Meet the Churchills

Circa One, Circa Theatre, 1 Taranaki St, Waterfront, Wellington

18/06/2011 - 16/07/2011

Production Details



 Love, Lies and Luncheon 

The funny, fractious Churchill family exposed – not quite their ‘Finest Hour’.

It’s 1962 – the Beatles have their first hit, James Bond his first film – and Randolph Churchill is holding a luncheon party to celebrate the 88th birthday of his admired but estranged father. Sir Winston is a fading force and there is unfinished business in his loving but dysfunctional family.

Randolph is determined to finally get the truth about the break down of his wartime first marriage. Sarah, making an uninvited surprise entrance, is desperate to inform her father of her latest new lover. Her mother and Randolph are equally desperate that she doesn’t. And Lady Clementine is intent on ensuring that Winston does not stand for Parliament again at the next election.

Meanwhile, the socially inept Dr Jenkins, a newly appointed research assistant to Randolph, is pressed into service for the day. His unexpected access to the subject of his academic studies gives him the chance to pursue his own agenda and he forms a surprising bond with the wily Winston.

Secrets are revealed, resentments released and new understandings formed, in this fresh and funny perspective on an iconic and larger-than-life family.

For playwright Paul Baker, who is the principal at Waitaki Boys’ High School, Meet the Churchills is only his second play. Talking about the play he says:

“By any definition of greatness, Sir Winston Churchill fits the bill. Yet so often behind a grand façade lies turbulence or tragedy – a family pays a price for greatness.

“The four Churchills depicted in the play – Winston and Clementine, and their children Sarah and Randolph – were all larger-than-life characters. It would be possible to write a play about any of them. They lived grandly, uncompromisingly, and often unhappily. All were dysfunctional, excessive, and generally lacking in reflective qualities – great material for any playwright!

“In the play they are forced together into that aristocratic crucible known as ‘the luncheon’, and faced with half a century of family lies, evasions, tensions and resentments, they are funny and sad, infuriating and outrageous.

“I have set the play in 1962 – a time when Britain is changing fast – and the invented character of Jenkins, the young academic, in his politics, his style of scholarship and his social skills, provides a taste of the new, meritocratic Britain that will soon render the world of the Churchills anachronistic.

“The historian and the playwright in me have battled it out before reaching the inevitable compromise. On the one hand, I am writing a comedy/drama, not a documentary. But on the other hand, audiences of a play about real people love to learn something new about characters or events that interest them. All the Churchills have been abundantly documented, and while the luncheon of Meet the Churchills is imagined, much of their dialogue is based on the historical record.” 

Circa Theatre is delighted to be presenting the World Première of this exciting new NZ play. Meet the Churchills gives an entertaining and humorous insight into the fascinating family lives and loves of one of recent history’s most famous figures.

MEET THE CHURCHILLS
18th JUNE – 16th JULY
Circa Theatre, 1 Taranaki Street, Wellington         

$25 SPECIALS – Friday 17 June – 8pm;  Sunday 19 June – 4pm 
AFTER SHOW FORUM – Tuesday 21 June

Performance times:
Tuesday & Wednesday – 6.30pm
Thursday, Friday, Saturday – 8pm
Sunday – 4pm

Ticket Prices:
Adults – $46; Concessions – $38;  Friends of Circa – $33
Under 25s – $25;  Groups 6+ – $39

PROUDLY SUPPORTED BY PETER and MARY BIGGS
PRESENTED BY ARRANGEMENT WITHPLAYMARKET 

BOOKINGS: Circa Theatre, 1 Taranaki Street, Wellington
Phone 801 7992; www.circa.co.nz   


CAST
Sir Winston Churchill:  RAY HENWOOD
Lady Clementine Churchill,
his wife: HELEN MOULDER
Randolph Churchill,
their son:  JEFF KINGSFORD-BROWN
Sarah Churchill, Lady Audley,
their daughter:  CARMEL McGLONE
Dr Stephen Jenkins:  BYRON COLL

DESIGN
Set Design:  JOHN HODGKINS 
Lighting Design:  PHILLIP DEXTER 
Costumes:  GILLIE COXILL  

PRODUCTION
Stage Manager:  Eric Gardiner
Technical Operator: Deb McGuire
Sound: Paul Stent, Ross Jolly
Publicity:  Claire Treloar
Graphic Design:  Rose Miller, Kraftwork
Photography:  Stephen A’Court
House Manager:  Suzanne Blackburn
Box Office Manager: Linda Wilson 



Iconic British Churchill family makes fine fodder for a fascinating piece of theatre

Review by Ewen Coleman [Reproduced with permission of Fairfax Media] 20th Jun 2011

Dysfunctional families are getting a lot of stage space in Wellington theatres this year. This time it is that British icon of the war years Sir Winston Churchill and his family that are on show in Circa’s new production of the world premier of Paul Baker’s Meet The Churchills.

And although it is somewhat strange that a NZ playwright’s first major play should focus on something as British as the Churchill’s there is no denying that as a family they make fine fodder for a play. Their lives were continually filled with drama and Baker has certainly done his homework to mine the tomes of writings about the Churchill’s to come up with a fascinating piece of theatre. 

Like many of its ilk, the drama is centred on a family tearing themselves apart during some form of family celebration.

The year is 1962, three years before he died, when although wheelchair bound and physically moribund his mind was nevertheless still as active and as shape as ever, as was his tongue. 

1962 was also a time when Britain was emerging from the shackles of the war years with the youth of the day finding free love, the Beatles and Carnaby Street. But in this household time has stood still as the four Churchill’s go back over their lives trying to form some sort of family unit in the last years of Sir Winston’s life after decades of self absorption and unhappiness. 

While the actual incident in the play, meeting for Sir Winston’s birthday, may never have occurred, the facts of their lives that are regurgitated and disgorged across the floor are based on fact and are, as the playwright says in the programme notes, all well documented. 

The fascination therefore is the way Baker has dramatised them to show the humane side of the Churchills, giving an insight, albeit brief, to what lay behind this iconic family. Baker also cleverly introduces the fictional figure of Dr Stephen Jenkins (Byron Coll), a historian, there to assist Randolph to write Sir Winston’s biography. Although an academic and their equal they refer to him as Jenkins and treat him like a servant. Yet he is young, modern and an outsider who often changes the dynamics of the warring factions.

To portray not only well known figures from history but also the emotional angst of their lives director Ross Jolly has assembled a sterling cast that it is hard to imagine could be bettered for such a play. 

Ray Henwood gives the performance of a lifetime as Sir Winston, both physically and vocally creating every bit the image we remember of the great man. Slouched in his chair with dropping jowls, the cadences of his acerbic one-liners beautifully pronounced in the way we remember Sir Winston speaking. Yet there was also humanity to the character in the final moments of reconciliation showing he was as much a victim of circumstance as the rest of them. 

Helen Moulder likewise turns in a superb performance as Lady Clementine, creating the perfect persona of the matriarch trying to hold the family together yet never really understanding the real needs of any of them. 

Jeff Kingsford-Brown is all gruff and bluff as the spoilt brat of a son and Carmel McGlone conveys convincingly the wayward Sarah trying desperately to claw back the many bridges she has broken over the years with her parents.

And as the interloper Dr Jenkins, Byron Coll mischievously weaves his way through the verbal tirades with adorable charm.

But the play isn’t all doom and gloom as it is peppered with many humorous and often very funny lines to make the production both entertaining and an absorbing insight into one of Britain’s famous families.
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Comments

Ross Young July 10th, 2011

 This is one of the best plays I have seen at Circa for years.  An agile script, both intellectually and in its humour and perfectly pitched characters - often so easy to over or under-do when playing 'great men'.  Might trim a couple of the kids scenes a little but apart from that - wonderful!  Congrats to all!

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Schedule your meeting with these superbly crafted characters now

Review by John Smythe 19th Jun 2011

The legendary Winston Churchill looms large in our mythology. As First Lord of the Admiralty he presided over the 1915 ‘Dardanelles Disaster’ (a.k.a. The Gallipoli Campaign) which is reputed to have been our making as a nation. As Prime Minister holding the Defence portfolio, he led Britain and the Allies through World War II, including the ill-fated attempt to disrupt Japanese landings in Malaya and Thailand (late 1941) which led to the fall of Singapore and saw many Anzacs made prisoners of war in hell holes like Changi.

Few families of the era in New Zealand and Australia have not been affected by Churchill’s actions in one war or the other.

In his new play Meet the Churchills, Paul Baker – the English-born, Auckland-educated principal of Waitaki Boys College in Oamaru – cleverly stitches such concerns into a small family gathering in 1962, on the occasion of Sir Winston’s 88th birthday.

His son Randolph (twice-married, now having an affair with married neighbour Natalie Bevan) has invited Sir Winston and Clementine (properly addressed by subordinates as Lady Churchill) to luncheon at his Suffolk home. Failed actress daughter Sarah (thrice married, twice widowed; a.k.a. Lady Audley, who, like her namesake, has a secret) makes a surprise visit from her new home in Rome.

An outsider, and something of a catalyst to the rather toxic familial mix, is Dr Stephen Jenkins, the playwright’s invention. He has written an unpublished thesis on Churchill’s wartime strategies and is responding to would-be historian Randolph’s advertisement for a researcher. Jenkins’ key source regarding the Middle East has been the diary of Winston Churchill’s chief of staff General Allenby and it emerges he has a personal interest regarding the fate of Japanese POWs.  

Jenkins becomes involved in the luncheon party by accident. His train was late; he had no idea the great man he keeps telling people he has “done” will be there. But he is not one to miss an opportunity; he has questions for Sir Winston – like why did he stop the War Cabinet engaging in peace talks with Hitler?

The wheel chair-bound great man is not, however, about to confess state secrets and deep inner feelings to a pipsqueak nobody. Besides there are family matters to resolve. The parents have only agreed to this luncheon because it is to be “a mending day” (which does not mean Clementine anticipates darning socks and turning shirt collars).

But Randolph wants to know why his father, being privy to classified information, failed to reveal what his wife ‘Pammy’ was up to all those years ago. Sarah, when she arrives, not long widowed, wants to reveal all about her new exotic lover.

Clementine wants decorum to prevail, not least to protect her husband from having another stroke. And apart from taking his nap (except he would rather not dream up a roll call of those who died because of his mistakes), Winston just wants to return to the state he was in before he was born.

Even though Winston has refused a peerage, because it is hereditary, he and his family are deeply imbued in the class system, Randolf especially. He is furious that he will not now become a Lord without earning it (“Earn?” he splutters? “What sort of modern talk is that?”).

Clementine carries her sense of superiority with practised grace. Sarah would slum it for anyone spunky. And Winston still uses his characteristic wit as his principal weapon against the rapidly-changing world represented by the committed egalitarian Dr Jenkins.

It is a volatile chemistry that generates as much comedy as drama in this dynamically modulated world premiere, directed by Ross Jolly.

In John Hodgkins’ otherwise naturalistic drawing room, with a splendid lawn and garden vista beyond the French doors, the reality is heightened by a ‘wallpaper’ of Churchillian images that gives a historical backdrop. A surprisingly new-looking cream sofa with huge patterned cushions, is reputed to have supported the eminent rumps of Kipling, Einstein, Shaw and Chaplin.

Gillie Coxill’s costumes capture era and character well – and wittily, in the case of Sarah’s garish blend of leopard print and bright colour splashes.  

In a tight-fitting early ’60s suit and narrow tie, hinting at early Beatles style, Byron Coll invests his long-haired Dr Stephen Jenkins with a light Liverpudlian accent modified by years at “Univarsity”. He walks the class war tightrope with flair, defying gravity in ways that will frighten traditionalists and provoke mental ‘V’ signs from social revolutionaries.

Baker bookends his play with minimal situation-setting narration from Jenkins then plunges him into the maelstrom that is the Churchill family.

Jeff Kingsford-Brown’s Randolph is such an arrogant and offensive upper-class twit, it’s a major achievement that we feel compassion for him towards the end. His compelling ‘born to rule’ ghastliness is an effective vehicle for much of the exposition.  

Immaculately white coiffed and blue frocked, Helen Moulder brings a regal presence to Clementine, adding bites and slashes of matriarchal savagery when called for. It’s easy to empathise with her, even as we judge her outmoded values.

Initially it seems we are to content ourselves with a shadow of Winston’s former self, in Ray Henwood’s infirm octogenarian. Soon, however, the dry wit surfaces from the grouchy shell and the brain we thought was in decline proves sharp and sound. He’s vulnerable, too.  

As the permanently pickled Sarah, Carmel McGlone oscillates between needy and sarcastic, bitter bitch and drama queen. She too wins our sympathy at crucial moments.

All five actors find full dimension in Baker’s thoroughly researched and superbly crafted characters. They surprise us, delight us, court our despair and draw us into their respective truths. At personal, national and international levels human fallibility is acknowledged, forgiven and in a strange way celebrated.

Meet the Churchills is a domestic epic that deserves full houses in Wellington and a world-wide audience. Schedule your meeting now.
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