Production PhotosGo Inside The Contingency Plan, A Double-Bill of Climate Emergency Plays Resilience and On the Beach
Check out production photos for Steve Waters' On the Beach and Resilience, which run at Sheffield, England's Crucible Theatre.
By
Leah Putnam, Michael Wiltbank
October 20, 2022
Take a look at Steve Waters’ On the Beach and Resilience, adouble bill of climate emergency plays revised for their current runs at Sheffield's Crucible Theatre. Performances began October 14; press day is set for October 21 the run through November 5. Get a first look at the production below.
The repertory company features Joe Bannister (Trouble in Mind) as Will and Kiran Landa (Extinct)as Sarika in both works, joined by Geraldine Alexander (Oslo)as Tessa in Resilience and Jenny in On The Beach, Peter Forbes (Jack Absolute Flies Again) as Colin in Resilience and Robin in On The Beach, and Paul Ready (Motherland) as Christopher in Resilience.
On the Beach follows Will as he picks up where his father, a leading climate scientist with a career that ended too short, left off in his work. As a catastrophic flood looms large, Will returns home with news that will bring secrets to light.
Resilience picks up Will's story when he is newly appointed as a government advisor and out of his depth. With an environmental disaster on the horizon, he must rally the politicians of Westminsters to listen and take swift action as they race against time.
Penned by Steve Waters, the plays feature design by Georgia Lowe, lighting design by Guy Hoare, and sound design and compositions by Giles Thomas. Caroline Steinbeis directs Resilience while Chelsea Walker directs On the Beach. Callum Berridge serves as assistant director, with casting by Arthur Carrington.
The musical centers on Sophie Scholl, a young German student who was executed for high treason due to her involvement with the non violent anti-Nazi resistance group White Rose.
Directed and choreographed by Matthew Bourne, the production played
the Chichester Festival Theatre this past summer and will arrive in
London later this month.
The play comes on the heels of a broader cultural conversation about Dahl's work and the prejudice that was embedded in many of his most beloved stories.