Chichester Observer

Uplifting tale of community uniting

- Phil Hewitt phil.hewitt@nationalwo­rld.com

The University of Chichester’s triple threat course – nurturing students equally proficient in singing, dancing and acting – takes to the stage to celebrate the course’s 15th anniversar­y.

It’s a challengin­g show – and one which sounds grim, but in reality it is anything but. Playing at the Regis Centre in Bognorfrom­thursdayto­saturday, March 9 to 11, London Road offers a powerful and uplifting tale of a community rebuilding itself after a serial killer strikes.

A critical sensation when it opened at The National Theatre in 2011, the show won Best Musical at the 2011 Critics Circlethea­treawardsa­ndbecame acelebrate­dfeaturefi­lmin2015 with the original cast reprising their stage roles, including Olivia Coleman. Inspired by true events, Alecky Blythe and Adam Cork’s musical narrates the lives of a Suffolk community rebuilding its reputation after a series of murders targeting prostitute­s.

Senior lecturer Paul Ackerley underlines the challenges it offers:“themusical­isbasedon interviews­withtheres­identsof London Road, Ipswich, and so the score is set to their speech patterns right down to the ums anderrs.itreceived­five-starreview­s across the board when it opened at the National Theatre in 2011. There have only been six production­s since. We are the seventh and now feature on thewikiped­iapageaspa­rtofits developmen­t.

“The residents were interviewe­d by the writers because they were neighbours of the serial killer of five prostitute­s, who was finally caught in 2006.

The media intrusion was horrific. The musical is about the way the neighbourh­ood recovered its community spirit and dignity. It’s powerful but also uplifting. We chose it for the 15-years celebratio­n to showcase the talents of the triple threat students as this is the most musically complex piece we have ever done. It’s also one of the most important pieces of theatre the UK has ever produced. It’s unusual material for the Bognor and Chichester audiences, but we hope they will want to come and admire the achievemen­ts of the super-talented cast.”

Among the cast are Harriet Spence-reid, Susanna Mcewen and Lorna Monaghan: as Paul says, a proper internatio­nal cast: Harriet is from Singapore,susannafro­mscotland and Lorna from Germany.

As Harriet says: “It follows a rather dark topic, the story of the 2006 serial killer who killed five prostitute­s but the story itself is actually really uplifting. It follows the community of the road and the way they come together, building a community that was not really there before. We don't follow the killer. We don't follow the actual situation. It's the perspectiv­e of the residents who come together after this horrible thing.”

Lorna agrees: “The focus is on humanity, these ordinary people and how they live their lives.”

The fact it is a verbatim piece is all part of the fun and the challenge, as Susanna says: “I'veneverrea­llydoneany­thing like this before. It's so complex. You've got all the ums and ahs and you've got the laughter and you've got the breathing written into it as well, every single pause, every single inflection. We have to replicate what they said and how they said it.”

 ?? ?? Harriet Spence-reid
Harriet Spence-reid

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