Tag Archives: The Revlon Girl

An interview with ‘The Revlon Girl’ company.

 The Director of Get the Chance Guy O’Donnell recently met with The Revlon Girl company. We discussed the plays development, Edinburgh Festival Fringe and their plans for the future.
Hi pleased to meet you. Can you please give our readers some background information on yourself and your role in the arts in Wales?

 Pontardawe Arts Centre 
We are a small Arts venue based in the centre of Pontardawe, 20mins from Swansea. Our aim is to improve the cultural opportunities in the local area by providing a platform for the more striking shows within the arts. Annually we deliver approximately 60 professional shows encompassing drama, comedy, live music and children’s theatre. We also provide development opportunities to improve creative writing, script writing and song writing. We are involved in supporting emerging companies in assisting them with research and development opportunities in supporting the creation of high quality theatre. We also provide the practical things such as rehearsal rooms, technical and marketing support.
https://npttheatres.co.uk/pontardawe/

Writer/Producer- Neil Anthony Docking
Neil is a writer, composer and producer, and has worked in press, radio, film and theatre. He studied music at the University of Westminster and has written for The Guardian (newspaper), Station Road (BBC Radio Drama), The Throne Room (original play for radio), Bay College, Casualty (BBC), Nuts & Bolts, Crossroads, Emmerdale (ITV1) and has been shortlisted for the BBC Dennis Potter Screenwriting Award. He has written, scored and co- produced the original independent British feature film musical, Rain and most recently wrote and produced Storyline, an original comedy for online broadcast. He is married to Maxine Evans (they met in 1984 when they were both members of the West Glamorgan Youth Theatre and, in one way or another, have worked together pretty much ever since). ’The Revlon Girl’ is his first play.

Director/Producer – Maxine Evans
Maxine studied classical acting at the Guildhall School of Music and Drama and has worked as an actor, writer, series editor and director in television, film and theatre. She directed Without a Song or a Dance (shortlisted Best Director at the Cork Film Festival) Nuts & Bolts (ITV/RTS Award winner) and Rain (a Feature Film Musical) while her writing/series editor credits include Coronation Street, Crossroads and Nuts & Bolts (ITV). She continues to develop new writing for theatre (Goat Street Runners and Who’s Coat Is That Jacket?) and has recently directed a new comedy entitled Storyline. As an actor Maxine appears regularly on television- most notably in BBC’s Call The Midwife and A Song For Jenny and as the indomitable ‘Rhian’ in Sky 1’s hit comedy Stella.

 Can you tell us about the work your company is taking to this Edinburgh Festival Fringe?
‘The Revlon Girl’ is an original play based on a true story following the Aberfan Disaster of 1966 (in which 144 people were killed- 116 of them school children). Set 8 months after the disaster, the play tells the true story of a group of bereaved mothers who met to talk, cry and to even laugh without feeling guilty. At one of these meetings, the women looked at each other and admitted how much they felt they’d let themselves go. Afraid of being judged frivolous, they secretly arranged for a representative from Revlon to come and give them beauty tips.

A short version of the play was presented in Covent Garden in 2015 before a full length version toured Wales in 2016 during the 50th anniversary of the disaster to overwhelming audience and critical acclaim.
getthechance.wales/2016/10/01/review-revlon-girl-october-sixty-six-kat-leslie/

Theatre | The Revlon Girl


Following what we think will be a successful debut at Edinburgh, the play transfers to the London stage in the Autumn for a 4 week run at the prestigious Park Theatre.

 Wales Arts International who have funded some of the companies this year state,
“The idea is to help the selected Welsh companies to present their work at the Fringe in the best possible way – with the best conditions – and, importantly, to connect with international promoters and programmers participating in the British Council Edinburgh Showcase.”
 Why is their support important along with Arts Council Wales and British Council Wales?
As with the many people who have already said that ‘The Revlon Girl’ has worldwide appeal because it is a universal tale with enduring themes that is as much about courage as it is tragedy (and is a story told by women i.e. just over half the global population) I would only add that ‘The Revlon Girl’ exists in part- given that it’s a human story about one of the worst man-made disasters in history- to remind ourselves how indifference is the source of inhumanity and to ensure that this kind of thing never happens again (in fact, on its first outing in 2015, we were surprised just how many overseas audiences came to see it and were bowled over by the story and couldn’t believe that it happened at all)

However, most recently, the play has taken on a chilling- almost prescient – quality; something that has struck not just the writer but also the director and cast in the wake of the Grenfell Tower disaster in West London. Since the play in part explores and illuminates the reasons why disasters like these happen (and why, sadly, they are going to continue to happen) some sections of the play now make stark reading. Indeed, amidst the news reports of the tragedy itself and the subsequent public anger, the writer remarked recently: ’after Grenfell, people are going to think I’ve rewritten the speeches… like Rona’s: “Put up a memorial if you like; in forty or fifty years nobody’s going to remember what happened here anyway. It’ll be something else by then. Another disaster waiting to happen. But it’ll be the same people who’ll say there’s nothing to worry about. Those who’ll be far away and stand to make a lot of money…” ‘
The point is: anyone who has seen ‘The Revlon Girl’ will tell you about its worldwide potential. But that’s a tough mountain to climb. But now, with the help of ACW, British Council et al, it’s time to get out the climbing gear and realise that potential.
The festival features a huge range of productions and there is great deal of competition for audiences, why should audiences come and see your company’s work?
If you’re intending on seeing only one play at the festival, then ‘The Revlon Girl’ is it. Not just is it one of the most moving pieces of theatre you are ever likely to see, it is also one of the most up-lifting. In a sense it has all the hallmarks of a classic (i.e. it is a good story told well by an amazing cast- no gimmicks, no tricks) and fans of Arthur Miller, J.B. Priestly, John Osborne, Clifford Odets, Tracy Letts, Edward Albee, Aaron Sorkin and even David Mamet (or, to put it another way, anyone who likes their drama to be acute, moving, funny and enduring)- should come see it.
Welsh artists/Companies will be showcasing a range of art forms including theatre, new writing, site-specific work and contemporary dance. In your opinion is there anything that is distinctly Welsh which links them?
Difficult to comment at this stage since we haven’t seen each other’s work but I guess there’s one thing I can say for certain: having read about what’s going up and chatting with some of their creators, the one – distinctly Welsh- thing that links them is the sheer diversity of ideas. (I don’t know if there could be anywhere else – outside London of course- that could produce such a breadth of creativity and activity)
What would you recommend seeing from the other Welsh/Wales based companies going to this year’s festival or perhaps the festival as a whole?
I’d recommend seeing them all! And soon!
What do the artists and companies do when they aren’t performing?
Generally speaking, the cast are working all year round doing other jobs like providing voices for CBBC (Michelle McTernan) or appearing in the P&O ads being Rob Brydon’s wife (Zoe Harrison) or shooting new shows for HBO (Antonia Kinlay) or else appearing on stage and screen in a variety of roles (Charlotte Gray, Bethan Thomas). The director (Maxine Evans) is also known as an actor (Call The Midwife, Song For Jenny) and has just come back from shooting series 6 of the Sky 1 hit ’Stella’ by Ruth Jones, playing the indomitable ‘Rhian’.
Other than that, it’s all the things you do in the arts: getting inspired, developing new work and looking for money down the back of the sofa!
What’s the best Fringe show you’ve ever seen?
This is our first time at the Festival so looking forward to answering this question in full next year!
Thanks for your time

Review The Revlon Girl October Sixty Six by Kat Leslie

revlon_girl  out of 5 stars (5 / 5) – Unmissable

The Revlon Girl is a heart-breaking, tear jerking story about the aftermath of the Aberfan disaster that happened in 1966. In the play a group of mothers who lost their children in the disaster meet in a room above the Aberfan Hotel 8 months later to discuss the events of the disaster. However, no one knows that  a representative from the makeup company, Revlon, is meeting with the mothers to give them all a talk on beauty tips.

This moving production will make you laugh as much as you will cry (or at last I did) and will shine a light on some very important life lessons. In the trailer for this play, Bethan Thomas spoke about how it shows that you don’t just have to deal with your own grief, but other people’s too. You fall in love with these characters and you cry for them. It was a phenomenally emotional story with powerful acting from an all female cast consisting of 5 amazing actors.

The Aberfan disaster is something that everyone in Wales will study  in Welsh class, but really, none of us know what actually happened and could never understand the pain it caused. The Revlon Girl sheds light on the effects of this historical event.

This down-right fantastic piece of theatre is about the mothers own ways of dealing with the grief, it’s about women and how they are portrayed. I think the writer Neil Anthony Docking and director Maxine Evans showed this beautifully in this motivating show. You see from start to finish, each woman’s journey and how each of them learn to cope in their own unique way.

This phenomenal production is worth the time and I would  defintely recommend this play to everyone.

Pontardawe Arts Centre, South Wales
Author: Neil Anthony Docking
Director: Maxine Evans
Running Time: About 60 minutes