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Reviews

WOVEN IN THE FABRIC

Square Chapel, Halifax and Halifax Minster
August 2010

Anna Carlisle’s ‘Woven in the Fabric’ may be jam-packed with well-researched facts but it is no dull history lesson. You’ll be engrossed and delighted and moved and inspired by a fascinating script and three delicious performances, all in the heart of down-town Halifax.

Woven in the Fabric

Photo: Janina Holubecki

The play takes its audience on a leisurely stroll from Square Chapel to Halifax Minster through three centuries of local history (with lots of chances to sit down). We follow Crystal, a modern woman, refereeing ghostly but heartfelt discussions between Martha Crossley, hard-working matriarch of the seven-generation carpet dynasty at Dean Clough, and Lavena Saltonstall, spirited young suffragette from Hebden Bridge.

The three actresses – Olwen May, Shenagh Govan and Emma Kearney – give sparkling, intelligent performances. Their interaction with each other and the audience is a delight.

Woven in the Fabric

What’s so enthralling is that the dedication of our historic sisters Martha and Lavena (born a hundred years apart and more than a hundred years ago) so colour our present experience: the ongoing struggles for workers’ rights and women’s equality in hard economic times matched with the equally important job of raising good children.

But the true heroine of the piece is Halifax itself: a town built on benevolence and radical ideas, poverty and hard labour: a physical environment that constantly reflects change in fortune and direction.

Review: Kerry McQuade, Halifax Courier and Hebden Bridge Times

Public feedback:

‘It really made people from Halifax feel proud.’

‘A delight: brought local history to life in a realistic and poignant way.’

‘Lovely production. I felt part of the play, close to the actresses.’

‘Thought it was so good we would have sat and watched it in the rain!’


AN ECLIPSE OF THE SUN

Middleham Castle North Yorkshire August 2006

Public feedback:

‘Magnificent.’

‘Absolutely wonderful. Brilliant play, acting & setting.’

‘Moving and inspirational; educational.’

‘Captivating: one of the best outdoor productions ever.’

‘Actors and their original style were enchanting.’

‘Brilliant’.

Eclipse of the Sun

A PEARL IN THE SANDS

Swarthmoor Hall Cumbria August 2008

Hebden’s Bridge’s Square Peg Productions kicked off their latest masterpiece at Swarthmoor Hall near Ulverston in the South Lakes.

Alexandra Mathie brought to life the tale of the amazing life of Margaret Fell – 1614-1702. This mother of nine was the one of the leading lights in early days of the Quakers.

Wife of Judge Thomas Fell – played by Robert Garrett – Margaret and Thomas continued to ‘receive open minds under this roof’ through the most turbulent time in English history – through and after the Civil War.

One of these itinerant rabble-rousing preachers was George Fox (also beautifully played by Rob Garrett) who convinced Margaret and her household to become Quakers. These early Quakers most radically at the time rejected the need for ministers, saw all men and women as equals, refused to doff their hats to ‘superiors’, or pay tithes to the church (which he called the 'steeple house') and regularly challenged ministers in them. This led to thousands of these dissenting early Quakers being regularly thrown into jail houses, as happened to both Fox and Margaret Fell, who married Fox 11 years after her husband’s death.

Anna Carlisle has knitted together very complex material into a moving and beautifully acted play that takes the audience through the orchard, grounds and very room where the early Quakers met at Swarthmoor Hall. The opening day, Friday 15th August was blessed with the best weather seen for days, if not weeks.

Pearl in the Sand

Photos and review: Geoff Tansey


SECRETLY PLEASED

Land Farm Colden August 2007

Glorious setting and fine weather for touching play on life of Hebden Bridge's famous photographer - Alice Longstaff.

Around forty people followed Alice Longstaff, and her husband John, around the beautiful grounds of Land Farm at Colden as they recalled Alice's long life in the photographic business in Hebden Bridge. Hebden Bridge actors Alexandra Mathie and Robert Garrett played the parts beautifully in a play written by local writer Anna Carlisle.

Click photo to enlarge

Photos and review: Geoff Tansey


AN OWL IN THE DESERT

Brougham Castle Penrith August 2005

IF ONLY English history lessons at school had been as interesting as last Sunday's performance of An Owl in the Desert, a celebration of the life of Lady Anne Clifford (1590-1676).

Through her restoration of Brougham, Appleby, Brough, Pendragon and Skipton castles and several churches, and the building of almshouses and hospitals, Anne Clifford left an indelible mark on our county.

As a woman she struggled all her life to secure her inheritance - against a spendthrift first husband who contrived with James I to steal her beloved northern estates from her, an 'irascible clot' of a second husband, the deaths of four children, the English Civil War, smallpox and more. She bided her time (like a "songbird waiting for morning", or "an owl in the desert") and finally at the age of 60 her way was clear.

Amazingly, this expansive, rich story was brought to life by only two actors, Alexandra Mathie and Robert Garrett. They played their parts with huge empathy and good humour.

It's an engaging story told in a beautifully simple, accessible and sympathetic way. We are all heirs to Anne's legacy. Her castles are there for our enjoyment and we should know, love and respect what she achieved.

Hopefully, An Owl in the Desert will become an annual event.

KATE REES, The Cumberland News


Public feedback:

‘Superb production, brilliantly acted and making our visit to the castle very special and meaningful. Both children were captivated.’

‘Brilliant acting, beautifully written, moving.’

‘Came to see it last year. Brilliant. Gives the castle a ‘lived-in’ feeling. Congratulations.’

‘…made our annual membership of English Heritage justified by this one visit alone.’

Owl in Desert