Marat/Sade
Peter Weiss
Robert Rae
Ross MacKay and Raymond Short
Mikey Cameron
George Tarbuck
Ronnie McConnell
Nabil Saban, Andrew McLay, Sophie E. Partridge, Ysy Collyer, John Hollywood, Gregor Davidson, Raymond Short, Pauline Heath, Sarah Caltieri, Senya Koroma, Amelia Cavallo, Jo Richards, Sarah Beauvoisin, Kenneth Harvey, Marsaili Farquhar, Alan Clay and a community cast
Gordon Davidson
John McGeoch
Jane Howie
October '08
Synopsis
Marat-Sade is a theatrical mediation of history, a comment on the dramatically changing world of the 1960s. Peter Brook’s seminal RSC production was performed first in 1964 and played across Europe throughout the decade. Set in post-Revolutionary France the contemporary and the historical intersect. It is a play of philosophical questioning, examining issues of social and sexual freedom and the merits of revolution. A challenging and shocking piece described at the time as “ a hypodermic needle plunged directly into the playgoers’ bloodstream. It hypnotises the eye and bruises the ear. It shreds the nerves; it vivisects the psyche—and it may scare the living daylights out of more than a few playgoers” (The Times 1964).
As relevant today as it has ever been our production is set in that iconic year, 1968, the year of assassinations, war, liberation, most importantly for this play, the May Paris protests. Widespread strikes and unprecedented student protests makes Paris in 1968 the perfect setting for such an explosive production. The production underlines the correlations between 18th Century post-Revolutionary France, the turbulent 1960s and the uncertain times we live in today.
A fine example of Artaud’s ‘Theatre of Cruelty’, Theatre Workshop’s ‘in-yer-face’ interpretation will both shock and challenge audiences. With a large cast of some of Britain’s best disabled actors including Nabil Shaban, this production will bring you Marat/Sade in all its raw intensity.
