Presented by The New Wolsey Theatre
19 April 2012 - 12 May 2012
Mining the same rich comic vein as A Chorus Of Disapproval and Noises Off, Ayckbourn's classic farce shows how four couples into three bedrooms simply won't go.
Trevor and Susannah are having marital problems - again. Rowing, making up, sulking, shouting, flirting, fighting - and always in other people's bedrooms.
Their friends, their parents, their ex'es, and their in-laws all have their cosy bedrooms and their comfortable relationships thrown into turmoil by this tempestuous relationship.
During one chaotic night we see the action unfold in three separate bedrooms, as Trevor and Susannah wreak havoc on the sleep, security and soft furnishings of all those around them. And of course, the only ones who end up in harmony and in bed are - Trevor and Susannah.
Ingenious, inventive and incredibly funny.
"He [Ayckbourn] has an acute observation of people and their multiple vulnerable points, an uncanny ear for the subtleties of conversation. Yet even when he is showing us foolishness, he is humorously aware of the inadequacies of man and woman, and above all else his characters are warm and lovable human beings."
Yorkshire Post on the 1975 World Premiere
Pricing
Premium Band A Band B Band C
25.00 20.00 15.00 8.50
Matinees: £10.00
19th, 20th, 21st & 23rd April: £10.00
Groups 10+ on 25th & 30th Apr: £10.00
NOTE: There is no performance on Monday 7th May (Bank Holiday).
Accessible Performances
Audio Described Performance:
Saturday 5th May 2012 at 2.30pm Book
You will automatically be booked a place on the 1.30pm touch tour
Captioned Performance:
Thursday 10th May 2012 at 7.45pm Book
Dates & Times
| Date | Time | Venue | Book |
|---|---|---|---|
| Thursday 19 April 2012 | 7:45 pm | New Wolsey Theatre | Book |
| Friday 20 April 2012 | 7:45 pm | New Wolsey Theatre | Book |
| Saturday 21 April 2012 | 2:30 pm | New Wolsey Theatre | Book |
| Saturday 21 April 2012 | 7:45 pm | New Wolsey Theatre | Sold Out |
| Monday 23 April 2012 | 7:45 pm | New Wolsey Theatre | Book |
| Tuesday 24 April 2012 (Early Start) |
7:00 pm | New Wolsey Theatre | Book |
| Wednesday 25 April 2012 | 2:30 pm | New Wolsey Theatre | Book |
| Wednesday 25 April 2012 | 7:45 pm | New Wolsey Theatre | Book |
| Thursday 26 April 2012 | 7:45 pm | New Wolsey Theatre | Book |
| Friday 27 April 2012 | 7:45 pm | New Wolsey Theatre | Book |
| Saturday 28 April 2012 | 2:30 pm | New Wolsey Theatre | Book |
| Saturday 28 April 2012 | 7:45 pm | New Wolsey Theatre | Book |
| Monday 30 April 2012 | 7:45 pm | New Wolsey Theatre | Book |
| Tuesday 1 May 2012 (Early Start) |
7:00 pm | New Wolsey Theatre | Book |
| Wednesday 2 May 2012 | 2:30 pm | New Wolsey Theatre | Book |
| Wednesday 2 May 2012 | 7:45 pm | New Wolsey Theatre | Book |
| Thursday 3 May 2012 (Post-Show Talk) |
7:45 pm | New Wolsey Theatre | Book |
| Friday 4 May 2012 | 7:45 pm | New Wolsey Theatre | Book |
| Saturday 5 May 2012 (Audio Described Performance) |
2:30 pm | New Wolsey Theatre | Book |
| Saturday 5 May 2012 | 7:45 pm | New Wolsey Theatre | Book |
| Tuesday 8 May 2012 (Early Start) |
7:00 pm | New Wolsey Theatre | Book |
| Wednesday 9 May 2012 | 2:30 pm | New Wolsey Theatre | Book |
| Wednesday 9 May 2012 | 7:45 pm | New Wolsey Theatre | Book |
| Thursday 10 May 2012 (Captioned Performance) |
7:45 pm | New Wolsey Theatre | Book |
| Friday 11 May 2012 | 7:45 pm | New Wolsey Theatre | Book |
| Saturday 12 May 2012 | 2:30 pm | New Wolsey Theatre | Book |
| Saturday 12 May 2012 | 7:45 pm | New Wolsey Theatre | Book |
Duration
2 Hours & 15 Minutes including an intervalPost Show Talks (What's this?)
3 May 2012 - FREE Post-Show Talk
Cast & Creative
Cast
Ernest - Christopher Ettridge
Delia - Susan Bovell
Nick - Barnaby Power
Jan - Chloe Howman
Malcolm - Richard Elis
Kate - Leanne Jones
Trevor - Tom Turner
Susannah - Sophie Roberts
Creative Team
Director - Peter Rowe
Set & Costume Designer - Foxton
Lighting Designer - Richard G Jones
Reviews
-
Ipswich 24
1st May 2012
Four Couples, Three Bedrooms and one chaotic night, Bedroom Farce, at the New Wolsey Theatre, tells the story of Trevor and Susannah's turbulent relationship and it's effect on their friends and family.
Jan (Chloe Howman) is off to a house warming party, leaving husband Nick (Barnaby Power) stuck in bed with a bad back. Mean while loved up couple Kate (Leanne Jones) and Malcolm (Richard Elis) are preparing to welcome their guests, but their party plans are soon ruined by Trevor (Tom Turner) and Susannah's (Sophie Roberts) constant rowing. -
East Anglian Daily Times
Andrew Clarke - 25th April 2012
You would think that the clue is in the title - audiences arriving at the New Wolsey could be forgiven for thinking that they are in for an evening of frothy, albeit somewhat insubstantial comedy.
This is not so. The clue for the tone of the evening's entertainment is actually in the name of the author - Alan Ayckbourn.
He has been declared Britain's favourite living playwright thanks to his ability to dissect the complex relationships which are created and destroyed behind the closed curtains of suburbia.
-
The Public Reviews
Glen Peace - 25th April 2012
To sleep, perchance to dream. Though in Alan Ayckbourn's Bedroom Farce there's little chance of sleep. In three bedrooms, across one night, recriminations and repercussions keeps the occupants awake most of the night.
In one, Kate and Malcolm are getting ready for a housewarming party, a second sees Jan getting ready to attend that party, while husband Nick is confined to bed with a back injury. In the third Delia and Ernest are getting ready for their anniversary dinner. Delia and Ernest's son, Trevor, is also attending the party with his wife Susannah. Trevor and Susannah's marital difficulties will become the catalyst for an interrupted night in all three houses. -
One Suffolk
Rachel Sloane
As you might expect with a play called Bedroom Farce there was a lot of running in and out of doors, jumping into beds and the wearing of nightwear - although they were sensible pyjamas rather than scanty nighties. However, the play is written by Alan Ayckbourn so, as you watch and laugh, you have to remember the other meaning of "farce" when it comes to observing some relationships- they can seem farcical.
This was a play about three very different bedrooms, all of which are on stage at the same time. The bedrooms of three couples accurately reflected their personalities - Ernest and Delia (traditional), Jan and Nick (trendy) and Kate and Malcom (chaotic). -
Grapevine
Steve Hawthorn - 25th April 2012
Back in 1975 when Alan Ackybourn wrote Bedroom Farce Britain was in the depths of an economic depression, terrorist cells were being uncovered by the police and we faced a petrol crisis which threatened to close our forecourts; we've come a long way in 37 years haven't we? Well maybe not in some regards but theatre has certainly changed over that period so how does Bedroom Farce stand up to the demands of a modern audience?
Well if that at The New Wolsey on Tuesday evening was anything to go by then the answer is remarkably well. Whilst it's vintage is obvious and it would be unthinkable nowadays to imagine a play of this sort being chosen to open the new home of a theatre of the standing of The National, as it did on it's London debut in 1977, Bedroom Farce still provides the most essential part of any theatre experience - entertainment.
-
* * * * Whatsonstage.com
Anne Morley-Priestman - 25th April 2012
One great thing about Alan Ayckbourn's wry comedies, from a theatre management point of view, is that they're practically production-proof. Another is that they are immeasurably enhanced by intelligent staging and uninhibited performances. This is where a thrust-stage such as that of the New Wolsey comes into its own.
Foxton's set of the three contrasted bedrooms in three different houses within a small geographical locality wraps the audience around the frenetic action (Peter Rowe is the director). We are wall-hangings, affected by what's going on before and below us, but unable to take any of the characters and shake - even knock - some sense into them.