Category Archives: Productions

Muse Productions

Cast for “Run for Your Wife” announced

Just a heads up before the Christmas break.  I know we’ve been a bit remiss with our contact lately, but we have a Cast finalised (hopefully) for “Run for your Wife”

John Smith Chris Rowley
Stanley Gardner Chris Willetts
Barbara Smith Aideen Clancy
Mary Smith Kathleen Browne
Detective Troughton Eoin Sheedy
Detective Porterhouse Martin McNelis
Bobby Franklin Gary Keane
Photographer Helen White

The play will be running in the Oakwood Arms from Tuesday April 10th – Saturday April 14th for 5 performances.

Ted Germaine will be directing, and Clare McNelis will be doing Set Design and Dressing

Anyone who would like to get a copy of the script so they can get an early start on their lines can drop in to Ted in the Oakwood and ask at Reception.

Here’s looking forward to a great 2012 for Muse Productions!

Reading for Ray Cooney’s “Run for your Wife”

There will be a reading for this hilarious farce in the Oakwood Arms, on Thursday 1st September at 8pm.  As usual all are welcome.
The story of London cab driver John Smith, with two wives, two lives and a very precise schedule for juggling them both. With one wife at home in Streatham and another at home in Wimbledon, and with occupants of the flat upstairs at the latter location.

Trouble brews when Smith is mugged and ends up in hospital, where both of his addresses surface, causing both the Streatham and Wimbledon police to investigate. Having upset his schedule, Smith becomes hopelessly entangled in his attempts with his lazy layabout neighbour upstairs in Wimbledon, to explain himself to his wives and two suspicious police officers.

The cast required is as follows:

Mary Smith: (F) Middle aged.  Smart, and attractive.  Wife of John Smith
Barbara Smith: (F) Middle aged.  Smart, and attractive.  Wife of John Smith.
John Smith: (M) Middle aged.  Very mild mannered.
Det. Sgt. Troughton: (M/F) Young Adult.  Uptight, hard nosed, cop with a chip on his/her shoulder and something to prove.
Stanley Gardner: (M) Middle aged.  Great character.  Lazy out of work friend of John.  Great comedic role.
Reporter: (M/F) Good starter role. Pushy reporter.
Det. Sgt. Porterhouse: (M)  Middle aged – Older.  Good old boy.  Great character
Bobby Franklyn: (M) Young – Middle aged.  A gay, very gay, man.  A great comedic character, and must be played as over the top.

Open Reading for Terry Pratchett’s “Wyrd Sisters”

There will be an open reading for Stephen Briggs adaptation of Terry Pratchett’s “Wyrd Sisters” in the Oakwood Arms on Wednesday 22nd at 8pm.  For those who have not attended a reading before, its a less formal form of audition.  We will simply sit and read through the play, asking people to swap parts occasionally just to get some different ideas and options.  Its much less intimidating than a formal audition process, and much more social.  You can even have a pint!

The play is a comedy riff on the themes in Macbeth, but familiarity with the play is not necessary to enjoy it.  Unlike Macbeth, the heroes of the piece are the three Witches, absolutely fabulous roles.  In addition we have a Fool, an Evil Duke and Duchess, the Ghost of the Dead King Verence, a Troop of Strolling Players and the true Heir to the Throne.  Also there are loads of small roles for guards, demons and peasants!  The play can be cast with plenty of doubling, or with a really large cast, all of which will depend on the interest and number of bodies available!

All are welcome, no previous experience necessary!

Clare Courier Review of Romeo and Juliet

http://www.clarecourier.ie/article.asp?id=2658

Students star as Shakespeare makes a comeback in Shannon

17 May 2011

Students star as Shakespeare makes a comeback in Shannon

 

Photo: Juliet (Michelle Cawley), Romeo (Lorcan Quinn) and Friar Laurence (Feidhlim Hillery) in Muse Productions performance of Romeo and Juliet at the Oakwood Arms.

All those who attended last week’s performance of Romeo and Juliet in the Oakwood Arms Hotel were gifted with a special treat. Muse Productions, in association with students from St Caimin’s Community School and St Patrick’s Comprehensive staged an outstanding version of Shakespeare’s tragic love story.

Muse Productions is the brainchild of two local couples, Ted & Ann Germaine and their good friends Martin & Clare McNelis. All four have a passion for drama in particular and are keen to re-energise theatre-goers in the locality.

Ted had been involved with the award-winning Icarus Drama Group for many years and drew on his experience and contacts to involve a number of Icarus veterans.

Tony Lyttle designed and illustrated the set, his wife Maria attended to hair and make-up. Also backstage old hands such as Eugene Logan, on sound, and Paddy Smyth made their own contributions.

According to Ted, “we aim to provide a platform for all types of theatre to be performed in Shannon with an emphasis on showcasing local talent and providing entertainment to the people of Shannon and the surrounding area.

It is certainly true to say that the new venue is a welcome addition to the town, particularly as it now appears that the promised civic theatre may be no more than a pipedream. Since its addition of a stage and fabulous sound system, the Oakwood Arms has become an ideal and intimate venue for concerts and plays.

Last week the hall was transformed beyond recognition with an imaginative and inventive set making the most of the semi-round, allowing for some enjoyable audience interaction.

This production of Romeo and Juliet brought together some very experienced performers such as Nicky Doherty, Gary Keane and Feidhlim Hillery with some young debutants including the two leads, Michelle Cawley, who sparkled as Juliet, and Lorcan Quinn as Romeo.

As an illustration of the dedication and pleasure that the young people took from the experience one needs to look no further than Lorcan, who cycled to and from rehearsals from his Kilmurry home.

The performance flowed smoothly considering the diversity of age and experience. Michelle Cawley was simply terrific. Despite having to deliver some lengthy dialogue she never missed a line of the very flowery and over-stated language which is uniquely Shakespearean.

Among the more seasoned performers Nicky Doherty was brilliant, as usual, as Juliet’s nurse, combining humour and pathos to a professional acting degree. Feidhlim Hillery as Friar Laurence was also outstanding, one could easily imagine him treading the boards of more famous theatres away from his job as the town’s apothecary!

Superb management of lighting and sound created the right atmosphere to allow the production to ebb and flow at the right moments. No doubt the young male actors revelled in the sword fighting scenes which they enacted with panache and tremendous gusto.

At the end of the performance I can only say, well done to everyone involved in putting on a great evening’s entertainment and particularly to the young people who will have learned a lot from the experience.

I have no doubt that some of them may yet pursue an acting career. Heaven knows but we may be able to look back and say “I remember his/her first performance in Romeo & Juliet at the Oakwood Arms”.

Muse Productions

Muse Productions in association with St Patricks Comprehensive School and St Caimin’s Community School will shortly present William Shakespeare’s “Romeo and Juliet” in The Oakwood Arms hotel.

The Capulets, led by Michelle Cawley in the role of Juliet will be played by pupils of St Caimin’s while Romeo and his fellow Montagues will be led by Lorcan Quinn and other pupils of St Patrick’s Comprehensive.  They will be ably supported by an extremely experienced cast of award winning actors, including Feidhlim Hillery, Edel Halliday, Kathleen Browne, Eoin Sheedy, Noel McNamara, Nicky Doherty and Gary Keane.  This tale of “Two Households, both alike in dignity” is well represented by the two schools involved.  Each school has a history of excellence, a love of drama and the arts, and a healthy rivalry to add a little edge to the proceedings!

This new venture will offer a unique opportunity to pupils from both schools to experience first-hand a living, breathing Shakespearean experience, to lift the prose from a dry page and see it come to life in an intimate semi-round production. The vibrancy and energy of the youth cast will act as a perfect counterpoint to the experienced actors supporting them. The production will be fully costumed and professionally staged with a large multifunctional set and mood enhancing lighting and sound.