Belfast Telegraph

Public asked to donate ‘special items’ for new play on Troubles

- BY REBECCA BLACK

A theatre has made an appeal for items with a connection to loved ones killed in the Troubles.

The Playhouse in Londonderr­y has made the request to the public ahead of one of the first production­s it will stage following lockdown.

Theatres in Northern Ireland have been allowed to reopen to allow staff to prepare ahead of September 1, when audiences will be allowed to return.

However, with the size of audiences limited by the requiremen­t to social distance, the Playhouse intends to go digital and share production­s with a global online audience.

It will stage a new production, Anything Can Happen: 1972, focusing on the worst year of the Troubles. That year saw almost 500 killings, 10,000 shootings, 2,000 explosions and almost 5,000 people physically injured.

Poet Damian Gorman wrote Anything Can Happen, which includes untold stories from people affected by or involved in the events of that year.

With an audience of just 20 to 30 people able to watch the new production, the Playhouse has issued an appeal for the public to contribute significan­t items that connect them to loved ones who were killed in the Troubles or died in the pandemic, to be placed on the empty chairs of the theatre. These can be objects or photograph­s of significan­ce or importance to them, to be placed on the 130 empty chairs in the theatre.

In a statement the Playhouse said the empty chairs will be lit by theatre lights in an act echoing Seamus Heaney’s famous work Mossbawn: Two Poems In Dedication, in which he describes “a sunlit absence”.

Gorman said: “The empty chair is a very powerful symbol of loss and grief. Somebody defined grief to me as ‘love which has nowhere to go’.

“Rather than having all these empty chairs that would be housing absence, we would be housing something of significan­ce. If all of that makes sense to you, please get in touch with us here at the Playhouse.”

 ??  ?? Appeal: Damian Gorman
Appeal: Damian Gorman

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