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HOW TO BOOK Online www.tron.co.uk Call 0141 552 4267 Table Reservations 0141 552 8587 or www.tron.co.uk/food-drink/ Text 18001 0141 552 4267 At our Box Office 63 Trongate, Glasgow G1 5HB BOX OFFICE Mon-Sat 10am-6pm Extended on performance evenings to 15 minutes after the last performance starts Sunday Two hours before the first performance starts, otherwise closed BAR & KITCHEN Mon-Sat 10am – late Sun 12pm-6pm ACCESS: The Tron Theatre is committed to being an accessible venue and our public areas are fully accessible for those with limited mobility. Facilities include ramps, elevators, adapted toilets and auditorium seating. In addition, we’re committed to programming Audio Described, Signed and Captioned performances. Details of these can be found on show listings. Please do let us know if you have any specific access requirements and we will do our utmost to accommodate them. This brochure is available in large print format facebook.com/trontheatre twitter.com/trontheatre instagram.com/trontheatre Tron Theatre Company presents COCK By Mike Bartlett A SCOTTISH PREMIERE Previews: Tue 9 February, 7.45pm £8 Wed 10 – Sat 20 February (excl. Sat 13), 7.45pm £10-£16 Matinee Sat 13 February, 2.30pm BSL & AD Wed 17 Feb CAP Thu 18 Feb Main Auditorium ‘Why are you telling me I have to know what I am? It doesn’t matter. I love him because he makes me toast in bed and he’s scared of cling film. I love her because she makes me feel as old as I really am. She’s gentle’ After his long-term gay relationship breaks down, John unexpectedly meets a woman with whom he discovers new pleasures and excitement. With the ex-boyfriend preening and strutting in the background, and his new girlfriend uncovering a whole different side to his personality, John is increasingly wracked with guilt and indecision about who he is and what he wants. When a civilised dinner party to discuss the way forward rapidly descends into a messy cockfight, John has to make a choice. What will he do? Tron Theatre Company’s production of Mike Bartlett’s sharp and witty play will be the first UK staging since its Royal Court premiere six years ago. ‘With the precious exception of literati like Oscar Wilde and his beloved Bosie, quarreling lovers are never as articulate and entertaining as they are in Cock’ Variety Written by Mike Bartlett Directed by Andy Arnold Tron Theatre Company presents THE LONESOME WEST By Martin McDonagh Previews: Wed 6 & Thur 7July 7.45pm, £8 Fri 8 – Sat 30 July 7.45pm £10-£16 Matinee Saturday 16 July BSL & AD Wed 20 July CAP Thu 21 July Main Auditorium Bickering brothers, Coleman and Valene share a house in the wild west of Ireland. One obsesses about his religious ornaments and his precious poteen, the other thinks only of his stomach, regularly crashing funerals in his quest for a free sausage roll. Their local priest, troubled by a spate of murders in the area, tries, and fails, to convince the squabbling pair to set aside their petty differences. The brothers vow to be nicer to one another, but as they clean the slate by confessing to a string of vile misdemeanors towards one another, things degenerate into vicious and bloody carnage. The Lonesome West is the third play in Martin McDonagh’s bleak but blackly comic Leenane trilogy. Written by Martin McDonagh Directed by Andy Arnold CELTIC CONNECTIONS 2016 www.celticconnections.com Sam Lee & Friends Fri 15 January 8pm £14 Sam Lee has been hailed as ‘Britain's most inventive folk singer’ (Evening Standard), a status masterfully underscored by his recent second album, The Fade in Time. Tonight, Lee and his band, on violin, Mongolian dulcimer, ukulele, piano and percussion, are joined by Traveller and Gypsy tradition-bearers. ‘Music beyond borders and ages’ (Rolling Stone) Cam Penner & Jon Wood with Rayna Gellert Sat 16 January 8pm £14 By turns elemental and spectral, Canadian Cam Penner's gruff, gritty folk/blues songcraft will be atmospherically accompanied by Jon Wood's wizardry on guitar, lap steel and sampler, here he launches his brand-new sixth album, Sex and Politics. ‘Masterful - utterly compelling’(AmericanaUK) Speaking of former member of acclaimed stringband Uncle Earl, Rayna Gellert, Béla Fleck said “I love Rayna's musical personality which is deep, funky and complex." Oysters 3 & Granny Green Sun 17 January 8pm £15 John Jones, Alan Prosser and Ian Telfer, aka Oysters 3, are the founding trio and creative core of UK folk-rock legends Oysterband. They present a freshly intimate and acoustic take on that outfit's 35-year back catalogue. Glasgow trio Granny Green’s arresting world/folk blend of accordion, trumpet and tuba won them a 2015 Open Stage Award. Yorkston/Thorne/Khan & Lisa O’Neill Tue 19 January 8pm £14 It was pure serendipity that brought Scottish singer-songwriter James Yorkston and Indian sarangi player Suhail Yusuf Khan together, backstage as Yorkston tuned up for a gig. After playing that very show together, with Khan’s cello-like instrument improvising around Yorkston’s eloquently understated ballads, they extended the collaboration to include jazz bassist Jon Thorne, Khan’s qawwali singing and Yorkston’s little-known skills on the Swedish nyckelharpa, with tonight’s show launching the trio’s debut album. Sometimes likened to a female Damien Dempsey or Shane McGowan, Cavan-born Lisa O’Neill’s timelessly weathered voice and straight-talking songs, on her 2013 album Same Cloth or Not, have seen her hailed as a major star in the making. Drift Wed 20 January 8pm £14 Hailed by The Scotsman as ‘a rare theatrical and sculptural treat’, Drift is a cross-artform production that evokes the extraordinary story of Shetland crofter Betty Mouat, who in 1886 spent eight days alone and adrift on the North Sea. Incorporating narrative and song from the inimitable Gerda Stevenson, Shetland-inspired music by Eddie McGuire, and video projections from those original performances. In the Round Thu 21 January 8pm £14 An intimate night of song-sharing from rising US stars, carving their own distinctive niches across genres from indie-folk to classic country. From Seattle, former The Courage frontman Noah Gundersen's intensely brooding, gorgeously melodic songs wrestle movingly with the legacy of his conservative religious upbringing, while Kentucky coal-miner's daughter Angaleena Presley skewers the heartaches and hypocrisies of hard-pressed ordinary Americans with trenchant lyrical flair. Alabama native Anderson East, a protégé of Jason Isbell’s producer Dave Cobb, is generating major industry buzz with his 2015 album Delilah, matching powerful vocals and poignant wordcraft in gospel-hued ballads and blues. 101 Scottish Songs – The Wee Red Book Fri 22 January 8pm £14 The late Glasgow schoolteacher and Labour MP Norman Buchan was a major driving-force within the early Scottish folk revival. Tonight’s performance, whose cast of top traditional singers includes Sheena Wellington and Margaret Bennett, celebrates Collins' republication of the fondly-nicknamed ‘Wee Red Book’, an inspirational repertoire source both then and now, in honour of the TMSA’s 50th anniversary. From the Calton to Catalonia Sat 23 January 8pm £14 Dramatising the involvement of working-class Glasgow families in the Spanish Civil War, From the Calton to Caledonia was written by Willy and John Maley in tribute to their father James, the conflict's longest-surviving Scottish veteran. This newly revised version, directed as a rehearsed reading by Martin McCardie, incorporates songs of the period from Arthur Johnstone and guests. Gaelic meets Gaelic Americana; Gillebride MacMillan & Kyle Carey Sun 24 January 8pm £14 The North American journeyings of Scottish Gaelic culture come full circle tonight, in a concert akin to the Transatlantic Sessions in microcosm. From Scotland, it features the renowned South Uist singer Gillebrìde MacMillan and he's joined by New Hampshire-based singer-songwriter Kyle Carey. Mairi Campbell ‘Pulse’ Wed 27 & Thur 28 January 8pm £14 Drawing on her combined fluency in Celtic tradition, free improvisation and classical idioms, as well as her personal artistic journey, the award-winning Scottish singer and fiddler/viola player Mairi Campbell performs a new one-woman show that blends live and recorded music with animation, dance, movement and storytelling. Pulse previewed to packed houses and rapturous applause at two Edinburgh shows in 2015. Seckou Keita + Gwyneth Glyn Fri 29 January 8pm £14 Widely regarded as his generation's most gifted and inventive exponent of the kora, the ancient west African harp, Senegal's Seckou Keita’s latest solo release, 22 Strings, reconnects Keita's experimental virtuosity and global array of influences with seven centuries of ancestral tradition. ‘Deeply contemplative and spiritually uplifting’ (R2) One of Wales’s most exciting folk artists, the bilingual singer-songwriter Gwyneth Glyn is another cross-cultural explorer, having recently collaborated with Indian singer Tauseef Akhtar on the 2015 album Ghazalaw, to be followed by her own solo release in 2016. Lynched & Clype Sat 30 January 8pm £14 Brilliantly revitalising the Irish ballad-group tradition for the 21st century, Dublin quartet Lynched match resonant four-part harmonies with terrific instrumental work on uilleann pipes, concertina, Russian accordion, fiddle and guitar. Simon Gall and Jonny Hardie’s band Clype are firmly rooted in the North East of Scotland, but pull in influences from all over the world. Vanishing Point presents THE DESTROYED ROOM A co-production with Battersea Arts Centre In association with Tron Theatre and Eden Court Preview: Thu 25 Feb, 7.45pm, £8 Fri 26 Feb – Sat 5 March, 7.45pm £10-£16 Post show discussion Wed 2 March Main Auditorium The Destroyed Room takes its inspiration from Jeff Wall’s famous photograph, which shows a ransacked room, where every item of furniture has been torn up and destroyed. What happened? It begins with what seems to be the recording of a TV show, as guests gather to digest world events. They sit among potted plants and standard lamps, discussing the things they have witnessed and debating the ethics of watching. Around them, cameras glide, filming their every word and every reaction, beaming them live onto a big screen. As the debate intensifies, slowly and as if in a dream, the atmosphere begins to change. The Destroyed Room is about the profusion of lenses, which bring the world right into our rooms but also keep it at a distance. It’s about what we see and what we turn away from. And what’s coming. Conceived and directed by Matthew Lenton Suitable for age 16yrs+ Fire Exit in co-production with Tron Theatre presents INTERNATIONAL WATERS Preview: Tue 22 March, 7.45pm, £8 Wed 23 – Sat 26 March, 7.45pm £10-£16 CAP & AD Thu 24 March Post show Q&A Fri 25 March Main Auditorium No refugee crisis ever looked so chic, darling. The social fabric has finally torn. Airports are closed, roads are blocked. Now even the 1% need to seek asylum. Four obscenely rich members of the elite pay through the nose to join an exclusive party on the last ship leaving London. They stay alive using the only things they know – money, sex and madness. But the ship is sailing in the wrong direction. They don’t know each other. They don’t know the Captain. They don’t know what the hell is going on. International Waters comes from multi-award-winning writer and director David Leddy, who has been called a ‘maverick’ (Guardian), a ‘genius’ (Scotsman), an ‘innovator’ (Times) and an ‘institution’ (Independent). Like a perverse Aesop’s fable for the apocalypse, the twisting plot explores how progress can sometimes be a trap. In this case it involves elegant glamour, brutal food poisoning, cyborg finance, and a delicious bull testicle meringue. Written and directed by David Leddy Supported by Creative Scotland Lung Ha Theatre Company presents THE SILENT TREATMENT Fri 1st & Sat 2nd April, 7.45pm Matinee Sat 2nd April, 2.30pm £10-£16 Main Auditorium Ssssh! No, but seriously Sssssssh! A sponsored silence is on; so whatever you do you have to keep it zipped, keep it buttoned, keep it together - even when one of the group is doing all they can to break you down. And how can you, can anyone, stay silent when one of the team has just won wads of cash; and what about those builders who just keep popping in and out, surely something has to be said to them? Renowned playwright Douglas Maxwell, composer MJ McCarthy and the Lung Ha Theatre Company performers take you on a (quiet) journey where silence is golden but there are many ways to overcome silence when there is just so much to be said. Written by Douglas Maxwell Directed by Maria Oller Lakin McCarthy presents MARK THOMAS: TRESPASS Wed 13th – Fri 15th April, 8pm £10-£16 Main Auditorium Trespass carries on from where Mark's previous show 100 Acts of Minor Dissent left off. It is his usual odd mix of theatre, stand up, activism, a dash of journalism and a dollop of mayhem. Mark asks the question: If the ramblers of the 1930s were here now what would they do to open up the cities? How do we turn the skyscrapers and corporate squares into our playgrounds? He sets out to try and carve a small space in the urban world where mischief and random chance can lurk. No one knows where this show is going to end up. Suitable for ages 16yrs+ Traverse Theatre Company presents CRASH Wed 27th & Thu 28th April, 7.45pm £10-£16 Main Auditorium “Everything that happens is created by you.” Confidence is everything in the world of high finance. Confidence in yourself, confidence in the market. Lose that and you lose everything. Crash is the story of an enigmatic trader attempting to rebuild his life following a tragic event. As he takes the first tentative steps back into the brutal landscape of trading stocks, he feels the pressure begin to build. In the continuing wake of the financial crisis, Scottish writer Andy Duffy creates a rare and poetic insight into the psychology of a banker’s world. Directed by Traverse Associate Artist Emma Callander, acclaimed for recent festival hits Cuckooed (Fringe First Award) and Theatre Uncut (Fringe First and Herald Angel Award). Written by Andy Duffy Directed by Emma Callander Performed by Jamie Michie The Traverse Theatre is supported by Creative Scotland and The City of Edinburgh Council. Puppet State Theatre Company presents JRR Tolkien’s LEAF BY NIGGLE Fri 29th & Sat 30th April, 7.45pm Matinee Sat 30th April, 2.30pm £10-£16 Main Auditorium Niggle is a painter. Not a very successful one, partly because he has so many other things to do. For some time he has been obsessed with one particular canvas – a curious picture of a tree with a vast landscape stretching out behind it. The painting keeps getting bigger and bigger, but Niggle has a journey to make. He doesn’t want to go, but he cannot get out of it… In 1939 Tolkien was despairing of ever bringing his great work The Lord of the Rings to a conclusion. One morning he woke up with Leaf by Niggle complete in his mind and wrote it down. Surrounded by ladders, bicycles, easels and heirlooms, Richard Medrington (Jean from The Man Who Planted Trees) recounts Tolkien’s miniature masterpiece, with music specially composed by Karine Polwart. Suitable for everyone aged ten and over. By JRR Tolkien Music by Karine Polwart With thanks to the Tolkien Trust. Tron Young Company present SHEEP Thu 4 – Sat 6 Feb, 8pm £7.50 Changing House Come on. Are we all pretending this isn’t happening? He was the last guy we know to die. That soldier that turned up is probably going to someone else’s funeral and someone else’s after that. He’ll be deployed to turn up and pay his respects: make the widow feel good and then they won’t blame the state or the military or whatever. Inspired by attitudes to war and militarisation, from historical perspectives to current media representation, Tron Young Company have created a blistering new original work that asks questions of accepted roles for women and men in conflict, modern society’s use of propaganda, and what happens when war arrives on your doorstep. ‘For then this town will have more dignity, and once again we’ll see that age return when there were women who were strong, true Amazons, whose deeds amazed the world.’ Lope de Vega, Fuente Ovejuna Directed by Martin O’Connor Designed by Kirsty McCabe Supported by Youngstart delivered by The Big Lottery Catherine Wheels in association with the Brunton Theatre present WHITE Wed 24 & Thu 25 Feb, 10.30am & 1.15pm £7.50 (Family of three £19.50; Family of 4 £26) Changing House A performance for 2-4 year olds. Welcome to the beautifully strange world of White. Full of birdsong and birdhouses, it gleams and dazzles and shines in the night. Two friends look after the birds and make sure the eggs stay safe. We watch, we help. The world is bright, ordered and white. But high up in the trees, all is not white. Colour appears. First red... then yellow... then blue... White is a playful, highly visual show for very young children and is a perfect first time theatre experience. ‘ingeniously designed, the production abounds in visual surprises’ New York Times Created by Andy Manley Amy Conway in association with Platform presents 30:60:80 Wed 2 – Sat 5 March, 8pm £10 (£7.50) Changing House 30:60:80 is a celebration of three lives, spanning fifty years with the women of one family and inviting audiences to consider the richness in their own maternal herstory. When Amy’s grandma turned 30, she had three children and was thankful to finally live in a house with an indoor toilet. When Amy’s mum turned 30, she had a profession, a mortgage and was pregnant with her first child. Amy just turned 30. She’s single, chancing it, and certain about exactly nothing. 30:60:80 is an invitation to three landmark birthdays to meet three remarkable birthday girls. Devised and performed by Amy Conway Devised and directed by Victoria Beesley Supported by Creative Scotland New Room Theatre presents BLACKOUT Wed 20 – Sat 23 April, 8pm Post show discussion Thu 21 Apr £10 (£7.50) Changing House ‘My first drink seemed to unlock something. I threw up, went home, woke up with a stinking hangover the next morning and thought, ‘that was fantastic, when are we doing it again’?’ Blackout is an honest, brutal and often hilarious insight into alcoholism and recovery, scripted entirely from interviews with recovering alcoholics, including the writer. Meet the woman who finds herself urinating off the top of the Scott Monument in Edinburgh. The man who nearly burns down a stranger’s kitchen. The mother who almost beats her son to death in a drunken rage. Blackout is the true story of real alcoholics, and the story of their recovery. Blackout is back in Scotland after a five star, sell-out London run. ‘Outstanding’ ***** London Theatre Written by Mark Jeary Directed by Paul Brotherston Sponsored by Castle Craig Foundation Spilt Milk presents ADULTING Thu 16 – Sat 18 June, 8pm £10 (£7.50) Changing House Adulting (verb) To adult. To behave the way everyone would expect you to behave when you are an adult. "I don't adult enough" "I'm sick of adulting all the time. I just want to child." Twenty-five. Quarter of a century years old. I am happily engaged, have a down payment on a two bed and a glamorous but reliable job. Aged 10, this is how I saw my future. In reality I live at home and have yet to find my soulmate. I attempt to bake. I often date. And I sometimes frequent DIY stores. All before another glass of wine. These are the little ways I try to feel like an adult. I know there are pros and cons to being this age, I just haven’t figured out the pros yet. Devised by the company GLASGOW INTERNATIONAL COMEDY FESTIVAL10-27 MARCH 2016 www.glasgowcomedyfestival.com ALAN BISSETT: THE MOIRA MONOLOGUES Fri 11 March, 7.30pm, £12 (£10) Main Auditorium The writer and actor performs his smash-hit ‘one-woman show’ in Glasgow for the first time in five years. Don’t miss this opportunity to meet Moira Bell – cleaner, single mum and the hardest woman in Falkirk – as she regales her pal Babs with tales about her bullied dug, her weed-smoking, her Valentine’s night out with a randy teacher…and then there’s her own unique take on Scottish politics. Directed by Sacha Kyle. ‘Moira's the most charismatic character on a Scottish stage in a decade. She’s also so funny that some in the audience were literally shouting with laughter.' Scotsman **** DOUG SEGAL: I CAN MAKE YOU FEEL GOOD Fri 11 March, 9.30pm, £12 (£10) Main Auditorium ‘Imagine if Derren Brown were funny’ Evening Standard In 2015 he taught you How To Read Minds And Influence People, in 2014 he Made You A Mentalist, now he's back with a work in progress show designed to make you feel good! As seen on BBC1 and BBC3 . ‘The UK's best kept entertainment secret’ Time Out 'Britain's top comedy mind reader' **** The Skinny ‘A show that leaves people open mouthed with astonishment & on their feet‘ **** Edinburgh Evening News SCOTT GIBSON Sat 12 March, 7.30pm, £12 (£10) Main Auditorium After a sold out debut show at GICF 2015, Scott Gibson returns with Like Father Like Son. An honest and frank insight into the men who have influenced his life. An unexpected reunion with his father, along with the death of his grandfather in late 2014 forced Gibson to look at the men in his family, and to ask the question... is there truth in the old saying ‘like father like son’? 'A natural, gifted and unapologetic storyteller.' Frankie Boyle 'The best act to emerge from Scotland in years.' Des Clarke University of the West of Scotland/RAFT present A MIDSUMMER NIGHT’S DREAM Thu 28 – Sat 30 April, 8pm £7.50 (£5) Changing House “I have had a most rare vision. I have had a dream, past the wit of man to say what dream it was…” In the dark, ethereal world of the Athenian woods, lovers, fairies and actors converge in confusion and enchantment. Guided by mischief and drawn by wonder, this one strange and unsettling night will change them all forever. A small cast of final year Performance students from the University of the West of Scotland present an abridged version of Shakespeare's beguiling tale of midsummer mayhem. Haunting music drifts through the silver trees, and the magic begins… By William Shakespeare The Royal Conservatoire of Scotland presents EARTHQUAKES IN LONDON Thu 2 – Sat 4 June, 7.45pm Matinees Fri 3 & Sat 4 June, 2.30pm £10 (£7.50) Main Auditorium Mike Bartlett’s (Doctor Foster, King Charles III, The Town, 13) rampaging panorama of the UK in the twenty first century has at its epicentre the unsettled lives of three sisters: one a politician, another heavily pregnant and the other a rebellious teenager. They share an absent scientist father who has predicted the environmental annihilation of humanity. All four struggle to find their truths against a shifting backdrop of strip joints, business meetings, rural Scotland, uncomfortable truths and swimming in Hampstead Heath. A chaotic odyssey of contemporary excess, where people and belief systems are in relentless movement and transformation. Like all great plays it is both human and political and charges us to respond to our time. Written by Mike Bartlett Directed by Mark Thomson The Royal Conservatoire of Scotland presents THE CIRCLE OF FIFTHS Thu 2 – Sat 4 June, 8pm Matinees Fri 3 & Sat 4 June, 2.45pm £10 (£7.50) Changing House It’s snowing heavily and the roads are closed. The gymnasium of the village school has become the shelter and sleeping quarters for the tired, stranded travelers - displaced and dispossessed for the night and relying on the hospitality of the locals. Between the twilight and the dawn, the headmaster, the ghost of a lorry driver, the woman with a missing husband and even Father Christmas himself, are forced to confront each other and themselves. As the magic hour of the dawn arrives, the snow is still falling. The Circle of Fifths is a dreamy, discordant and haunting adaptation of the Polish novella by Szymon Bogacz. Directed by Matthew Lenton Based on the book by Szymon Bogacz Polish Text Adapted by Aleksandra Poplawska Literal English Translation by Agnieszka Lenton CREATIVE It’s been brewing for a while, but here it is: a brand new way of talking about the Tron’s commitment to nurturing creative talent in Glasgow, Scotland and further afield. Tron Creative works alongside the incredible programme of home grown and international productions in our theatre spaces, as well as the year-round education and outreach from Tron Participation. Between everything our goal is to foster a wide-reaching conversation between artist, community and audience from right here at Trongate. First Read Tron Creative is pleased to announce the launch of its script-reading programme, First Read. To find out more, and how to submit, please visit http://tron.co.uk/creative/firstread. Write Tron Designed for writers old and new, the content of each session is customized to address the needs, questions and interests of each writer present. This course offers fresh insights, new strategies and the tools, motivation and inspiration to support writers to get the best out of their creative process. Each block includes a ticket to a theatre performance and a one-to-one surgery session with the tutor to focus on current work and the course is ideal for writers preparing submissions for The Progressive Playwright TERM 1: 16 Jan, 6 Feb, 27 Feb, 19 March, Surgery sessions Sat 5 March TERM 2: Sat 23 Apr, Sat 14 May, Sat 28 May , Sat 18 June, Surgery session Sat 4 June Saturdays 10.15am-1.15pm £85 /£75 per term Tron 100 Club The Tron 100 Club is our year-long artistic membership initiative offering selected creatives the chance to engage in a programme of workshops, panels and masterclasses with some of the biggest names in the UK arts industry. Find out how to get involved at http://tron.co.uk/creative/100Club. Outside Eyes 9 Mar & 22 Jun, 7.45pm Main Auditorium £5 Following a successful pilot last Spring, scratch night Outside Eyes returns to our main house space. If you have a performance in your head that needs working out in front of an audience, then Outside Eyes is the place for you. Each event presents a curated selection of brand new ideas from artists of all disciplines to an audience made up of peers, industry and anyone who wants to see the newest, most exciting work Glasgow has to offer. Get involved at http://tron.co.uk/creative/OutsideEyes. Tron Lab Each Lab involves a one-week residency in the Tron’s Changing House for the selected artist, with support beyond the residency week itself to begin taking the steps towards wherever their project needs to go next, whether that be finding funding for further development, or finding partners for future touring. Both residencies will take place in in March 2016, and the deadline for applications is 15th January 2016. For more information and specific dates head to http://tron.co.uk/creative/tronlab. The Progressive Playwright Award Thur 14 Jan, 7.45pm £5 Main Auditorium A panel of judges and the audience will award a £2000 bursary to one of the six twenty minute plays progressed from our Autumn ’15 season. Thu 23-Sat 25 Jun, 8pm £5 Changing House First draft reading of the full length work by the writer selected in January as the recipient of The Progressive Playwright Award. The Progressive Playwright Thur 17 Mar, Thur 14 Apr & Thu 26 May, 8pm £5 Changing House The Progressive Playwright returns with reading of plays from up-and-coming playwrights. Each evening, extracts from six plays will be read, with the night culminating in the audience voting for the play that they would like to hear an extended version of at the next event. Themes for this season’s events are: LOVE Directed by Alison Peebles Submission deadline: 22 February JEALOUSY Directed by Allie Butler Submission deadline: 28 March DECEIT Directed by Katherine Nesbitt Submission deadline: 2 May Script submissions to [email protected] Submission guidelines can be found at http://tron.co.uk/creative/progplaywright Preview We are proud to present two new works in Preview, from artists who came to us through the Outside Eyes and Tron Lab strands with ideas for projects that blew our socks clean off. Little King in preview with Tron Creative presents GREATER BELFAST Wed 17 – Sat 20 Feb, 8pm £7.50 Changing House Part gig, part theatre experience, Greater Belfast is centred on the hopeful and divided city of Belfast. Little King and his string quartet blend song, storytelling, spoken word and instrumental music to examine a fractious relationship between a city and one of its sons. Expect the patter and slang of Belfast, the caustic black humour of Belfast, all bent together to inspire stories and songs that cut through the sleech, and speak to the heart. Written, composed and performed by Matt Regan Directed by Claire Willoughby Supported by Creative Scotland Isobel McArthur in preview with Tron Creative presents HOW TO SING IT Wed 8 – Sat 11June, 8pm £7.50 Changing House ‘Embdy here belongs tae Glesca?’ ‘Embdy no sure where they belong?’ Isobel has been on a journey. With herself. With a voice that travels between Manchester and Glasgow more regularly than a Virgin Pendolino, Isobel (and Isobel) are determined to find out whether accent matters and if how you say it holds more sway than what you’re saying. Told onstage and onscreen, How To Sing It explores the turmoil in rewriting the music of our voices. Written and performed by Isobel McArthur Playwrights’ Studio Scotland presents TALKFEST Mon 18 – Sat 23 April, times vary Playwrights’ Studio, Scotland returns to the Tron to develop and celebrate the work of Scotland’s playwrights. These range from aspiring dramatists writing for the stage for the first time, to some of our most experienced professional playwrights. The Tron’s spaces will be packed with new playwriting in the form of rehearsed readings, discussions, master classes, workshops, script surgeries and networking opportunities. Make connections with others who share your passion for playwriting. Learn new skills, hone your craft and be the first to see brand new work by Scotland’s playwrights. More details about public performances and how to get involved will be announced soon at www.playwrightsstudio.co.uk VIC BAR SUNDAY JAZZ In the Victorian Bar Relax and enjoy chamber jazz of the highest quality as award-winning pianist/composer Euan Stevenson (Emerging Artist Scottish Jazz Awards 2013) hosts another season of Sunday Jazz at the Tron. Sun 31 Jan, 2pm £8 New Focus Quartet Blending jazz with classical and Scottish folk influences, saxophonist Konrad Wiszniewski and pianist/composer Euan Stevenson collaborate with a top rhythm section to create joyous music that is "lush, modern and brilliantly accessible" (BBC Radio Scotland). Sun 28 Feb, 2pm £8 Relaxin’ at Camarillo Charlie Parker, Dizzy Gillespie and Bud Powell were pioneers of the Be Bop movement. Join The Euan Stevenson trio and special guests as they pay homage to these late masters with authentic arrangements from the forties and fifties. Sun 27 March, 2pm £8 Remembering Chet Many Chet Baker tributes celebrate the trumpet playing of the man but rarely do you get that combined with his vocal talent too. Three of Scotland’s finest musicians join forces to bring the music of the man to life. Colin Steele, one of Scotland’s best trumpeters, sublime piano accompaniment of Euan Stevenson and smooth vocals of Iain Ewing combine to produce something truly magical. Wellrespected in their own right, expect something of a different class from this trio. Transport yourself back in time to a smoky jazz joint for some beautifully laid back, west coast jazz. Sun 24 April, 2pm £8 Anything Goes: The Music of Cole Porter Unlike many successful Broadway composers, Porter wrote the lyrics, as well as the music, for his songs. The Euan Stevenson Trio perform their own unique arrangements of timeless hits such as Easy To Love, I’ve Got You Under My Skin and I Get a Kick Out of You with additional surprise guest vocalists. Sun 29 May, 2pm £8 Tribute to Jobim/Getz Widely known as the composer of The Girl From Ipanema, one of the most recorded songs of all time, Jobim left a large number of songs that are now included in jazz and pop standard repertoires. An innovator in his use of sophisticated harmony and melody in popular song, his music, often wrongly classed as little more than elevator music, demands closer listening. Sun 26 June, 2pm £8 Jazz Piano Duos Expect keyboard fireworks, telepathic interplay and virtuosic interpretations of classic standards and original compositions. THE SEVEN SONG CLUB Continuing our season of live acoustic sets in the Vic Bar, The Seven Song Club present: Fri 15 Jan, 8.30pm £7.50 Magic Lantern Show/Paul Alger Band/The Cinnamon Girls Fri 5 Feb, 8.30pm £7.50 Haight Ashbury/Sister John/La Dee Dah Fri 18 Mar, 8.30pm £7.50 Lola in Slacks/everywhere/Alan Tennie Thu 31 Mar, 8.30pm £7.50 Colour of Whisky/Helen Reeves Trio/Tam T Cameron Fri 8 April, 8.30pm £7.50 Tenement and Temple/Lorraine Wilson Fri 6 May, 8.30pm £7.50 Honey and the Herbs plus special guests Thu 19 May, 8.30pm £7.50 Strange Blue Dreams/Harry and the Hendersons Fri 17 June, 8.30pm £7.50 Sporting Hero and the Gracious Losers/Hellfire Club FOLKIFY Wed 27 Jan, 24 Feb, 30 Mar, 27 April, 18 May & 22 June, 8.30pm £7.50 Folk for folk. Hosts Sandy Nelson and Morna Young invite you to join them for an evening of ‘folked up’ acoustic music. From rock to R&B, the duo, plus special guests and friends, will present a new spin on your favourite songs plus an array of new writing talent. Join us for a relaxed evening of music plus audience participation. Phamie Gow Thu 14 April, 8:30pm £10.00 International musician, composer, singer/songwriter and recording artist Phamie Gow is reknowned for her innovative and groundbreaking playing and compositions for the celtic lever harp, and her new piano compositions are recognized as creating a new sound in the celtic/classical crossover world. A regular on Classic FM, Phamie is currently Caffe Nero’s number 1 most-played artist and was awarded The Kindred Spirit Award for Music in 2015. COMEDY NEW WRITING Comedy In Progress invites audiences to enjoy some of the best names in professional comedy working through new material, from stand up to sketches, radio shows to TV pitches. If it’s comedy then it comes here before it goes in front of anyone else! So if you love laughing or you like being the person that says ‘I saw them when…’, then this is the night for you. Thu 4 Feb, 8.30pm £7.50 Jellybean Martinez & Andrew Learmonth Thu 3 March, 8.30pm £7.50 Jamie Dalgleish, Chris Forbes & Mark Nelson Thu 7 Apr, 8.30pm £7.50 Vladamir McTavish Thu 5 May, 8.30pm £7.50 Marc Jennings & John Robertson Thu 2 June, 8.30pm £7.50 Mark Nelson POETRY SLAMS Scottish Slam Championships Sat 13 Feb, 7.45pm Main Auditorium £7.50 Slam poetry is the wild child of literature and a poetry slam is an intensely entertaining event. Competition winning rhymers, rappers, ravers and rhapsodists from across Scotland vie for the points, the prize money, the kudos of being Scottish Champion and the opportunity to go to Paris and take part in The World Series. Come along, pick your favourite and cheer them on to glory! Robin Cairns comperes. Sunday Stramash Sun 20 March, 2pm £7 (includes soup and bread) The ancient Scottish art of flyting has been dormant long enough. In this afternoon session ranters and poets will speak out against their own pet hates. They may be as pugnacious and personal as they like – on subjects ranging from the political to the frankly petty! However, they will be answered immediately by our panel of objectionable contrarians – one of whom will come back with a series of withering retorts. The floor will run crimson from the wounds of the injured! And the audience will decide the winner of each bout. If you have a warm and affectionate fellow-feeling for all mankind this is not the event for you. Come and have a go if you think you’re bard enough! Robin Cairns comperes. Sunday Slam Sun 22 May, 2pm £7 (includes soup and bread) Poets punky, poets passionate and poets … well, poetic will take part in an afternoon competition. A panel of judges will score them on poem, performance and audience reaction. Someone will go away triumphant. Come along and cheer on your favourite as they progress through the rounds. Robin Cairns comperes. Interested in taking part? Contact [email protected]. MOON COUNTRY In this new season, Peter Arnott presents more entertaining and challenging new writing. With a musical guest to open and close, each performance will showcase one of five exciting new pieces of work as well as deliver another instalment from Moon Country itself. Clown Country by George Docherty Wed 17 Feb, 8.30pm £7.50 Mother Ease by Molly Innes Wed 23 March, 8.30pm £7.50 The Door by Vlad Buccea Wed 20 April, 8.30pm £7.50 Doge’s Palace by Kevin Carr Wed 25 May, 8.30pm £7.50 A Rabbit, A Pig & A Whore in a Tiny Red Box by Heloise Thual Wed 29 June, 8.30pm £7.50 TRON PARTICIPATION Tron Participation is the education and outreach strand of the Tron Theatre’s activities, offering a year-round programme of classes and workshops for all ages, abilities and backgrounds. Explore. Create. Learn. Enjoy. Work for Children Tiny and Tall Tales Little imaginations. Big adventures. Tiny and Tall tales are fun-filled storytelling sessions, brought to life with props, movement, music, percussion and creative play and all carefully designed to stimulate the senses. Workshops help your little one with physical, social, emotional and language development while encouraging their imagination to flourish. Best of all you get to join in too! Tiny Tales 10.30am (babies and crawlers) Tall Tales 11.30am (walking independently up to 3yrs) Classes run weekly on Saturdays during term time: 23 January – 18 June £5 per class Ticket admits 1 child and accompanying parent/carers (maximum 2 adults per ticket) Skillshops Drama classes for children and young people. Let your imagination take you on the most amazing journey where everything is possible! Term 1: 23 January –26 March Term 2: 23 April – 18 June (excl. 28 May) Juniors (4 – 6yrs) Saturdays, 1pm – 2pm £60/£50 per term Seniors (7-10yrs) Saturdays, 2.30pm-4.30pm £75/£65 per term WORK FOR YOUNG PEOPLE Tron Youth Theatre Learn about the world of theatre through creative workshops, rehearsals and performance projects as well as seeing professional productions. Monday 25/Wednesday 27 Jan – Mon 20/Wed 22 June (excl. school holidays) YT Junior (11-13 yrs) Wednesdays 6.30-8.30pm £150/£135 (Payable in 3 instalments of £50/£45 due Dec ’15, March & May ’16) YT Senior (14-17 yrs) Mondays 6.30-8.30pm £150/£135 (Payable in 3 instalments of £50/£45 due Dec ’15, March & May ’16) TRON YOUTH THEATRE NEEDS YOU – now recruiting performers for two main stage productions in 2016. Email [email protected] for more info. Youth Theatre Juniors present IMAGINE THAT! Thu 9 – Sat 11 June, 7.30pm £8 Main Auditorium Telling stories comes naturally doesn’t it? Remember the time when… You’re never going to believe what happened… Did I tell you about….? Guess where I went this weekend….? But what if the tales you’re telling are about something that isn’t real? Is your story a lie or just a piece of entertainment? Tron Youth Theatre Juniors explore the stories we spin and the imaginary characters we dream up and wonder if what’s in our heads is more interesting than real life? Youth Theatre Seniors present PUSHING IT Thu 7 – Sat 9 April, 7.30pm £8 Main Auditorium Dos and don’ts. Homework guidelines. School regulations. Rules of the house. Curfews. Parental regimes. Boundaries. If it’s an adult’s job to set them, is it our job to test them? Breaking them, bending them, stretching them, twisting them. Nudging them, poking them, struggling to cope with them. Are we all just at it? No, we’re just pushing it. Work for Adults Tron Studio Tron Studio is our adult community drama company where members meet regularly throughout the year for skills development workshops, as well as to attend theatre performances and create their own work. Working with director Fraser MacLeod, the group will devise a new show to be staged during Mayfesto 2016. Tuesdays 7-9pm 26 Jan – 24 May £180/£150 concession per block Payable in 3 instalments of £60/£50 due Dec ’15, March & May ‘16 Costume and Set Design Level 2 This practical course follows on from Level 1, using the techniques learned to explore in more detail ideas around colour, shape, tone and mood. The Level 2 course is directly linked to a main stage production and participants will be given the opportunity to gain hands-on experience progressing a design from model box to stage. The cours is a mix of theory, discussion and practical activity and is suitable for: Individuals who have completed Set & Costume Design Level 1 Artists with an interest in theatre design and looking to expand their practice. Individuals with some design experience Wed 27 Jan – Wed 30 March (10 taught sessions) £100/£90 concession (includes all materials) For further information please contact Lisa Keenan. Education Manager [email protected] or book directly with box office on 0141 552 4267 GET INTO BED WITH THE TRON – for as little as £10 a month The Tron prides itself on delivering brilliant contemporary theatre for the people of Glasgow, Scotland and beyond as well as being a creative hub for the Scottish theatre community. We need your help to continue to deliver the high quality programmes of work that our theatre community and audiences alike deserve. Tron Theatre is a registered charity and we receive a public subsidy which covers just half of our operating cost. Our aim is to raise an additional £1 for every £1 of public funding we receive. You can support Tron Theatre and its future by subscribing as a Tron Patron. Patrons are the life and soul of Tron Theatre and for as little as £10 a month you can make a real difference to what we do whilst also enjoying a range of benefits including invites to exclusive Patron events, opportunities to attend Q & A sessions, discounts on tickets and meals and a £20 voucher of hair and beauty salon Belle and Blackley for all new Patrons. So climb in, we’d love you to join us! To become a Patron please call our box office on 0141 552 4267 or email [email protected] For more information contact our Development Team on 0141 559 5304 BAR + KITCHEN Where you’re always welcome…. We’ve had great feedback on our new look and new menus and Head Chef Mark McKenzie and his team continue to create interesting and flavoursome fare using fresh, local ingredients. As well as updating the menus for the Spring/Summer season, we’ve introduced a series of free events in the Vic Bar to complement the existing programme of music. So whether you like comedy or acoustic sessions, spoken word or Irish trad music, drop by, grab a beer (from our recently installed West kegerator) and enjoy. Tron Bar & Kitchen becomes the place to be on a Sunday, with brunch from 11am featuring classics like Eggs Benedict and Eggs Florentine. And for those who prefer a heartier meal, our head chef is now roasting a delicious cut of Aberdeen Angus every week for the classic Sunday lunch. We’ve extended food service on Friday and Saturday evenings until 10pm so if you’ve no plans to see a theatre show, you can enjoy our evening menu at a more leisurely pace. If you do have tickets for a show however, we’re continuing to offer a 10% reduction on all pre-theatre food*. Do book ahead though, online or by calling 0141 552 8587 to ensure that we can get you wined and dined ahead of the show. For menus, more information on our free events or to make a reservation visit: http://www.tron.co.uk/food-drink/ or call 0141 552 8587 *Subject to availability. Discount only applies on date shown on purchased tickets. Not available between 27.11.15 and 04.01.16 SUPPORT The Tron gratefully acknowledges support from: FUNDERS Creative Scotland, Glasgow City Council SPONSORS Belhaven Best TRUSTS AND FOUNDATIONS The WM Mann Foundation, The Hugh Fraser Foundation, Merchant’s House Trust Glasgow, The Big Lottery. SUPPORTERS The Scottish Council for Development and Industry, Page\Park TRON ANGELS Archangel – Ashley Jensen, Heather MacLaren, Mark Smith, Debbie McDougall, Sonia Raphael, Laura and John Macguire Elliot, AS Scaffolding Limited PATRONS Maureen Aitken, Steve Ansell, Susan Binns, Denis Boner, Kati Byrne, Jacqueline Calderwood, Stewart & Frankie Coulter, Jean Couper CBE, Allan Cowan, Dhyani Crawford, Elizabeth Degnan, Louise Dingwall, Angela Donoghue, Penny Forshaw, Lauren Galloway, Jim Hamilton, Marie Hand, Jim Hayle, Anne Hogg, Susan Hunt, Eleanor Hyland, Lesley Inglis, Lorraine Inglis, Ruth Johnston, John and Agnese Keeper, Isabella Kilgannon, Peter Lawson, Jonathan Lister, Andrew Lockyear, Louise McCarthy, Colin McCredie, Fiona McDonald, Frank McGoldrick, Margaret Ann McGoldrick, Fraser McLeod, Heather MacLaren, Tommy Macleod, Iain and Alison Michael, Gary Morrison, Helen Morton, Lionel Most, Bill and Gillian Neish, Ruth Ogston, Stuart Oliphant, Helen O’Neil, Noelle O’Rourke, Alice Orr, Liam Paterson, Angela and Euan Petrie, Raymond Prendergast, Tonia Quarell, Nuala Quinn, Elizabeth Reid, Fraser Reid, Jean Reid, Eleanor Roberts, Eleanor Rutherford, Jenny Ryall, Catherine Steel, Morag Shearlaw, Irene and Fred Shedden, Ida ShusterBerkeley, William Scott, Mandy Stewart, Gail Sunter, William Turner, Ian Watson, Robert Way, Steven Way, Andy and Sandra West, Marie Wilkinson, Iris Williamson. CORPORATE PARTNERS AFS, Alliance Wine, DPI Broadway, EVM, JamHot, Z Hotel, West, Robertson Taylor W&P Longreach, Belle & Blackley Hair & Beauty. If you are interested in playing a vital role in the Tron’s future call 0141 559 5304. Tron Theatre Ltd is a Scottish Registered Charity No: SCO12081 FIND US The Tron can be easily spotted on Trongate by the old steeple with the blue clock face. Entrance to the theatre and bar is on Chisholm Street. SUBWAY The nearest subway station is St Enoch TRAIN The Tron is a 10 minute walk from Glasgow Central or Queen Street: 3 minutes from Argyle Street and 5 minutes from High Street BUS The Tron is on the many bus routes and the nearest stops are on Trongate and Osborne Street PARKING Nearby carparks include King Street NCP and Albion Street Q Park. Blue Badge parking is available on Chisholm Street. For more information on getting to the Tron visit: travelinescotland.com TRON.CO.UK