Tag Archives: James Williams

Review Miramar Trigonl by Helen Joy

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 out of 5 stars (4 / 5)
 

I have enjoyed a huge ice-cream sundae in the café and am happily taking my seat, when Enid comes over and has a chat. She tells me about the nasty business with her husband and how she’s had to sell the house.

It is a nasty business too. Poor woman. Homeless. Di gartref. How easily it can happen.

I have no idea how I have become fluent in Welsh. Enid is chatting away and we are all listening and we are all tutting and laughing and commiserating with her. She is exaggerated as a story-teller, she relishes the telling of her tale, she compensates for her loss through her canniness. We like Enid but we see she is a cunning old bird. We are sorry when her home is taken and renamed: Miramar. Awel y Mor is nicer, we agree. We don’t mind her moving back in while the new owners are away, china dogs in another family.

The slapstick comedy of the sausage and mash dinner hidden in the cupboard when the inevitable knock on the door comes. We are encouraged not to like the smart and sassy daughters of Miramar but of course, eventually we do. And the sausages make their mark on all of us.

This is about communication – about showing us that spoken language has just one part to play and so we roll from Welsh into English and back again without even noticing. It is about family, life and death and consequences. It is about different tastes and different times and places. It is about home. It is about shit. Cachu. It happens.

Simple props, careful costume and straightforward lighting. All we need to establish a sense of a house and its people in transition. It is nicely performed. Alice and Georgina make good foils to the characterful Enid. Light and dark, this is a strong play with a tidbit of fiery drama at the end. Y sosejis.

I ask two ladies, who are sitting in the evening sun outside The Red House on a Saturday night in Merthyr, whether they speak Welsh. No, they say in unison. Didn’t need to. Understood every word. We’ll be coming again. So funny. We laughed and laughed. Same here, I say. Finally, my knowledge of Welsh swearwords comes in handy and I share some choice ones. We part and you can hear us all laughing up the street. Am dipyn.

We all know everyone in it – recognise and enjoy!

Play:                Miramar

At:                   The Red House, Merthyr
Playwright:          Rebecca Smith-Williams
Producer:             Rebecca Knowles
Director:               James Williams
Theatre:                Triongl
Cast:                        Enid – Valmai Jones
Alice – Rebecca Knowles
Georgina – Rebecca Smith-Williams
Seen:              7.30pm, 18th June, 2016
Reviewer:      Helen Joy for 3rd Act Critics
Running:        Saturday 18th, Redhouse , Merthyr Tydfil
Wednesday 22nd – The Welfare, Ystradgynlais http://www.thewelfare.co.uk/
Links:               http://www.triongl.com/miramar.html
 
 

Welsh Playwrights, An interview with Tony Wright

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Get the Chance values the role playwrights living and working in Wales bring to the cultural life of our nation.  Here is our first interview in this series with Welsh playwright Tony Wright.

Hi Tony great to meet you, can you give our readers some background information on yourself please?

Sure, so my name is Tony Wright my dad was Jamaican and my mum was Welsh and is from the Valleys. I grew in in Tremorfa, which is near to Splott in Cardiff. I left school without any formal qualifications.

So what got you interested in writing then Tony?

When I was 14 my sister brought a book home the Contender, it was a boxing book and this was the first book I picked up myself and was interested in. This developed an interest in literature for me so I then started to go to the library myself to read. Inspired by the book I tried boxing but it wasn’t really for me, it was too painful!

When I was 16 my friends formed a band called Level Vibes and I was the guitarist. I didn’t stay with the band for very long and I quickly realised that I couldn’t really play guitar but I could write lyrics, so I started to write lyrics for the band. I wrote a couple of things and my claim to fame is I wrote a song for a Benji Webb who now fronts the band called Skindred. Benji cut his first 12-inch single for a song I wrote called ‘Plant a Seed.’

http://www.barddgriot-productions.com/#!eyes–dont–lie-bottom–page-plant-a-see/ctc7

That’s a great claim to fame! So what did you do then?

I realised then that I could write! I set up my own band Digital and we did a few gigs at Grassroots in Cardiff. Which is a drop in youth centre with a music studio, an excellent place! Two of my songs stayed in the set for Level Vibes and their profile really developed they were talked about as the Welsh UB40. Level Vibes members also included rap poet Leon Charles

http://www.walesonline.co.uk/news/wales-news/1970s-butetown-in-photos-2075339

http://www.literaturewales.org/writers-of-wales/i/129552/desc/charles-leon/

Digital didn’t really take off and when I was about 30 I was offered the chance to access some adult education courses and went to the Friary and Coleg Glen Hafren in Cardiff I learnt during the adult education courses that I was dyslexic. I think dyslexia wasn’t as widely known then. My tutors informed me I should have had an A grades but because of my dyslexia I got a C’s, which made me really angry and frustrated. I continued to want to learn and managed to get to university and studied a combined studies course on Media, History and Cultural studies. Much of my studies were based on subcultures and Rude Boy culture. During the course I learnt about scriptwriting. Again my tutor informed me that they thought I had dyslexia. I had a test and was diagnosed with severe dyslexia. I realised I if I had have been diagnosed earlier I would have received support but I didn’t and still don’t let my dyslexia hold me back.

Whilst on the course I wrote my first full-length script called ‘Climbing Out’ about a mixed race guy from Splott who was given the chance to move down to Cardiff Bay. I thought it was good and I just had to do something with it. So I went to Splott with no money just my script and spoke to people on the street and asked them if they wanted to be in my film! John Allen who worked at Chapter supported me; he very kindly gave us a space to work in. We booked the YMCA in Splott for 4 nights and it was one of the best things I have ever done. It was hard and a struggle we funded the performances ourselves with some in-kind support. At that time there wasn’t many mixed race black actors seen acting in Wales. The audience loved it, they where mainly the community and friends. For lots of the audience it was the first time they had seen a play with people in it that they could identify with and they said, “We want to see more!”

To do that yourself takes a lot of drive and ambition Tony, did you approach the Arts Council of Wales or similar organisations for funding or support?

Yes I went to Arts Council Wales for funding but I was unsuccessful in my application at the time, as I didn’t have 2 years trading or bank accounts. This was a barrier for me but they were flexible and asked to see if I had some evidence of trading. From then on we started to develop a relationship and discuss how they could support me. Since then I have had lots of support from ACW officers Jennifer Stoves, Melanie Hawthorn and Nick Davies. They know my work and me.

So with the success of your first play I wonder if you then wanted to develop your play writing skills?

258611_10151260965619283_1828133446_oWell they say to write about what you know so… my next project developed out of my knowledge of Reggae sound systems and Rude Boy culture, music was and is the thing that brings lots of my friends together. ‘Rude’ is became a Ska musical about a mixed race guy in Cardiff called Roddy, the play focus’ on him looking back at his teenage rude boy-self and the characters, culture and music that informed his youth.

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The cast of Rude 

The project developed when I met with a guy called Dave Norton and James Williams. I met Dave in a bar and we got talking and I found out that Dave was an actor and producer with his own theatre company called ‘Give it a Name.’ We started working on it together in 2009 it was produced twice in 2009 and 2012,  the second time as part of Black History Month. The play featured Shekira Johnson, Brent Morgan, John Norton, Dean Rehman, Joe Shire, and Olly Wood. James Williams who is a Musical Director was also the plays director. We performed it in the Rockin’ Chair Bar and Grill, in Riverside, Cardiff which was a Caribbean restaurant.

Performing it there meant we took theatre into a place it’s not normally shown. It was all staged in the restaurant. There were people sitting eating and the play was happening around them. The actors improvised with the audience it was excellent. There was one part of the show where the cast pretend to fight and one of the local bouncers jumped in to stop the fight thinking it was real! We had to say, “No Dave mate it’s a play!” James also got the excellent band together. They were Jenny Bradley, Fran Dimech, Chay Lockyer, Eric Martin Jr, and Gregg Price.

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I love the fact that the production was performed in a restaurant and not a traditional theatre space and really involved the audience. So to bring us up to date what have you been up to recently?

Well I am 53 I have been thinking to myself no more Art stuff. All my mates are retiring and I am thinking about getting a job! I started doing some voluntary work at Butetown History and Arts Centre and enjoyed meeting the different people that use the building. Whilst volunteering there I supported a project with MIND and a campaign called ‘Time to Change’ I was approached to work one project called Mental Notes – Beyond Words. I developed a piece of drama called ‘The Prisons Within’ I personally know a lot of people who have gone to prison with mental health problems and the importance of getting help. The play is set in a prison with two men in the same cell. In turns out one has OCD and one has depression. Del Lusion is one character and he is a symptom of mental health problems. He winds up the other character in the play. During the play the two characters get to know each other and talk about how they ended up in prison.

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 The Prison Withins cast members Paddy Faulkner and Jason Camilleri

The play ends on a positive note and shows that you need to talk if you have mental health issues. The play was performed by actors Paddy Faulkner, Robert Marrable and Jason Camilleri and directed by Jemma Llewellyn

With the play I don’t offer any solutions to mental health problems I just offer a space for people to be aware of these issues in society, which I think, is one of the roles of writers and artists.

Sounds great I believe the production is going to be staged again soon? When will we be able to see the production Tony?

The play will be performed at The Wales Millennium Centre on Thursday the 30th June at 7.30 pm. The cast for this performance will include Jonny Hollywood/Robert Marrable and Paddy Faulkner. It will be directed by Jason Camilleri.

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The play will also be performed at Parc Prison, Bridgend as part of their staff training next month.

If you would like a free ticket  go to my website and send me a message. http://www.barddgriot-productions.com/#!lets_talk/con8

One of the reasons I formed my company Barddgriot- Productios was to maintain working with a talented multi-cultural team of people living in and working in Wales. As I have mentioned I have had the pleasure of working with a wealth of talented people in my career. I have also been supported by people like Director Greg Cullen who directed a short play I wrote at the Royal Welsh College of Music and Drama. I hope to continue to work with more of the brilliant artists and writers in Wales in the future!

http://www.barddgriot-productions.com

Thanks for your time Tony