The Happy Lands
| Released | Summer 2012 |
| Length | TBA |
| Director | Robert Rae |
| Producer | Helen Trew |
| Producer Mentor | Tony Garnett |
| Executive Producers | Robert Rae, Andrew Leitch, Ewan Angus, John Murphy |
| Director of Photography | Scott Ward |
| Production Designer | James Helps |
| Costume Designer | Maggie Miller |
| Make-Up Designer | Julie Mackay |
| Editor | Florian Nonnenmacher |
| Script Consultant | Adrian Mead |
| Script Editor | Roger Smith |
| Musical Composer | James Ross |
| Written by | Robert Rae and Peter Cox with members of the Fife Mining Community (including Steve Allan, Lillian King and Ross Wilson) |
Synopsis
A Theatre Workshop Scotland Production developed and created along with members of the mining communities of Fife, Scotland.
It’s the General Strike 1926 – only seven years after the slaughter of the trenches, miners unions lead the country against savage austerity cuts handed to the nation by a Liberal-Conservative government.
Set in the village of Carhill Scotland, in the heart of the Fife coalfields, we follow the journey of one mining community as they are pushed inevitably towards a labour conflict with the Kingdom Coal Company in a seven month long lock out. “Not a penny off the pay, not a minute on the day” is the chant as the coal company demand longer hours for less pay.
The intimate portrayal of three families show the human consequences of an impersonal economics. The coal company practically owns the village and is colluding with government forces to keep the ‘red threat’ under control. Standing up for their rights inspires national support and galvanizes a defiant spirit of the time. Faith forged through suffering grows and though the strike fails, the seed of a political awakening is sown.
Inspired by true stories from local families in Fife, the Happy Lands follows the journey of law-abiding citizens who become law-breakers in a heroic battle against the state. It’s never a good time to stand up for your rights – but it’s always the right time.
