The Cherry Orchard

 

by

 

 Anton Chekhov and directed by Lynda Edwards

 

Performed at the Nuffield Theatre on 19th to 23rd January, 1999

 

 

 

“THE CHERRY ORCHARD”

 

Chekhov’s final and most mature play is well structured and the balance between comedy and pathos is finely held. We see clearly Chekhov’s gentleness and compassion as well as his objectivity. In the play we are shown the confusion of those members of the landed aristocracy who, at that time in Russia, were losing their money, their land, their status and their sense of order. Against these people we are shown the new, rising breed of progressive “builders of the future” - the question is posed whether a future built on the total destruction of the old order can be a “glorious” one.

 

This is a play about the new order versus the old order, about a cherry orchard which may or may not symbolise lost hopes, but most importantly, it is about people, their quiet despair, their frustrations. their hopes, their weaknesses and their strengths. The wide range of characters which Chekhov uses to people his stage, from the quietly tragic to the loudly farcical create the illusion of life for us. “Life

as it is - not on stilts”.

 

 

ANTON CHEKHOV

 

Anton Chekhov, Russia’s greatest dramatist, undoubtedly influenced the development of modern European drama. His new “drama of mood” touched playwrights from Gorky to Pinter. Born

in 1860 in Taganrog, the third of six children, Chekhov developed an early flair for the dramatic as a skilled comic actor with an instinct for entertaining. After graduating as a doctor in 1884, Chekhov concentrated on short story writing during the 1880’s and became very successful in this field.He produced stories imbued with his own characteristic blend of poignancy, astringency, detachment and carefully controlled humour. He had previously written one full length play (Platonov 1881)

and between 1888 & 1891 he wrote his famous one-act farces including The Bear. However it was not until The Seagull was performed by The w Arts Theatre in 1898 that Chekhov really received acclaim as a dramatist. This partnership with The Moscow Arts Theatre and , in particular with its’ director Stanislavsky, led to successful productions of Uncle Vanya, Three Sisters and finally The Cherry Orchard. Chekhov was a very sick man for most of his adult life and died shortly after finishing tonight’s play in 1904.

 

Music used during the performance includes Russian folk songs sung by Ivan Rebroff and traditional Russian folk melodies recorded specifically for the performance

 

The Cast

 

 

Lyuba Ranevskaya (an estate owner)

Mollie Manns

Anya (her daughter)

Belinda White

Varya (her adopted daughter)

Sheana Carrington

Leonid Gaev (Ranevskaya’s brother)

James Smith

Yermolay Lopakhin (a business man)

Bill McCann

Peter Trofimov (a student)

Peter White

Boris Simeonoy-Pishchik (an estate owner)

David Jupp

Charlotte (a governess)

Jenni Watson

Simon Yepihodov (a clerk)

Philip de Grouchy

Dunyasha (a maid)

Carol Clark

Firs (a manservant)

Douglas Coates

Yasha (a manservant)

Ken Hann

A passer-by

Derek Sealy

A Stationmaster

Chris Williams

A Post Office clerk

Rory Kinahan

Guests

Caroline Drinkwater, Jean Durman

 

For the Maskers

 

Director

Lynda Edwards

Designer

Ken Spencer with Imogen Hobbs, Julia Patterson

Stage Manager

Tony Lawther

Production Assistant

John Carrington

Properties

Enid Clark, Caroline Drinkwater

Assistant Stage Managers

Keith Larkin, Jan Ward, Tim Hobbs, Adam Hobbs, Tim Archer

Furniture

Jenni Watson

Lighting

Clive Weeks, Sue Cunningham

Sound

Angela Barks

Choreography

Pamela Sylvester

Guitar

John Murfit

Flute

Orin Stone

Wardrobe

Chris Baker, Janet Cairney

Publicity

Meri Lawther

Set Construction Manager

John Riggs