Earthquakes in London

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Written byMike Bartlett
Date premiered4 August 2010
Place premieredCottesloe Theatre, London,
United Kingdom
Original languageEnglish
Earthquakes in London
Written byMike Bartlett
Date premiered4 August 2010
Place premieredCottesloe Theatre, London,
United Kingdom
Original languageEnglish

Earthquakes in London is a play by Mike Bartlett. It received its world premiere at the Royal National's Cottesloe Theatre on 4 August 2010, following previews from 29 July 2010. The production was directed by Rupert Goold in a co-production with Headlong.[1] The play was also published in 2010.[2]

The play centres on the lives and loves of three sisters, abandoned long ago by their doom-mongering father. The father is a prominent climate scientist played by Bill Paterson who predicts environmental apocalypse. The eldest sister (Lia Williams) is a cabinet minister who plans to halt all airport expansion, choosing environment over economy. The middle sister (Anna Madeley) is heavily pregnant and growing increasingly depressed about the uncertain future her child is being born into. The youngest sister is a rebellious teenager and frequent nuisance to her career-minded eldest sister. As the three women attempt, in their own different ways, to come to terms with the fact that their father's pessimistic forecasts may be right, Freya, the middle sister, contemplates suicide to avoid bringing her child into an apocalyptic future and an opportunity presents itself for reconciliation with their estranged misanthropic father.[3][4]

Original cast

The original cast includes Lucy May Barker, Gary Carr, Clive Hayward, Brian Ferguson, Polly Frame, Tom Goodman-Hill, Michael Gould, Anna Madeley, Bill Paterson, Jessica Raine, Geoffrey Streatfeild and Lia Williams.[5]

Jessica Raine and Tom Goodman-Hill met while performing the play and later married.

Reception

The National Theatre/Headlong production received generally positive reviews, with The Guardian,[3] The Independent,[4] The Telegraph[6] and Time Out[7] all awarding the production four stars.

Rupert Goold was "longlisted" for the 2010 Evening Standard Theatre Awards for his direction of the original production. Miriam Buether received the set design award, and she was also shortlisted for the 2011 Laurence Olivier Awards.

Trivia

References

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