The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)

Play for Ms Open University

- CRAIG SMITH

The story of a miner’s daughter, pioneer and po l i t ica l firecracke­r from to be told in a new

Fife is play.

Bo rn to humb le beginnings in Lochgelly in 1904, Jennie Lee went on to become the first ever minister for the arts and a founder of the Open University.

The Dundee-based independen­t theatre company Knights Theatre is developing a new play about her life.

They plan to perform a rehearsed reading later this month.

Jennie Lee: Tomorrow Is A New Day will go ahead at 7pm on Thursday October 22.

Due to the current Covid19 restrictio­ns though, it will now be presented digitally and remotely – and also in the spirit of the Open University which

Lee was about.

Artistic director Matthew Knights said his subject came from a working class background to achieve great things.

“I worked in Fife Council for a while and in 2018 I me t Ke v i n S ay e r (the council’s area ser vices manager) and others around Lochgelly and Cowdenbeat­h who were already involved with work to remember her locally,” he explained.

“I saw two things about the story really, one that it would have a deep resonance with people in Fife who remembered her and also that a lot of people don’t know a lot about her.

“Like a lot of working class history it is neglected and could also appeal to a new generation.”

With no regular funding support for the project has come from the people of so passionate

Fife as well as ONFife and the Open University in Scotland.

The team are applying to Creative Scotland for further developmen­t funding to create a final draft in 2021 with the aim to then seek production in 2022-23.

The hope is that it can be performed in Fife as well as potentiall­y going further afield.

Lee, who died in 1988, was an MP before she was old enough to vote.

She caused uproar in Parliament during her first speech, in which she accused Wi n s t o n Churchill of “corruption and incompeten­ce”, and was quickly known as a Labour rebel who protested the introducti­on of prescripti­on and dental charges.

After becoming the first UK minister for the arts, and arguably the most influentia­l, Lee was in her 60s when she produced the White Paper that outlined plans for what would be the Open University, which was supported by Prime Minister Harold Wilson and called “blithering nonsense” by other MPs.

Developmen­t of the play began back in April 2019 with a special workshop in Lee’s native Lochgelly, and tickets for the forthcomin­g reading are available by donation via Eventbrite.

All donations will directly contribute to the future production of the play and help support artists in what are incredibly challengin­g times for the sector as a whole.

Tickets are available from h t tps ://www . even tbr i te .co .uk /e / jennie-lee-tomorrow-is-an e w -day -rehearsed - r e a d i n g - tickets-1226828908­29

 ??  ?? MINER’S DAUGHTER: Proud Lochgelly lass Jennie Lee.
MINER’S DAUGHTER: Proud Lochgelly lass Jennie Lee.

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