Royal Court to stage NHS play ahead of election

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Who Cares at the Royal CourtImage source, Handout
Image caption,

Who Cares will pose several questions about the future of the NHS

The debate around the future of the NHS has inspired a new play, Who Cares, being staged by the Royal Court in the run up to the general election.

The verbatim script is based on interviews writer Michael Wynne has carried out with nurses, doctors, managers, politicians and paramedics.

Wynne told the BBC he hoped it would "make people think in a different way".

It will take place all around the London theatre building, which will be transformed into a hospital setting.

Wynne spent 18 months interviewing NHS staff, private healthcare workers and policy makers, using sections of the interviews to form the "immersive" play.

"I got some real inside access, so some of the material and subjects are areas that people don't really know about, even though it feels like the NHS is talked about a lot," Wynne said.

"On the whole people really wanted to talk and had amazing stories and were really passionate.

"But," he admits, "it is such an emotional subject, sometimes people were quite cagey.

"One of the people I interviewed, on the release form he just wrote at the bottom, 'don't stitch me up', you know. So it's been complicated at times.

"I'm still waiting to hear back from a couple of people, to see if they'll let us use all their material."

'Timely and thrilling'

The Royal Court had originally hoped to stage the play in an old hospital, but after delays decided to go with its own theatre as a venue. Wynne said they wanted it to run before the election as it was sure to be such an "important issue".

"Partly that was just from all my interviews, and finding out what was going on financially and on the front line with staff," he said.

"I felt it might bubble to the surface more."

The Royal Court's artistic director Vicky Featherstone called it "timely and thrilling" to be putting on the "moving and incisive play" this season.

"The NHS has become one of the most criticised yet vital parts of our society and the debate around it will play an important part in the run up to the election," she said.

Who Cares is billed as giving "unheard perspectives on the past, present and possible future of our NHS", and Wynne hopes it will make an impact.

"I think theatre is really good for debates. I studied politics which is why I really love that in theatre," he said.

He added the play would pose several questions about the NHS: "Do we appreciate it and do we take it for granted? Do we not realise how lucky we are at times, especially when you look at other countries - not just in terms of having to pay but in terms of the treatment that you get?

"So I do want to throw it back to the audience and make them think... or emotionally connect in a different way."

Image source, Handout
Image caption,

Marianne Jean-Baptiste is one of the stars of new play Hang

Wynne also hopes the hospital setting will help stir emotions.

"That idea of an immersive production, that you feel like you're in a ward or a waiting room - because we've all had those experiences - hopefully it will make you feel more before the play's even started," he said.

"I've mainly focused on the professional side - I haven't really interviewed patients, so my idea was that the audience will be on the patient journey."

"It starts off in a waiting room - in a rehearsal room in a building next door - and goes through to the ward. There's a garden, then we're going to go up the back stairs and go through rehearsal rooms, dressing rooms and then up to the theatre upstairs where the climax will be."

Because of "the scale and ambition" of the project, it has three directors on board - Debbie Hannan, Lucy Morrison and Hamish Pirie.

Rehearsals start on Monday and the play will run from 10 April - 16 May, with around 50 people at each performance.

It is just one of the productions announced as part of the forthcoming season at the Royal Court, with Gary Owen's Violence and Son and Debbie Tucker Green's new play Hang also on the bill.

Hang is billed as a "morally challenging and taut three-hander", looking at the relationship between a victim and the perpetrator of a crime.

It stars Marianne Jean-Baptiste and Clare Rushbrook, previously seen together on screen as Brenda Blethyn's daughters in Mike Leigh's Secrets and Lies.

Image source, Handout
Image caption,

Constellations features 100 different scenes in just over an hour

A UK tour for the Royal Court's award-winning play Constellations, written by Nick Payne and directed by Michael Longhurst, has also been announced.

It follows sold-out runs for the play at the Royal Court Theatre and the West End, starring Rafe Spall and Sally Hawkins, and on Broadway starring Jake Gyllenhaal and Ruth Wilson.

Constellations will visit The Ambassadors theatre in Woking, Liverpool Playhouse, Bristol Old Vic, Nuffield Theatre in Southampton, The Lowry in Salford Quays, Cambridge Arts Theatre, Richmond Theatre and Brighton's Theatre Royal from May.

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