The Scotsman

The Year in...

Financial constraint­s and political upheaval haven’t stopped Scotland’s theatre community from generating a wealth of powerful, joyful, funny and moving production­s, writes Joyce Mcmillan

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Our critics take a look at the highlights of 2019, including Joyce Mcmillan on theatre, Alistair Harkness on film, Duncan Macmillan and Susan Mansfield on art, Fiona Shepherd on pop, Ken Walton on classical, Jim Gilchrist on folk and jazz and Allan Massie on books

In theatre, it’s surprising how often the worst of times is the best of times. This year, the political landscape has been grim, in Scotland and the wider world. And in the smaller world of the arts, the funding situation seems to grow ever more stressful, as arts management­s apparently resign themselves to the idea of managing what they see – perhaps unwisely – as an “inevitable” continuing decline in government support for the arts.

If Scotland’s theatre artists are downhearte­d, though, it apparently only adds a more intense creative edge to their work; for 2019 has been a year of exceptiona­l achievemen­t on Scotland’s stages, in terms both of the sheer quality of work produced and – given the financial pressures – of its quantity. The Lyceum in Edinburgh, for example, has some claim to be Scotland’s flagship producing theatre; and this has been a year of outstandin­g theatrical excellence in Grindlay Street, ranging from Touching The Void back in January – a superb stage version of Joe Simpson’s great climbing story, adapted by Lyceum boss David Greig – through a hugely popular staging of Local Hero, to this autumn’s beautiful and terrifying stage adaptation of the great science fiction story Solaris, co-produced with the Malthouse Theatre in Melbourne.

Meanwhile, the Citizens’ Theatre – still in exile at the Tramway – shared with the Lyceum in co-producing Zinnie Harris’s stunning version of The Duchess of Malfi, starring Kirsty Stuart, and also scored massive success with their spring production­s of Nora – Stef Smith’s powerful take on Ibsen’s A Doll House –andof

Dark Carnival, a louche and brilliant cabaret vision of life undergroun­d in a Glasgow cemetery, co-created with Vanishing Point and Biff Smith of A New Internatio­nal. In its 80th anniversar­y year, Dundee Rep struck gold with a magnificen­t spring production of All My Sons, directed by Jemima Levick, and – in its autumn anniversar­y season of Dundee plays – both with Peter Arnott’s superblyst­aged vision of the 1879 Tay Bridge disaster, and with its smash-hit Christmas musical version of Oor Wullie, which is set to tour Scotland early next year.

Peter Arnott’s work on Tay Bridge also produced a remarkable spinoff in the beautiful monologue The Signalman, performed and partly co-created by Tom Mcgovern, which was one of the outstandin­g successes of this year’s 500th play anniversar­y season at A Play, A Pie And A Pint, Scotland’s remarkable lunchtime theatre factory. Now directed by Morag Fullarton and April Chamberlai­n, A Play, A Pie And A Pint scored outstandin­g success this year with new plays including The Signalman, Uma Nada-rajah’s terrific Toy Plastic Chicken and Rob Drummond’s The Mack, about the two catastroph­ic fires at Glasgow School of Art, which won Best Male Performanc­e award for well-known television actor John Michie at this year’s Critics’ Awards For Theatre In Scotland.

2019 also emerged as an exceptiona­l year for new plays on Scottish stages, many of them produced or premiered at the Traverse, including Stef Smith’s Fringe hit Enough, Dritan Kastrati and Nicola Mccartney’s breathtaki­ng refugee story How Not To Drown, Meghan Tyler’s Crocodile Fever, Oliver Emanuel’s autumn hit The Monstrous Heart, Douglas Maxwell’s I Can Go Anywhere, and – also in the autumn – Jenni Fagan’s stunning stage version of her own 2012 novel The Panopticon, produced by the National Theatre of Scotland. At the Tron, it was a fine year for challengin­g and reversing old gender stereotype­s, through shows ranging from Jo Clifford’s crossgende­r version of The Taming Of The Shrew to Johnny Mcknight’s superb all-female panto, Cinderfell­a.

The year also saw the debut of Philip Howard’s new touring company Pearlfishe­r, with Ellie Stewart’s gorgeous surrealist stage poem

Hope & Joy, and the acclaimed debut at Perth Theatre of Morna Young’s award-winning Lost At Sea, a largescale drama about the losses suffered by Scottish fishing communitie­s over the last two generation­s.

The 2019 Edinburgh Internatio­nal Festival brought stunning performanc­es from James Mcardle and Ann Louise Ross in Sir David Hare’s Scots-accented version of Peer Gynt, while on the Fringe, there was an exciting debut for Ross’s son Finn den Hertog and new Scottish-based company Groupwork, with their show The Afflicted.

Peter Arnott’s Tay Bridge also produced a remarkable spin-off in The Signalman

2019 was also a year of welcomes and farewells, as Elizabeth Newman arrived as artistic director at Pitlochry, presiding in her first season over outstandin­g production­s of Nicola Mccartney’s Heritage (directed by Richard Baron), and of Brian Friel’s Faith Healer, starring George Costigan and Kirsty Stuart. In the autumn, the Traverse announced that Gareth Nicholls and Debbie Hannan had been appointed joint artistic directors, following Nicholls’s outstandin­g work at the Traverse as associate director, and Hannan’s superb direction both of

The Panopticon, and of Marius von Mayenburg’s The Ugly One at the Tron; meanwhile, Alasdair Mccrone stepped down after 24 remarkable years as artistic director of Mull Theatre, leaving behind a joyful legacy in farewell production­s of Robert Dawson Scott’s The

Electrifyi­ng Mr Johnston and Peter

Arnott’s Unspotted Snow.

And in December, the quietly magnificen­t Duncan Hendry stood down as chief executive of Edinburgh’s Capital Theatres after another tremendous year which included, in the autumn alone, opportunit­ies to see Rufus Norris’s

Cabaret at the Festival Theatre, Robert Lindsay in Prism at the King’s, and Lisa Goddard and Roy Hudd in

A Woman Of No Importance, also at the King’s. This Chrismtas, Hendry also presided over the joyful return of beloved comedy star Andy Gray to this year’s King’s Theatre panto,

Goldilocks And The Three Bears. It’s a rowdy old show, like all the best pantomimes; but one that perhaps marks a fitting conclusion both to Hendry’s outstandin­g seven years in one of Scottish theatre’s toughest jobs, and – more widely – to a year which may not have been the easiest in Scottish theatre history, but has certainly been one of the richest, in celebratin­g theatre’s power to bring us together, even in the most divisive times.

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 ?? Tay Bridge ?? Clockwise from main: George Costigan in
Faith Healer at Pitlochry Festival Theatre;
Solaris at the Lyceum; Angus Miller and Kirsty Stuart in
The Duchess;
Dundee Rep’s
Tay Bridge Clockwise from main: George Costigan in Faith Healer at Pitlochry Festival Theatre; Solaris at the Lyceum; Angus Miller and Kirsty Stuart in The Duchess; Dundee Rep’s
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