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The Shakespeare Ladies Club

Alison Neil
Theatre

Georgian London. A group of Ladies of Quality are determined to make Shakespeare fashionable. Then comes a surprise guest. Another terrific dramatic performance by Alison Neil in the second of her one-woman shows at the Arts Centre.

 

TALES OF GEORGIAN LONDON. Written and performed by Alison Neil.

Coffee shops and tooth-worm, smuggling and mouse-skin eyebrows? Amid the fascinating trivia of mid-eighteenth century life, Mary Cowper De Grey recounts the true story of a group of Ladies of Quality who determined to make Shakespeare fashionable. The success of the Shakespeare Ladies Club echoes down the centuries. Mary also has a very personal tale to recount – her involvement with a young and ambitious would-be actor... David Garrick.

Mrs Cowper De Grey then introduces her surprise guest – and the Lords, Ladies and Gentlemen of the audience are told a very different tale – of a London unseen by People of Quality.

London in the mid 1700s: vivacity and prosperity, marvels and great achievements in art and science; when the first steps were taken to quell the squalor and brutality of life for the poor; and women were not staying at home, or keeping quiet...


Alison Neil began her professional acting career in 1978.
Before embarking on her one-woman shows, she appeared in many
theatre productions including the national tour and West End production of Stoppard's Rosencrantz And Guildernstern Are Dead (playing Ophelia), and the national tour, West End and Canadian production of Little Lies (with Sir John Mills) playing Beattie Thomlinson.

Other theatre roles include Elvira in Blithe Spirit, Mrs De Winter in Rebecca, Cecily in The Importance Of Being Earnest, Maria in The School For Scandal, Kitty in Ayckbourn's Taking Steps and Connie in Allan Bennett's Habeus Corpus. She has also worked extensively in children's theatre, including many productions at the Polka Children's Theatre, London and for Krazy Kat Theatre.
 

Alison has worked for BBC radio and appeared in a number of television productions.

Her first one-woman play Bella - The Story Of Mrs Beeton opened in 1988 and toured until 2002.  The huge success of this first play created a demand for a succession of one-woman shows.

"an extraordinary one-woman show...such was the power of Alison Neil's performance that I am convinced I now know Mrs Beeton personally" 
Paul Heiney - THE TIMES

"A totally rivetting performance…which deserves to become a theatre classic" LYNN NEWS

become a theatre classic" LYNN NEWS

"Worthy of Joyce Grenfell" OXFORD MAIL

'Comparable with the one-woman performances of the great Ruth Draper" LYNN NEWS

"…the linguistic power of  Alison Neil's script and her mesmeric performance  of it" HALSTEAD GAZETTE

Both Bella - The Story Of Mrs Beeton and
The Just-William Lady were adapted for BBC Radio 4 and broadcast in 2001.

Her skills as a writer and historical researcher led to a second career producing scripts and brochures for visitor attractions such as RAF Upper Heyford, Newhaven Fort, Tonbridge Castle, "The 1066 Story" and  "A Smugglers Adventure" (both in Hastings), plus historical information for large scale events such as the VE Day Celebrations in Hyde Park, the Queen's Golden Jubilee Pageant in London and many Royal Tournaments and other royal and military events.

She has also been a member of Past Pleasures, interpreting medieval history at the Tower of London and working on special events as a historical interpreter.

Alison lives in a secluded farmhouse on a hilltop in South Wales with her husband, David Collison, who has directed her three most recent one-woman plays.
Date: 
Friday, 26 March
Admission: 

Doors open 7.00. Performance starts 7.30pm. Tickets £11 (members £10)