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Playful Productions, Neal Street Productions and Robert Fox present
The Chichester Festival Production of

SOUTH DOWNS
By DAVID HARE
Director JEREMY HERRIN

THE BROWNING VERSION
By TERENCE RATTIGAN
Director ANGUS JACKSONcenter>

  • The hit Chichester Festival Theatre production transfers to the Harold Pinter Theatre from April 19 2012
  • Anna Chancellor and Nicholas Farrell reprise their roles in this double bill
  • Tickets on sale now

Following a critically acclaimed and sold out run as part of the 2011 Chichester Festival, the double bill of Terence Rattigan's one-act masterpiece and David Hare's specially commissioned companion piece will transfer to the Harold Pinter Theatre from April 19 with a press night on April 24.

Press Release and details


LESS THAN KIND
at Yvonne Arnaud Theatre

London 1944: The war is reaching its climax on the beaches of Normandy, but a senior minister has problems not just in supplying the front line with tanks, but also on the home front… Terence Rattigan’s ‘lost play’ Less Than Kind runs from February 14 to 18. Web

KEY LINKS           

The Terence Rattigan SocietyWorks and Publications
Nick Hern Books
Samuel French 2011 Centenary Year Archive

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Man and Boy

February 2012 at Chelmsford Theatre Workshop, which is known for its excellence and has won several awards. This production is to celebrate Rattigan's centenary and is directed by Mike Nower, who has directed and performed in many amateur Rattigan productions, including Flare Path and The Deep Blue Sea. See
What's On? for details. . .

Chelmsford Theatre Workshop


REVIEWS AND AWARDS

BBC Audio Drama Awards

A production of Terence Rattigan's Flare Path broadcast on Radio 3 garnered two nominations - Rory Kinnear in the best actor category and Rupert Penry-Jones for best supporting actor. Web


The Deep Blue Sea

Interview with Terence Davies - The Guardian

"In his new film The Deep Blue Sea, an adaptation of Terence Rattigan's 1952 play, Davies explores what happens when a wife does what his mother could not: walks out on a 1950s British marriage. But the real shock of The Deep Blue Sea for Rattigan's original audiences is that Hester (played by Rachel Weisz in the film) does not leave her husband because he's a brute, but for something even more socially unacceptable back then.


San Sebastian Film FestivalVariety
TimeOutTimeDaily TelegraphBBC
The GuardianThe ObserverThe Independent Edinburgh GuideEvening Standard
Daily Record

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