The Play That Goes Wrong | |
---|---|
Original title | The Murder Before Christmas |
Written by | |
Date premiered | 4 December 2012 |
Place premiered | Old Red Lion Theatre |
Original language | English |
Genre | Comedy |
Official site |
The Play That Goes Wrong is a play by Henry Lewis, Jonathan Sayer, and Henry Shields of Mischief Theatre Company. The story follows a performance of a murder mystery, where the ill-fated theatre company encounters numerous mishaps.
The original production has been running since 2012 in London, where it won Best New Comedy at the 2015 Laurence Olivier Awards. [1] Since 2014, the play has undertaken five tours of the UK, and a Broadway production ran from 2017–2019 and then continued off-Broadway.
The Cornley Polytechnic Drama Society, fresh from such hits as Two Sisters , The Lion and The Wardrobe , Cat , and James and the Peach , has received a substantial bequest and is putting on a performance of The Murder at Haversham Manor – a 1920s murder mystery play, similar to The Mousetrap , which has the right number of parts for its members. The cast is headed by Chris Bean, who plays Inspector Carter and serves as the show's director, set designer, costume designer, prop maker, box office manager, press and PR person, voice and dialect coach, and fight choreographer.
Before the play starts the backstage staff is making last-minute adjustments to the set, including trying to mend a broken mantelpiece and find a dog that has run off.
During the performance, a plethora of disasters befalls the actors, including doors sticking, props falling from the walls and failing in numerous ways, and floors collapsing. Cast members fall down, are struck by set pieces, misplace and break props, forget lines, miss cues, break character, drink white spirit instead of whisky, mispronounce words, step on fingers, are hidden in a grandfather clock, and are manhandled off stage. One cast member is knocked unconscious, and her replacement (the group's technician) refuses to yield when she returns. An actor repeats an earlier line of dialogue, cuing the other actors to repeat the whole dialogue sequence, ever more frenetically, several times. In the climax, virtually the whole of the remaining set collapses.
The play premiered at the Old Red Lion Theatre in London in 2012, and moved to Trafalgar Studios in 2013. The play then opened at the Duchess Theatre in the West End on 14 September 2014, where it remains as the longest-running play since the theatre opened in 1929. [2] The direction is by Mark Bell. The cast included Henry Shields as Chris, Dave Hearn as Max, Rob Falconer as Trevor, Henry Lewis as Robert, Charlie Russell as Sandra, Jonathan Sayer as Dennis, Greg Tannahill as Jonathan, and Nancy Zamit as Annie. Sets are designed by Nigel Hook and built by Splinter Scenery. Costumes are designed by Roberto Surace. [3] [4]
The play's first UK tour began in January 2014 (prior to transferring to the Duchess Theatre in the West End) at the Marlowe Theatre in Canterbury featuring the original cast, visiting 17 venues and ending in Darlington in July. [5]
It began a second UK tour from January 2017, starting at the Theatre Royal in Bath, ending at the Cambridge Arts Theatre in August. [6]
A third UK tour occurred in 2018, starting at Royal and Derngate, Northampton. [7]
A fourth UK tour commenced on 13 July 2021 at the Marlowe Theatre Canterbury, [8] and concluded at the Waterside Theatre Aylesbury on 27 November 2021. [9]
The fifth UK tour began at the Theatre Royal in Bath in April 2022. The original West End cast returned to this touring production for two weeks in Manchester and Newcastle. [10]
The play opened on Broadway on 2 April 2017, with previews that began on 9 March 2017 at the Lyceum Theatre. The production featured the original London cast, and film director J. J. Abrams made his debut as a theatrical producer. [11] The production closed on 6 January 2019, after 745 regular performances and 27 previews. [12]
A touring production began in Australia at the Comedy Theatre in Melbourne from February 2017, before heading to Adelaide, Sydney, Canberra, the Queensland Performing Arts Centre (QPAC) in Brisbane, and His Majesty's Theatre in Perth. [13]
The play toured North America, starting in September 2018 in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. The original tour cast included Brandon J. Ellis as Trevor, Evan Alexander Smith as Chris, Yaegel T. Welch as Jonathan, Peyton Crim as Robert, Scott Cote as Dennis, Jamie Ann Romero as Sandra, Ned Noyes as Max, and Angela Grovey as Annie. [14] [12]
The Second National tour launched in the fall of 2019 and continued until the COVID-19 pandemic caused it to shut down ahead of schedule. Cast members included Chris Lanceley as Chris, Chris French as Jonathan, Michael Thatcher as Robert, Jacqueline Jarrold as Sandra, Todd Buonopone as Dennis, and Adam Petherbridge as Max. Bianca Horn initially played Annie before returning to the Off-Broadway company. She was replaced by Ashley D. Kelley. Jason Bowen also initially played Trevor before swapping places with Off-Broadway's Ryan Vincent Anderson.
The national tour went out again in 2023 with a stop at Washington, D.C.'s Kennedy Center, but has not announced any additional tour dates at this time.
The Broadway production transferred Off-Broadway to New World Stages on 11 February 2019. [15] On 12 March 2020, production was suspended due to the COVID-19 pandemic until it reopened on 15 October 2021. [16] [17]
In lieu of a 2021–2022 national tour, a sit down production was launched at Chicago's Broadway Playhouse. The production opened in December 2021 and closed on 21 May 2022.
Character | West End [18] | Broadway [19] | U.S. Tour [20] | Off-Broadway [21] | Chicago [22] |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
2014 | 2017 | 2018 | 2019 | 2021 | |
Chris Bean | Henry Shields | Evan Alexander Smith | Matt Harrington | Matt Mueller | |
Robert Grove | Henry Lewis | Peyton Crim | Brent Bateman | Jonah D. Winston | |
Dennis Tyde | Jonathan Sayer | Scott Cote | Bartley Booz | Michael Kurowski | |
Max Bennett | Dave Hearn | Ned Noyes | Matt Walker | Jarred Webb | |
Annie Twilloil | Nancy Zamit | Angela Grovey | Bianca Horn | Ernaisja Curry | |
Sandra Wilkinson | Charlie Russell | Jamie Ann Romero | Ashley Reyes | Kelly O'Sullivan | |
Jonathan Harris | Greg Tannahill | Yaegel T. Welch | Chris Lanceley | Joseph Anthony Byrd | |
Trevor Watson | Rob Falconer | Brandon J. Ellis | Ryan Vincent Anderson | Colton Adams | |
The play's creators later collaborated on two television specials, an adaptation of Peter Pan Goes Wrong and a sequel titled A Christmas Carol Goes Wrong, aired on BBC One in December 2016 and 2017. [23] [24]
A TV series, The Goes Wrong Show, followed in 2019. [25] [26] In December 2019, a full series of "The Goes Wrong Show" was broadcast featuring 6 episodes [27] [28] [29] with the same cast as the other two TV specials. Each episode was said to have received an average of 2.2 million people watching it when broadcast. [30]
Following the success of the first series, the BBC commissioned a second series which premiered its first episode on 27 September 2021.[ citation needed ]
Year | Award ceremony | Category | Result |
---|---|---|---|
2014 | WhatsOnStage Award | Best New Comedy | Won |
2015 | BroadwayWorld UK Award | Best New Play | Won |
Laurence Olivier Award | Best New Comedy | Won |
Year | Award ceremony | Category | Nominee | Result |
---|---|---|---|---|
2017 | Tony Award | Best Scenic Design of a Play | Nigel Hook | Won |
Drama Desk Award | Outstanding Scenic Design of a Play | Won | ||
Outer Critics Circle Award | Outstanding Set Design | Nominated | ||
Drama League Award | Best Play | Nominated |
Year | Award ceremony | Category | Nominee | Result |
---|---|---|---|---|
2019 | Lucille Lortel Awards | Outstanding Featured Actor in a Play | Matt Walker | Nominated |
The Play That Goes Wrong received positive reviews. Tim Walker of The Telegraph gave it four out of five stars, calling it "a great-looking, brilliantly performed piece" and stated that "I have seldom, if ever, heard louder or more sustained laughter in a theatre." [31] Mark Shenton of the London Theatre gave it four out of five stars, stating that though the play would not appeal to everyone, "you cannot fail to admire the ceaseless energy of the cast", and shared that "the real surprise is just how well-sustained the joke is." [32]
Sarah Hemming of the Financial Times gave the play four out of five stars, noting its shared lineage with plays such as Noises Off and stated that "It's not new then, but it is often very funny." Though she found areas in the play that needed improvement ("it would be funnier if it started more subtly, rather than at full tilt.... The company could also make more of offstage dynamics"), she considered the play to be "largely a joyous show." [33]
The Broadway production of The Play That Goes Wrong won the 2017 Tony Award for Best Scenic Design in a Play.
The Play That Goes Wrong has been translated and licensed for productions in over 30 other countries, namely China, Hungary, Poland, Spain, Greece, Israel, Scandinavia, France, Italy, Iceland, Brazil, Germany, Austria, Switzerland, Kosovo, Belgium, The Netherlands, Mexico, Argentina, Uruguay, Colombia, Turkey, New Zealand, Hong Kong, Singapore, Philippines, Puerto Rico, South Africa, Slovakia, Slovenia, South Korea, Portugal (UAU), Croatia, Russia, India (Natak na Natak nu Natak by Sharman Joshi Productions),("Play that goes wrong" by Prathmesh Viveki) " Cyprus and the Czech Republic. [34]
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