GIBSON GREIG COMPOSER/SOUND DESIGNER Black Swan: The Clean House, Much Ado About Nothing, The Memory of Water, The Messiah, Accidental Death of an Anarchist, The Lady Aoi. Other Theatre: ThinIce: Red Shoes, Bed, The Gathering, The Visit. Barking Gecko: Gogo Fish, The Troll from the Bowl, Hidden Dragons, The Feather Surfers. Tinderbox Productions: Talking Heads. TV: Who Do You Think You Are?, Skippy: Australia’s First Superstar, A Royal Romance, Desperately Seeking Doctor, Time Trackers, Great Escape: The Reckoning, Stress Buster, Marx & Venus, Death of the Megabeasts, Gallipoli’s Submarine, Saving Andrew Mallard. Film: No Through Road, Plum Role, The Actress, Iron Bird. Awards: Ash won the 2009 WA Screen Award for Excellence in Craft - Music Composition. In 2007 Ash was the recipient of the APRA/Australian Guild of Screen Composers Award for Best Music for a Short Film for Iron Bird. THANK YOU Black Swan State Theatre Company would like to thank Brian Heller and The Arts Angels, Geoff Bickford and Dessein, Cathy Penglis, Artsworkshop, WAAPA, Louise Grimshaw, Jenny Poh, Scott Fussell, Lance Robinson and Jennifer and Sean Friend. Black Swan greatly appreciates the help of Bradricks Boxing Club and Bang & Olufsen in providing props for Twelfth Night. Black Swan would also like to thank Garry Snowdon and the Playhouse Theatre staff for their generous support and assistance during 2010. ABOUT BLACK SWAN STATE THEATRE COMPANY Black Swan State Theatre Company is Western Australia’s Flagship Theatre Company and one of Australia’s foremost theatre companies. Since its inception in 1991, Black Swan has earned both critical and popular acclaim for its world premiere productions and highly distinctive (re) interpretations of international theatre classics – all of which are infused with the unique culture of Western Australia. These have included such landmark productions as Bran Nue Dae, Sistergirl, Tourmaline, Corrugation Road (winner of the prestigious The Age Critics’ Award), The Merry-Go-Round in the Sea, Cloudstreet (Perth, Sydney, London and Dublin seasons) and The Odyssey. As State Flagship Theatre Company, Black Swan presents a broad ranging programme including the creation of new work, contemporary international works and reinterpretations of classic plays that reflects life in Western Australia. Our vision is for Black Swan to be at the forefront of Australian theatre, earning critical acclaim, attracting capacity audiences and offering our diverse community rich, meaningful theatre experiences. Black Swan aims to produce theatre of exceptional quality that celebrates life, while entertaining and enriching the hearts and minds of Australians. Under the leadership of Artistic Director, Kate Cherry, Black Swan has also created the Rio Tinto Black Swan Commissions, a new commissioning program investing into WA’s creative future and showcasing Western Australian stories. The Company also runs a professional development program for emerging Western Australian artists, The HotBed Ensemble (supported by the RAC). Both the Rio Tinto Black Swan Commissions and The HotBed Ensemble are initiatives that are unique amongst Australian state theatre companies. Black Swan State Theatre Company will be the Resident Company in the new State Theatre Centre of Western Australia, to open in late 2010. Black Swan’s 2010 season consists of five mainhouse productions. Twelfth Night follows Sarah Ruhl’s magical realism play, The Clean House, the world premiere of Hannie Rayson’s new work The Swimming Club and the hugely successful musical The Sapphires by Tony Briggs. Our season concludes with J.T. Rogers’ Madagascar. Black Swan’s HOTBED ENSEMBLE the hotbed ensemble The HotBed Ensemble is Black Swan State Theatre Company’s professional development program for emerging Western Australian artists. It was initiated to provide a bridge to mainstage work for talented theatre artists making their mark in the independent theatre scene or recently graduated from training. In partnership with the RAC, the program includes exclusive training and mentoring opportunities, close contact with Black Swan artists and creative opportunities in HotBed productions. There is also the opportunity to be involved in play readings, secondments to Black Swan State Theatre Company mainhouse productions and exclusive master classes with national and international visiting artists. As artists of the future, the Ensemble also keeps Black Swan in touch with new ideas and trends in the performing arts. The HotBed Ensemble presented their first production for 2010 at the Perth Institute of Contemporary Arts, with Neil LaBute’s successful and savage play, The Shape of Things. Following this is Yellow Moon: The Ballad of Leila and Lee by David Greig, a gritty contemporary tale of young love, looming tragedy and the unexpected, performing from 6-22 August 2010. The HotBed Ensemble receives support in memory of Bern Ranford. RIO TINTO BLACK SWAN COMMISSIONS Part of Black Swan State Theatre Company’s role as Western Australia’s flagship theatre company is to engage audiences on a profound level by celebrating and promoting Western Australia’s cultural identity. Black Swan aspires to create beautifully crafted stories that matter to Western Australians and are seen throughout Australia. Our brand of dynamic contemporary theatre aspires to promote Western Australian theatre artists as an integral part of the national cultural agenda through co-productions, tours and the creation of new work. Our commissioning program enables us to contribute to the national canon through plays we have developed and produced at Black Swan State Theatre Company. The Rio Tinto Black Swan Commissions are unique in Australia. Through collaboration with our Principal Partner, Black Swan has created a research and development wing of the company that offers commissions, dramaturgy and workshops for new work. The new work that is created through the commissioning program takes various forms. Sometimes writers are offered a commission because we would like to see how they intend to develop an idea that intrigues us or because we would like to foster an ongoing relationship with the playwright and we want them to continue writing. Occasionally, Black Swan offers a substantial commission to a writer of national stature to deliver a script that we are convinced, based on the writer’s track record, will go straight to the main stage. The most recent result of that is our production, The Swimming Club by Hannie Rayson. When I heard about Hannie’s vision for this play, I knew we had to commission her to write it and I hope you were as pleased with the result and we were! Black Swan’s commission of Kate Mulvany resulted in the production of The Web in 2009. Writers currently under commission include Reg Cribb, Matt Dyktynski, Aiden Fennessy, Hilary Bell and Bill McCluskey. We look forward to sharing the fruits of their work with you, now and over the coming years! Kate Cherry entertainer er JOONDALUP HEALTH CAMPUS IS PROUD TO BE ASSOCIATE PARTNER OF TWELFTH NIGHT yesterday emergency dept today acting class kai, 9 primary school darch tomorrow oscar winner? Good health and support are often what we need most to become who we want to be in life. For every step, or misstep, along the way Joondalup Health Campus is right behind you, helping your dreams become reality. We believe in your dreams. We are Growing With You. JH063710 www.joondaluphealthcampus.com.au madaGAsCAR By J.T. Rogers “A subtle and haunting piece... powerfully captures how little we know about those we love” The Telegraph In the haunting tale of an unsolved disappearance that forever alters three lives, each individual story unfolds at different points in time in the same hotel room in Rome. Unravel the mystery of Madagascar as the stories weave back and forth to form one gripping tale of love and loss. 23 October - 7 November Playhouse theatre Book Now! Tickets are available through BOCS Ticketing on 9484 1133 or www.bocsticketing.com.au “An engaging journey of selfdiscovery with a dark heart... an intricate and beutifully paced account of a love affair on the run” The Guardian yellow moon The Ballad of Leila and Lee By David Greig A gritty, contemporary tale of young love, looming tragedy and the unexpected. Two teenagers from opposite worlds never meant to get mixed up in murder, but now they are on the run and need a place to hide. But refuge isn’t always what it appears to be. 6 - 22 August Pica Book Now! Tickets are available through BOCS Ticketing on 9484 1133 or www.bocsticketing.com.au and PICA on 9228 6300 or www.pica.org.au Black Swan’s move into the State Theatre Centre of Western Australia draws closer 2010 marks a big and exciting change for Black Swan, as we prepare to move into the State Theatre Centre of WA. We will take up residency in the new theatre by the end of this year, with our first production in the new theatre slated for early 2011. Designed by award-winning Kerry Hill Architects, the State Theatre Centre will be the centre-piece of the Performing Arts Precinct in the Perth Cultural Centre. It will feature the 575 seat Heath Ledger Theatre, the 200 seat, flexible Studio Underground, The Courtyard - a multi-purpose outdoor event space, two rehearsal rooms and two flexible use private suites. With work progressing quickly, here is the latest update: • In the Heath Ledger Theatre installation of the timber cladding is nearing completion. The upper balcony is under construction and the orchestra pit lift and removable apron are complete. • The flying system has been tested and is now operational. • The decorative ceiling to the Bronze Box is approaching completion along with the glazing of the box office and the main theatre. • External earthworks for the preparation of landscaping have commenced near The Courtyard at the James Street entrance. • The Studio Underground and Rehearsal Rooms 1 and 2 have had their floors completed and are structurally finished. Project Profile: Percent for Art As part of the WA Government’s Percent for Art Scheme, the State Theatre Centre will have two unique public artworks. The artwork commission will reflect the contemporary nature of the architecture and contribute to the audience experience with the venue. The first of the artworks is an interactive light installation, “Comets” by artist Matthew Ngui. The second artwork by Audrey and Arif Satar is a sound installation that is integrated within the fabric of the building. Both artworks will engage audience members from the very moment they enter the venue, building anticipation and telling a story long before the curtain goes up. With construction progressing quickly, visit http://www.statetheatrecentre.dca.wa.gov.au for the latest news. External image by Kerry Hill Architects. All other images Eva Fernandez. Private Giving 2010 Founding Patron Janet Holmes à Court AC gives annually to support Black Swan’s commissioning program and to promote its educational activities, directly assisting young Western Australians. Her generosity and support over many years is highly appreciated and has provided a platform for the future development of Black Swan and its giving program. Creative Development Fund Our Patron Sally Burton has kindly assisted us with the establishment gift for the new Creative Development Fund, aiming to attract gifts of a minimum of $10,000 over a four year period. Our aim is to raise $2 million over the next four years to ensure we are consistently investing in the theatrical work we produce for both artists and audiences, ensuring Black Swan’s sustainability in the long term. Black Swan wishes to thank the following individuals, including Black Swan Board members that have generously committed to donating to this Fund over the next four years: Andrew Drayton & Alecia Benzie Alan Cransberg Rob McKenzie Kate O’Hara Vicki Robinson Alan Robson AM Sam & Leanne Walsh Craig Yaxley If you are interested in supporting this future Fund, please contact our Fundraising Manager, Estelle Hajigabriel on 6389 0311. All donations over $2 are tax deductible and you can remain anonymous and/or keep your gift amount undisclosed. Examples of projects that require support include: 1. To mentor two West Australian young designers to work alongside established designers for a production in 2011 $5,000 per designer. 2. A creative development period for two current commissions $15,000 per commission. 3. Puppetry for a future production at the new State Theatre Centre $20,000. Black Swan would like to thank the McCusker Charitable Foundation for their recent generous gift towards a new program in 2011, providing the opportunity for emerging artists to develop their career in Perth, WA. If you are interested sending a significant gift to Black Swan or to host your own private giving event, please contact our Fundraising Manager, Estelle Hajigabriel on 08 6389 0311 or email [email protected]. Encore! Thank you to the following people who have kindly donated to Black Swan’s giving programme – Encore! Encore! Applause $10,000 $5,000 Programmed Facility Management Opening Act $2,500 First Call $1,000 Natalie Angliss Annie Fogarty Terrie O’Shea Felicity Bailey Nicola Forrest Mimi Packer Mary Caporale Janine Goyder Ingrid Puzey Linda Coli Evelyn Hall Pam Quatermass Shane Colquhoun Chris Hedges Veronique Ramen Caroline Crabb Sandy Honey Marianna Ravlich Arianne Cullen Peter Iancov Stephanie Robson Libby Dadd Nicola Iffla Linda Savage Joanne Della Maddalena Linda Kenyon Sally Savini Ash Donner Cathy Leunig Lisa Telford Didi Downie Heather Lyons Debbie Throsby Sally Everist Sallie-Ann Manford Shareen Traub Michela Fini Paul Mar Becky Vidler Denise Fisher Rose Moore Virginia Ward Behind The Scenes $500 Kaye Armstrong Jim & Freda Irenic Tania Hudson & Damon Ezekiel Dr Gordon & Nena Johnston Garnett Skuthorpe Louise Herron We would also like to recognise Michael Kiernan for his generous donation to the Encore! Programme. Black Swan would like to thank the following individuals who recently sent gifts between $50 - $499: Patricia Berridge Amanda Luke Cameron Blythe Ross McLennan Katherine Cheng Sandra Napier & Mike Ryan Stephen Dennis Jeff Skates Maggie Down Flora Smith Shirley Egan Margaret McKenna & Brian Webber Jarrad Seng & Ella Hickman Anon (8) Encore! gives you the opportunity to help Black Swan deliver high quality productions. To become part of Encore!, please visit our website at www.bsstc.com.au to make your donation online or contact us on 6389 0311. black swan state theatre Company Black Swan State Theatre Company Box 3232 Broadway PO Crawley WA 6009 The Playhouse Theatre is managed by AEG Ogden (Perth) Pty Ltd Venue Manager for the Perth Theatre Trust Venues Telephone: (08) 6389 0311 Perth Theatre Trust Fax: (08) 6289 0322 Chairman Dr Saliba Sassine Email: [email protected] Trustees Peter Alexander, Rob Butler, Janet Web: www.bsstc.com.au or find us on Facebook! Davidson, Sandra Liu, Jenny McNae, Marian Tye Founding Patron Janet Holmes à Court AC Patron Sally Burton Chair Sam Walsh AO Trustee/Director General Department of Culture and the Arts Allanah Lucas General Manager Alan Ferris Deputy Chair Andrew Drayton AEG Ogden (Perth) Pty Ltd Deputy Chair Duncan Ord Chief Executive Rodney M Phillips Treasurer Craig Yaxley Directors Alan Cransberg, Rob McKenzie, Kate O’Hara, Vicki Robinson and Prof Alan Robson AM Playhouse Theatre General Manager Garry Snowdon Head Technician Ian Boase Artistic Director Kate Cherry Head Mechanist Graeme Mell General Manager Shane Colquhoun Office Manager Mandy Allen Director, The HotBed Ensemble Adam Mitchell Account/Administrative Assistant Production Manager Ashley Page Ma Asuncion (Sonjie) Cortez Artistic Coordinator Chantelle Iemma Casting Director Annie Murtagh-Monks Wardrobe Manager Sacha Mahboub Finance Manager Amanda Luke Ticketing & Administration Officers Fleur Hardy and Nicole Inkster Education Manager Alena Tompkins Fundraising Manager Estelle Hajigabriel Marketing & Sponsorship Manager Nancy Hackett Marketing Coordinator Kerry Miller Marketing Assistant Shona Saxton Photographer Gary Marsh Box Office Supervisor Linda Hutchison (BOCS Ticketing) For Twelfth Night Head Technician/Lighting Operator Ian Boase Head Mechanist Graeme Mell Cameras and other recording devices are strictly forbidden. Patrons are requested to switch off mobile phones and watches with digital alarms prior to commencement of the performance. Latecomers may not be given access to the auditorium until there is a convenient break in the program. Smoking is not permitted. Change of Artist Black Swan reserves the right to vary advertised programs and to add, withdraw or substitute artists as necessary. Cover Image Frances Andrijich Overseas Representatives London: Diana Franklin and Yolande Bird New York: Stuart Thompson Privacy Policy Black Swan respects the privacy of individuals in accordance with the Privacy Act. 2010 Band – Guitar Andrew Weir Dramaturg Michael Cathcart Directing Secondment Jeffrey Jay Fowler (NIDA) Band – Drums Daniele Di Paola Voice and Dialect Coach Leith McPherson Set Design Secondment Emma Craig (WAAPA) Touring Company Manager Michael Norman Voice Consultant Geraldine Cook Stage Manager Rebecca Gibbs Assistant Stage Manager Nicole Gillespie Rehearsal Stage Manager Peter Sutherland the sapphires Featuring Aljin Abella Hollie Andrew Christine Anu Jimi Bani Casey Donovan Kylie Farmer Kenneth Ransom Oliver Wenn Director Wesley Enoch Musical Director Peter Farnan Stage Manager Alyson Brown Assistant Stage Manager Natalie Moir Sound Editor Ben Collins Directorial Secondment Brigid Gallacher Dresser Erryn Hanson Lighting Secondment Amy Hammond (Yirra Yaakin) the clean house the swimming club Featuring: Carol Burns Vivienne Garrett Sarah McNeill Hugh Parker Brooke Satchwell twelfth night Featuring Renée Hale (McIntosh) Stuart Halusz Brendan Hanson Luke Hewitt Kirsty Hillhouse Geoff Kelso Ingle Knight Samantha Murray Will O’Mahony Kelton Pell Kenneth Ransom Kazimir Sas Steve Turner Amanda Woodhams Director Roger Hodgman Lighting Designer Trent Suidgeest Featuring Tina Bursill Caroline Gillmer Megan Holloway Sarah McNeill Nicholas Papademetriou Igor Sas John Waters Choreographer Tony Bartuccio Director Kate Cherry Lighting Designer David Murray Composer Ash Gibson Greig Sound Supervisor/ Operator Tom Brickhill Set and Costume Designer Christina Smith Composer Ash Gibson Greig Stage Manager Hugo Aguilar López Assistant Director Kyle Morrison Lighting Designer Matt Scott Choreographer Claudia Alessi Assistant Stage Manager Nicole Gillespie Assistant Musical Director/Lead Musician Simon Burke Sound Designer/ Composer Russell Goldsmith Voice Coach Julia Moody Directing Secondmnet Daniel Monks Gemma Gurney (NIDA) Band – Sax Ben Collins Movement Director/ Choreographer Claudia Alessi Set Designer Richard Roberts Costume Designer Tim Chappel Director Kate Cherry Set Designer Christina Smith Set Designer Andrew Bellchambers Costume Designer Alicia Clements Costume Designer Alicia Clements Lighting Designer Jon Buswell Stage Manager Amy Leeder Assistant Stage Manager Natalie Moir Design Secondmnet Lauren Clark (WAAPA) Set/Costume Designer Fiona Bruce Stage Management Secondments Erin Coubrough (WAAPA) Stephen Moore (WAAPA) Lighting Designer Tess Reuvers the hotbed ensemble Sound Designer/ Composer Peter Dawson Moving Image Designer Mia Holton madagascar Featuring Rebecca Davis Greg McNeill Amanda Muggleton Movement Director Claudia Alessi the shape of things Director Kate Cherry Set and Costume Designer Alicia Clements Lighting Designer Jon Buswell Composer Ben Collins Stage Manager Anna Dymitr Hawkes Assistant Stage Manager Hugo Aguilar López yellow moon: the ballad of leila & lee Featuring Austin Castiglione Adriane Daff Melanie Munt Tim Solly Director Adam Mitchell Stage Managers Genevieve Jones Hugo Aguilar López Young Writers Program Gita Bezard Eva Bujalka Chris Isaacs Daniel Kershaw Steve McCall Nathanial Moncrief Jane Rait Demelza Rogers Production Electrics Benjamin Davis Benjamin Fry Erryn Hanson Driver Kim Westbrook Staging Alex Giles Graeme Mell Brad Rose Stage Management Paula Coops Jennifer Friend Chris Isaacs Jason Thelwell Artsworkshop Ian Parsons (Director) Rod Jones (Director) Les Hickford Alison Little Marek Szyler Wardrobe Pattern Maker/Head Cutter Mandy Elmitt Penny Mazzuchelli Machinist Lyndell Darch Sandy Mitchell Costume Beading Holly Barker Costumier Sue Kerr Wigs Deanna Nishi Black Swan State Theatre Company gratefully acknowledges the support of our Partners: Principal Partner Government Partners Department of Culture and the Arts GOVERNMENT OF WESTERN AUSTRALIA Black Swan State Theatre Company is assisted by the Australian Government through the Australia Council, its arts funding and advisory body. The Hotbed Ensemble Production Partner The Clean House Madagascar Associate Partners The Swimming Club The Clean House Twelfth Night Season Partners Accommodation Partner Education Partner Wine Partner FRANKLAND ESTATE WESTERN AUSTRALIA Media Partners online Partner Subscriber Incentive Partners technology Partner Legal advisors ... part of our extended family There is nothing more important than family; and ours has really grown after 12 years with the state’s flagship theatre company. We are proud to share stories from Western Australia through the first of the Rio Tinto Black Swan Commissions in 2010 and as principal partner look forward to the continued growth of our family. www.ciwa.riotinto.com.