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Two was performed at The Park Hotel on 22nd & 23rd June 2018

Cast and Crew

Director: Chad Bunney
Assistant Director: Amy Jo Brownson
Producer: Jacqui Clark
Assistant Producer: Matthew Peter Clare
Stage Managers: Renesse Leong & Abbie Cochrane
ASM: Luca Davies & Adam Genga
Creative Consultant: Andy Ainscough

Landlord: Adam Keenan
Landlady: Clare Fletcher
Male Multirole: Jamie Lonsdale
Female Multirole: Hannah Cooper
A sharp and touching slice of English life set in a Northern Pub owned by a savagely bickering husband and wife. Two is a series of short vignettes that skilfully combines pathos and humour, with all fourteen characters played by four actors.
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"There's little comfort to be gained in a pint of Guiness, yet here we are"
                                                                - Landlady

Publicity

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​Rehearsal Process


​Show Photos

Review

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Following LUTG’s impressive production of Dunsinane, I jumped at the opportunity to review Two, Jim Cartwright’s Northern drama. The play follows the lives of pub regulars over the course of an average day, or so the audience thinks. The date becomes significant later.

Two actors play the twelve characters that frequent the pub (hence the name)in the original version, but the theatre group have adapted this so that four actors play the different characters. Clare Fletcher (Land Lady) and Adam Keenan (Land Lord) play one character each, while Hannah Cooper and Jamie Lonsdale play various oddities.

The set is comprised of a bar and two bar stools which the locals of the pub sit on to perform their monologues. The audience is close to the action. The arrangement of chairs around tables instead of the traditional rows of seats is an excellent addition to the relaxed atmosphere of a pub. This placement allows various characters to weave in and out of the tables, speaking to the audience members. Lothario Moth (Jamie Lonsdale) points at several girls, exclaiming ‘You’re beautiful!’ before his girlfriend, Maudie (Hannah Cooper) enters the pub.

Director Chad Bunney said that he included audience interaction because Cartwright’s version was made to be inclusive.
Lighting is used well. It functions much the same as a fade to black might in a television programme: as darkness descends upon the Land Lord, light is shone on the elderly woman (Hannah Cooper). As one monologue ends, another begins.

After the interval the easy-going mood changes.

Roy and Leslie (also played by Lonsdale and Cooper) are far from the comical Moth and Maudie. As they sit down for a drink in the pub, it becomes clear that she is not drinking. Or looking up. And barely speaking.

The pair play the couple well: Lonsdale is steely-eyed and commandeering, while Cooper is meek and malleable. I even saw her eyes shimmer. Their relationship is appalling because of how relentlessly realistic the scene is: Roy makes her ask to use the toilet. Roy tells her never to tell him no. And in the split second when Leslie looks up from her shoes, Roy asks, ‘Who are you looking at?’
The Land Lady and Land Lord fight tooth and nail throughout. Their bickering is akin to Kat and Alfie in EastEnders. Cleverly, they are used to frame the narrative: the audience assumes that their story only stretches as far as having oddball customers when the opposite is true. The tension between the two reaches its peak in the last ten minutes when, as they lock up for the day, they are confronted by their shared past.

‘Do you know what day it is?’ the Land Lady asks.

The mystery is revealed, and what follows is an outpouring of tension and grief. Fletcher and Keenan convey their anxiety throughout the play by criticising each other, with added eye rolls and tuts. Their argument in the denouement is surprising: no longer the Land Lord and Land Lady stock characters, there is far more depth to these two than meets the eye.
​

With each different character, the actors transform themselves on stage: there are stiff joints and dance moves and screaming fights. My only criticism is the sometimes wavering accent, which goes from adequate to excessive. As a whole, Two is a great achievement under LUTG’s belt and an impressive directing debut from Chad Bunney.

- Written by Lexi Burgess




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  • Home
  • About
    • ANNOUNCEMENTS
    • MEMBERSHIP
    • MEET THE EXEC
  • SHOWS
  • ARCHIVE
    • SHOW ARCHIVE >
      • 2015/16 >
        • JUMPERS FOR GOALPOSTS
        • TOP GIRLS
        • THE GUT GIRLS
        • THE SHADOW BOX
        • CALLBACK
        • BLOOD BROTHERS
        • ONE MAN, TWO GUVNORS
        • ABIGAIL'S PARTY
        • THE ELEPHANT MAN
        • MY MOTHER SAID I NEVER SHOULD
        • MUCH ADO ABOUT NOTHING
        • ACCIDENTAL DEATH OF AN ANARCHIST
      • 2016/17 >
        • HOUSE WITH A RED DOOR
        • HIS FRIEND ED
        • PARADE
        • BLITHE SPIRIT
        • 1984
        • INCOGNITO
        • THE GLASS HOUSE
        • THE CRUCIBLE
        • SAUCY JACK AND THE SPACE VIXENS
        • PROOF
        • AND THEN THERE WERE NONE
        • THE DIARY OF ANNE FRANK
      • 2017/18 >
        • CHATROOM
        • THE HISTORY BOYS
        • ARCADIA
        • MACBETH
        • DIOGENES IN A JAR
        • SPRING AWAKENING
        • HERE
        • STATION
        • TWO
        • DUNSINANE
        • HOUND OF THE BASKERVILLES
        • THE 39 STEPS
      • 2018/19 >
        • LOVE FROM A STRANGER
        • JEKYLL & HYDE: THE MUSICAL
        • STOP!... THE PLAY
        • THE TEMPEST
        • CLICK
        • AN IDEAL HUSBAND
        • BREAKFAST AT TIFFANY'S
        • DINNER
        • GAMES AND AFTER LIVERPOOL
        • TWELFTH NIGHT
        • METAMORPHOSIS
      • 2019/20 >
        • KATHERINE HOWARD
        • THINGS I KNOW TO BE TRUE
        • FRANKENSTEIN
        • LEAR
        • DEALER'S CHOICE
        • THE WIND IN THE WILLOWS
        • HEDDA GABLER
      • 2021/22 >
        • THE GRAVEYARD SHIFT
        • PERFORMANCE SHOWCASE
        • WOYZECK
        • IN EVENT OF MOONE DISASTER
        • THE VILLAGE
        • THE HAPPIEST DAYS OF YOUR LIFE
        • GOD OF CARNAGE
        • A STREETCAR NAMED DESIRE
      • 2022/23 >
        • A CHRISTMAS CAROL
        • BRIEF ENCOUNTER
        • AFTER LIFE
    • SHORTS ARCHIVE >
      • Z IS FOR ZELDA
      • IN THE WHITE
      • SOMETHING SOMETHING
      • HORATIO
      • THE DUMB WAITER
      • BULL
      • THE NEW QUAY PROJECT
      • BE CAREFUL WHAT YOU WISH FOR
      • IN THE WHITE (2022)
    • EXTERNAL PROJECTS >
      • LANCASTER OFFSHOOTS >
        • BEATRIX POTTER'S PETER RABBIT AND OTHER TALES
        • HUNCHBACK
        • NEVERLAND
        • DR FAUSTUS 2010
        • SYMPATHY FOR THE DEVIL
        • DR FAUSTUS 2019
      • COLLAB
      • CHARITY SHOWCASES >
        • MOULIN ROUGE
        • CHICAGO
        • WICKED
        • BEAUTY AND THE BEAST
        • MAMMA MIA
        • GREASE
    • EXEC ARCHIVE
    • OSCARS ARCHIVE
    • SOCIALS ARCHIVE
    • LIFETIME MEMBERS
  • TUTORIALS
    • PROPOSING A SHOW
    • DIRECTING
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    • STAGE MANAGING
    • FRINGE
    • FAQ'S
  • Store
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  • Calendar