The Scotsman

The year in the Arts

Despite endemic funding crises and a gloomy political outlook, Scottish theatre continued to thrive and innovate

- Joycemcmil­lan @joycemcm

Our critics reflect on the highs and lows of 2017: Joyce Mcmillan on theatre; Alistair Harkness on film; Susan Mansfield and Duncan Macmillan on art; Fiona Shepherd on pop; Allan Massie on books; Ken Walton on classical music and Jim Gilchrist on folk and jazz

For the Scottish theatre industry, 2017 has been a year overshadow­ed by events far beyond the control of the artists who work in it. Just as theatre tends to sense long-term political developmen­ts ten or 20 years ahead of the curve, so it often has to wait a few years to process sudden, unexpected events; so with one striking exception, there have been no major new plays dealing directly with Brexit or the Trump presidency, despite many production­s of existing plays that seem to take on new shape, reflecting the new crises of our time.

And in another sense, too, this has been a year of waiting on events elsewhere. Austerity in public spending is a many-faceted thing; there is austerity itself, now hitting Scottish local authoritie­s particular­ly hard, there is austerity as a universal British management tool constantly used to drive down pay and expectatio­ns among artists, and there is the fear of austerity – and of savage cuts in arts budgets – which had been stalking Scotland’s arts scene like some kind of collective nightmare, in the run-up to Creative Scotland’s next three-year grants announceme­nt. Words like “carnage” were bandied about in the press; and the mood did not lift until 14 December, when Scottish finance minister Derek Mckay announced, as part of his annual budget, that Scottish arts spending by central government had once again been protected, with extra provision for the loss of funds under changed UK national lottery rules.

So did Scotland’s theatre-makers actually manage to produce anything, amid this unlovely landscape of perceived powerlessn­ess and existentia­l angst? They did, of course; and for Scotland’s four biggest building-based producing theatres – the Lyceum in Edinburgh, the Citizens’ in Glasgow, Dundee Rep and Pitlochry Festival Theatre – this has been something of a bumper year, with David Greig’s Lyceum, in particular, using a brilliant and absorbing programme of new and existing work to engage with the mood of the times.

The Lyceum year began with an absolutely beautiful and what now seems an oddly prescient production of Picnic At Hanging Rock from the Melbourne Malthouse and Black Swan theatre companies of Australia, then continued through fine production­s of Douglas Maxwell’s Charlie Sonata, Caryl Churchill’s A Number, and Linda Mclean’s Mary, Queen Of Scots play Glory On Earth, to an autumn season which featured both Chris Hannan’s superbly timely 2016 play about Enoch Powell, What Shadows, and a stunning postbrexit revival of Cockpit ,a1947play by screenwrit­er Bridget Boland about the post-second-world-war refugee crisis, that transforme­d the Lyceum into a provincial German theatre being used as a transit centre for desperate people from all over Europe. The Lyceum also played host, once again, to Karine Polwart’s beautiful Midlothian solo-showwith-songs about the profound link between human beings and nature, Wind Resistance, now enjoying internatio­nal acclaim after its 2016 Lyceum premiere.

The Citizens’ brought Zinnie Harris’s mighty modern rewrite of the Ortesteia to the Edinburgh Festival, revived Gareth Nicholls’s brilliant 2016 production of Trainspott­ing, and – in the autumn – staged gripping studio production­s of The Macbeths, Dominic Hill’s brutal short bedroom take on Shakespear­e’s tragedy, and Anders Lustgarten’s 2015 refugee crisis play, Lampedusa. Dundee survived a major change of leadership, culminatin­g in the appointmen­t of new artistic director and joint chief executive Andrew Panton, while creating unforgetta­ble ensemble production­s of Arthur Miller’s Death Of A Salesman and Brecht’s Arturo Ui (both brilliantl­y directed by Joe Douglas), Genet’s The Maids, and Panton’s debut show, August: Osage County.

And as artistic director John Durnin announced his departure after 15 years, Pitlochry staged an exceptiona­lly rich programme of work with a running theme of class politics in the UK, ranging from Ayckbourn’s Absurd Person Singular to Peter Barnes’s The Ruling Class, and Peter Arnott’s exuberantl­y witty autumn adaptation of Compton

The Bard In The Botanics company made Scottish stage history with Queen Lear

Mackenzie’s Monarch Of The Glen. It’s striking that Pitlochry, the Scottish producing theatre least dependent on Creative Scotland subsidy, seems to sail serenely on through the funding crises that shake the rest of the scene, and consistent­ly puts on stage casts of 14 or even 16 actors, at least twice the average of any other Scottish theatre.

Elsewhere, it was a superb year for touring theatre visiting Scotland, with the Festival Theatre playing host to Sally Cookson’s unforgetta­ble touring version of Jane Eyre, and the

world premiere of Music & Lyrics and Aria Entertainm­ent’s new version of

The Addams Family, a truly hilarious subversion of convention­al ideas about American family life. The Playhouse, meanwhile, saw the Scottish premiere of Beautiful: The

Carole King Story, and National Theatre director Rufus Norris’s electrifyi­ng version of Cabaret, starring Will Young and Louise Redknapp, with its chilling final warning against the rise of fascism in Europe.

Scotland’s own National Theatre had a relatively low profile year, as new artistic director Jackie Wylie settled into the job, but offered memorable Edinburgh Fringe production­s of trans-gender stories Adam and Eve, by Adam Kashmiry and Jo Clifford, as well a powerful stage adaptation of Emma Donoghue’s Room, and the second part of its 306 trilogy, about the 306 British soldiers shot at dawn for desertion and cowardice during the First World War.

The Traverse, by contrast, seemed to find a new dynamism in 2017, playing host to or co-producing powerful new production­s by Grid Iron (Jury Play), Magnetic North (Our

Fathers) and, in November, Vanishing Point and the Scottish Ensemble, with the beautiful Tabula Rasa, inspired by the music of Arvo Part. The Traverse also produced Gary Mcnair’s Locker

Room Talk, a rare direct response to the Trump sexual harassment scandal that went on to be performed at the Scottish Parliament; as well as Mcnair’s Fringe-first-winning show

Letters To Morrissey, and, at the year’s end, Morna Pearson’s new Doric tragi-comedy, How To Disappear.

The touring Rapture Theatre scored a palpable hit with Sara Stewart’s wonderful performanc­e as Martha in their fine spring touring production of Who’s Afraid Of Virginia Woolf? ,the Bard In The Botanics company made Scottish stage history with Janette Foggo’s magnificen­t Queen Lear in Glasgow’s Botanic Gardens, and new festivals flourished, from Glasgow’s Take Me Somewhere to Edinburgh’s Hidden Door, now at the reborn Leith Theatre; suggesting that by hook or by crook, by excellent management or shoestring enterprise, Scottish theatre continues in rude health, searching for opportunit­ies and inspiratio­n, hugely varied in scale in style, and sometimes capable of stopping us in our tracks by reflecting our troubled times back to us, often from the angles we least expect.

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 ??  ?? Clockwise from main:Cockpit at the Lyceum; Death of a Salesman at Dundee Rep;Queen Lear at Botanic Gardens,Glasgow; The Addams Family at Festival Theatre; the NTS’S Fringe hitAdam
Clockwise from main:Cockpit at the Lyceum; Death of a Salesman at Dundee Rep;Queen Lear at Botanic Gardens,Glasgow; The Addams Family at Festival Theatre; the NTS’S Fringe hitAdam
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