The Scotsman

Tay Bridge drama claims top award

- By BRIAN FERGUSON

A play about the signalman on duty on the night of the Tay Bridge disaster was the big winner at this year’s Scottish theatre awards.

Peter Arnott's monologue The Signal man won three of the major Critics’ Awards for Theatre in Scotland.

A solo show about the signalman on duty on the night of the Tay Bridge disaster, a play about a troubled teenager's experience­s of Scotland's care system and drama set in aboard a space station orbiting a new planet are the big winners in the Scottish theatre awards this year.

Winners the Critics’ Awards for Theatre in Scotland have been announced despite the shutdown of venues across the country since March.

Production­s going as far back as May 2019 were eligible for the awards, which were launched 17 years ago.

Peter Arnott's monologue The Signalman, which saw Tom Mcgovern play the haunted railway worker Thomas Barclay reflecting on his role in the 1879 tragedy 40 years later, won three of the major Critics’ Awards for Theatre in Scotland.

The Signalman, which was premiered as part of the lunchtime theatre season A Play, a Pie and a Pint at Oran Mor in Glasgow, claimed the prizes for best new play and best production, while Mcgovern was honoured for best male performanc­e.

Another Arnott play, Tay Bridge, based on the real lives of some of the passengers who perished and was performed at Dundee Rep to coincide with the 140 th anniversar­y of the tragedy, was nominated for best ensemble in the CATS awards.

The honour for best female performanc­e went to Anna Russell-mar tin, star of The Panopticon, the National Theatre of Scotland’s adaptation at Edinburgh’s Traverse Theatre of Jenni Fagan’s best-sell

ing novel, which was inspired by her own experience­s of the care system in Scotland. Russell-martin has been honoured months after recognitio­n at the Venice Film Festival for her role in The Shift, a short film set in a Glasgow supermarke­t.

Solaris, an eerie psychologi­cal thriller based on the classic 1961 sci-fi novel by Polish writer Stanisław Lem, which was staged at the Royal Lyceum in

Edinburgh last September, was honoured for best technical presentati­on and best-designer, being named joint winner of the latter award with the Catherine Wheels touring show Atlantis Banal: Beneath the Surface.

The b est ensemble award went to the cast of Thank You Very Much, a collaborat­ion between the National Theatre of Scotland and the performer and theatre-maker Claire Cun

ningham, while the show was also honoured for best music and sound.

Elizabeth Newman, the artistic director of Pitlochry Festival Theatre, was named best director for its show Faith Healer, which also saw Line of Duty and Happy Valley star George Costigan nominated in the best male actor category.

Joyce Mcmillan, theatre critic at The Scotsman and co-chair of

the awards judging panel, said: “This is is a tremendous­ly difficult time for everyone in theatre, both for those running our theatres, and for

the huge rage of freelance workers – from actor and writers to designers and musicians – who create much of what we see on stage.

"Yet for all the difficulti­es, the judges remained aware of the tremendous year of

work, that was just coming to an end when the theatres closed down in March. "We decided to work online to agree our short list and winners for the year, so as to give richly de served recognitio­n to the theatre-makers in Scotland who were producing such wonderful work, before C ovid intervened .”

 ??  ?? 0 The prize for best female performanc­e went to Anna Russell-martin, star of The Panopticon, the National Theatre of Scotland’s adaptation at the Traverse Theatre
0 The prize for best female performanc­e went to Anna Russell-martin, star of The Panopticon, the National Theatre of Scotland’s adaptation at the Traverse Theatre

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