Cowal’s Walking Theatre Company attracts Canadian connection for a new play

The link with Argyll itself to this exciting development is a coincidental one through the Isle of Lismore. Continue reading

Walking Theatre’s Wizard of Oz at Mount Stuart

The house and grounds of Bute’s magnificent Mount Stuart are opening on Easter Sunday afternoon for a special day – from 1.00pm – 4.00pm.

Cowal’s Walking Theatre Company is taking the Yellow Brick Road all the way to the location south of Rothesay

Wanted

Munchkins and Magical creatures to help Dorothy find her way through the Enchanted Forest at Mount Stuart.

Follow the yellow brick road to the Emerald city and discover the Easter treasure.

The Wicked Witch of the East need not apply.

Red sparkly shoes are optional and there will be a prize for the best dressed munchkin.

This is a family theatre walk through the grounds, lasting around 1.30 hours. It finishes at the Emerald City  (in the crypt) for activities and tea. £3 per child, well behaved adults free.

Communicado at Craignish with The Goverment Inspector

Communicado posterAnd no – this is not about state censorship of the Arts, or not yet. But… Bribes? Fiddled expenses? Panic? Sound familiar?

One of Scotland’s most respected and trailblazing theatre companies, Communicado, in a co-production with Glasgow’s Tron Theatre, presents this feisty adaptation of Gogol’s classic satire on bureaucracy and human vanity.

It will be presented at Craignish Village Hall on Sunday 7th March at 8pm, with a show at Mull Theatre in Tobermoray on 2nd March already behind it

A penniless nobody from the big city arrives in a small town, where he is mistaken for an all-powerful government inspector by its corrupt and self-serving officials. Hilarious and vicious in its expose of the corruption of (petty) power, in this age of abuses of office, banking crises and publicly subsidised duck islands, The Government Inspector is more topical and relevant than ever

In the run-up to 2010’s general election, Gogol’s acerbic, very black comedy – first published in 1836 as a stinging critique of Tsarist Russia- asks the big question ‘do politicians and politics ever change?’

‘I have wanted to stage  this play for a long time’, says director, Gerry Mulgrew. ‘It is one of those brilliant and dazzling examples of a perfectly structured satire, the comedy of errors par excellence, and quite extraordinary in the ruthlessness with which it exploits the basic situation of mistaken identity for comic ends. In so doing, none of the characters is spared Gogol’s forensic scalpel as he dissects and gleefully exposes the greed and stupidity of his collection of self-serving public officials and their spouses and hangers- on.’

Government inspector communicado

Communicado hits the piece with all its trademark attack and musical invention – this time with live music from the Communicado Temporary Orkestra No.27 on electric balalaikas and mouth organs.