The Scotsman

From Star Wars villain to Enoch Powell at the Lyceum

● Ian Mcdiarmid will perform at venue for first time in four decades

- By BRIAN FERGUSON Arts Correspond­ent

He is known to millions of film fans as the man behind the villainous Emperor Palpatine in the Star Wars blockbuste­r film series.

Now veteran Scottish actor Ian Mcdiarmid is to make a rare appearance on stage in his home country, playing the controvers­ial politician Enoch Powell.

Mcdiarmid, 72, an Olivier and Tony award winner, was born in Carnoustie. He will be performing at the Royal Lyceum in Edinburgh for the first time in more than 40 years when he stars in a new play recalling Powell’s notorious 1968 “Rivers of Blood” speech.

Due to be staged in September, it is one of the centrepiec­es of a new season of plays programmed by artistic director David Greig to response to the Brexit vote last summer.

Others include a revival of a long-lost Irish play, 1948, about British soldiers guarding refugees in an occupied German town, and a Syrian playwright’s new take on The Arabian Nights, which will be staged over the festive season.

Written by Clydebank-born playwright Chris Hannan, What Shadows is partly set in Scotland and sees Powell confronted by an Oxford academic and daughter of a Caribbean immigrant 24 years after the incendiary speech.

Addressing a Conservati­ve associatio­n meeting in Birmingham, the MP compared anti-discrimina­tion laws

0 Ian Mcdiarmid as Emperor Palpatine in Return Of The Jedi to “throwing a match on to gunpowder” and argued that mass immigratio­n from the Commonweal­th was “literally mad”.

Roxana Silbert, director of What Shadows, said: “As we near the 50th anniversar­y of Enoch Powell’s explosive ‘Rivers of Blood’ speech, I’m excited to be working with the brilliant Ian Mcdiarmid for Chris Hannan’s What Shadows. Chris’s powerful play is a scorching interrogat­ion of how a divided nation can learn to speak across the divide.”

Greig said: “The new season was really born the day after the European referendum. I was walking out of Waverley Station, having stayed up all night, and just had a feeling of disorienta­tion about the world I thought I was living in.

“I just had the feeling that the coming season needed to head directly towards questions about identity, who we are, what we are and what Europe is that felt very strong. Then Trump happened – another parameter shaking moment.

“I felt we had to go straight for the things we need to think about and talk about, but do it in a way that’s about big stories, theatrical­ity and entertainm­ent, not propaganda.”

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