Joseph Rowntree Theatre Company to stage Western Frontier musical Calamity Jane under Sophie Cooke’s direction

Helen Gallagher’s ‘Calamity’ Jane and Matt Tapp’s Wild Bill Hickok: Leading the Joseph Rowntree Theatre Company cast in Calamity Jane. All pictures: Jennifer Jones

THE Deadwood Stage rolls into York from February 4 to 7 when the Joseph Rowntree Theatre’s in-house fundraising company kicks off the spring season with Calamity Jane.

Gracing the JoRo stage for only the second time since the Haxby Road theatre’s inception in 1935, Sammy Fain and Paul Francis Webster’s 1961 musical – preceded by the 1953 film version – is  a story of friendship, adventure, and romance, set against the dramatic backdrop of the Western Frontier. 

Director Sophie Cooke, musical director Martin Lay and choreographer Heather Stead steer the Joseph Rowntree Theatre Company’s eighth full-scale production since forming in 2017.

Charting the interlinked lives of a South Dakotan community, full of characters united by dreams of a better life, Calamity Jane takes audiences to the golden age of musicals in an adaptation by Ronald Hanmer and Phil Park from Charles K Freeman’s stage play.

Tom Menarry’s Mister Francis Fryer and Alex Schofield’s Henry Miller in rehearsal for Calamity Jane

Led by tough talkin’, gun-totin’ heroine ‘Calamity’ Jane, and ex-peace-officer ‘Wild’ Bill Hickok, the citizens of Deadwood are content with their ways of life: supporting their fort of soldiers, socialising at the beloved Golden Garter saloon and awaiting treasures brought in from the world beyond.  

However, when a new face blows in from the Windy City and creates a stir, friendships will be formed, long-time loyalties tested and perhaps even secret love revealed.

As a fan of Calamity Jane in all its adaptations since her childhood, director Sophie Cooke chose this show for JRTC, drawn to songs beloved by multiple generations, the humorous, heart-felt story and the show’s combination of operetta, vaudeville and vintage Broadway.

“It’s been a dream to direct,” she says. “Calamity Jane is a story about friendship, love, and community, with a true feel-good factor. The community spirit in Deadwood really captures the spirit of community theatre: everyone pulling together, supporting each other and having fun along the way. 

Calamity Jane director Sophie Cooke in the rehearsal room

“It celebrates that golden-age musical feel: big songs, big characters and lots of heart. It’s a timeless show, with themes, characters and songs that defy decades.”

In the cast will be Helen Gallagher as ‘Calamity’ Jane; Matt Tapp as Wild Bill Hickok; Jennifer Jones, Katie Brown; Adam Gill, Lieutenant Daniel Gilmartin; Mollie Raine, Adelaide Adams; Sadie Sørensen, Susan; Tom Menarry, Mister Francis Fryer, and Alex Schofield, Henry Miller

 Joining them will be Paul Betts as Joe; company newcomer David Hartley as stage-coach driver Rattlesnake; Jamie Benson, Charlie from Nantucket; Kit Stroud, poker-playing doctor-undertaker “Doc” Pierce; Matthew Jarvis an d Conor Heinemeyer as scouts Hank & Pete and Gary Bateson as Colonel. 

Playing the CanCan Girls will be Abigail Atkinson; Liz Campbell; Chloe Chapman; Hollie Farmer; Sarah Rudd; Rachel Shadman and Heather Stead. Featured dancers will be Britt Brett; Katie Crossley; Robyn Hughes-Maclean; Rebecca Jackson; Lorna Newby and Jennifer Dommeck.

Joseph Rowntree Theatre Company cast members enjoying a rehearsal for Calamity Jane

The ensemble will comprise Meg Badrick; Victoria Beale; Amy Blair; Ruth Boag-Chapman; Pamela Bradley; Sophie Coe; Sue Coward; Lois Cross; Phoebe Dixon; Catherine Halton; Johanna Hartley; Cate Lawson; Caitlin McDowell; Lucy Moul; Rocks Nairn-Smith; Cameron O’Byrne; Kayleigh Oliver; Eliza Rowley; Rachael Turner and Charlotte Wetherell.

Joseph Rowntree Theatre Company in Calamity Jane, Joseph Rowntree Theatre, York, February 4 to 7, 7.30pm plus 2.30pm Saturday matinee (last few tickets available). Box office: 01904 501935 or https://www.josephrowntreetheatre.co.uk/whats-on/musical/calamity-jane/2830.

Joseph Rowntree Theatre Company: back story

FORMED in 2017, the company has since staged such shows as Kiss Me, Kate!, Hello Dolly, Curtains and 2025’s Beauty And The Beast as the im-house company at the JoRo.

All show profits fund the maintenance and development of the long-running community stage, allowing York performers, volunteers and audience members alike to enjoy classic and contemporary theatre in a space of their own. More than £50,000 has been raised so far, with plans for future productions already underway. 

The Joseph Rowntree Theatre Company’s poster for next week’s production of Calamity Jane

REVIEW: Joseph Rowntree Theatre Company in Curtains, Joseph Rowntree Theatre, York, until Saturday ***

In the spotlight: Steven Hobson’s Lieutenant Frank Cioffi with the Curtains cast at the Joseph Rowntree Theatre. All pictures: Picture: Simon Trow, Simon Charles Photography

KANDER & Ebb wrote Cabaret, Chicago and Frank Sinatra’s signature song, New York, New York.

In truth, Curtains is not on a par with those peaks, being a musical, satirical comedy and whodunit rolled into a play within a play that excels at none of them.

A recipe with so many rich ingredients might have even Paul Hollywood worried, and what happens here is that nothing quite satisfies, although that is no fault of the Joseph Rowntree Theatre Company’s exuberant cast, director Alex Schofield, musical director Scott Phillips and orchestra alike.

The comedy sometimes has to strive too hard in its clunky send-ups of theatre group tropes and murder mysteries alike. Under Scott Phillips’s ceaselessly exuberant musical direction, his wind and brass players are full of oomph, as the songs are given maximum welly, particularly by Jennie Wogan-Wells’s Georgia Hendricks, Jennifer Jones’s Niki Harris and Rosy Rowley’s redoubtable Carmen Bernstein, but they fall well short of K&E’s Seventies’ best.

The whodunit interweaves with the hapless play within a play, a boisterous but seemingly plotless Western by the name of Robbin’ Hood, but it never has the grip, rising tension or intrigue of a Christie murder mystery. The more the plot thickens, somehow the more it doesn’t, because the musical must go on, in theatre tradition…but just too much is going on.

This 2007 American musical, with a book by Escape (The Pina Colada Song) hitmaker Rupert Holmes, is set in 1959, backstage and on stage at the Colonial Theatre, Boston, Massachusetts, where the exasperating, line-forgetting leading lady of a new musical mysteriously suddenly dies (much like her performance, not so mysteriously).

Everyone, cast and crew alike, is a suspect for forensic interrogation by Lieutenant Frank Cioffi (Steve Jobson), the unconventional local detective with a passion for musical theatre. So much so, he keeps making suggestions to improve the musical (within the musical, not the K&E musical itself, which might have been a better idea).

Director and detective: Ben Huntley’s Christopher Belling and Steven Jobson’s Lieutenant Frank Cioffi

You will enjoy the running in-joke of the song In The Same Boat forever being re-written in search of a better tune before Cioffi has the brilliant idea of running all five versions together in the best ensemble number of the show.

Unlike Holmes’s humour, Jobson has a lightness of touch to his performance, at ease with song and script alike, his Cioffi being plucky and persistent, and suddenly romantically involved too.

In a show where individual performances surpass the material, Wogan-Wells has fun as the indefatigable Georgia, taking over from the murdered lead, while Ben Huntley revels in being the Englishman abroad and aghast, Christopher Belling, the director with the waspish tongue and ocean-wide ego.

Curtains is too long, too convoluted, never as funny as a Mischief send-up, but JRTC’s production values are good, from costumes to lighting and Ollie Nash’s sound design. Choreographer Sarah Colestead, principals, featured dancers and ensemble, are kept busy by the flow of song after song and in turn keep the stage busy with commotion in motion.

As usual, JRTC will be raising funds for the JoRo, adding to the £23,000 donated from past productions. That all helps to keep the curtain up, even if Curtains doesn’t raise the roof, despite the committed performances.

Curtains for Curtains, a whydoit dud, but roll on JRTC’s upcoming shows, Helen Spencer’s second instalament of Musicals In The Multiverse and Beauty And The Beast.

Box office: 01904 501935 or josephrowntreetheatre.co.uk.

Jonathan Wells’s Aaron Fox, left, Jennie Wogan-Wells’s Georgia Hendricks, Mark Simmonds’s Oscar Shapiro and Rosy Rowley’s Carmen Bernstein in Curtains

Alex Schofield directs Joseph Rowntree Theatre Company for the first time in Kander & Ebb’s musical whodunit Curtains

Alex Schofield directing a rehearsal for Joseph Rowntree Theatre Company’s Curtains. Picture: Mike Darley

IT’S curtain up for Curtains, the Kander & Ebb musical comedy whodunnit to be staged by the Joseph Rowntree Theatre Company in York from February 7 to 10.

After playing grouchy feed-store proprietor Horace Vandergelder in Hello, Dolly! last year and assistant-directing The Producers in 2018, Kiss Me Kate in 2019, Made In Dagenham in 2020 and Kipps (The Half A Sixpence Musical) in 2022, Alex Schofield steps up to direct a JRTC show for the first time.

“By the time I did Hello, Dolly!,I’d already pitched to direct Curtains, after we secured the rights in spring 2022,” says Alex, who works in human resources at York Minster. “Initially, we’d looked at doing it last September but that couldn’t happen, and it’s one of those situations where it still won’t feel real until the opening night as I’ve been planning it for so long.

“I became aware of the show just before the pandemic when Jason Manford was leading the touring company in 2019 and then transferred into the West End. It came more into my provenance when it was one of those productions that could be streamed during lockdown with donations to arts funding, and that’s when I first saw it.”

Whodunit? All the cast members are suspects in Kander & Ebb’s musical Curtains. Picture: Jennifer Jones

This 2007 American musical, with glorious songs by Kander & Ebb and a witty and charming book by Rupert Holmes, is set in 1959 at Boston’s Colonial Theatre, where the entire cast and crew are suspects in a plucky local detective’s investigation into why the leading lady of a new musical mysteriously dropped dead on stage.

“It’s a really funny show, sending up murder mysteries and theatre groups, so that’s all three of my boxes ticked: I love comedy, I love musical theatre and I love whodunits!” says Alex, who first directed a show, The Pirates Of Penzance, for the now-defunct Jorvik Gilbert & Sullivan Company seven years ago.

“I think people should be attracted to Curtains by Kander & Ebb’s involvement. It’ll have the appeal of a classic musical; it’s very fast paced and very funny, but it has loads of tension as well, with all these characters who have different motives for murder.”

Steven Jobson as Lieutenant Frank Cioffi in Joseph Rowntree Theatre Company’s Curtains. Picture: Jennifer Jones

Scripted by Rupert Holmes, who was brought in after Peter Stone, the writer of the original concept and book, died in 2003, Curtains features a play within a play. A Western, cowboy accents and all, by the name of Robbin’ Hood.

“You think, ‘how extreme can I make it from real life?’, with the auditions needing to see if people could do both a generic American accent and Southwestern [American frontier] accent so that the audience can distinguish between characters in the play and characters in the play within the play,” says Alex.

Comedy is a key element in Curtains. “It doesn’t take itself seriously and in some ways it speaks more to the English sense of humour, in how it sends itself up, but what separates it from English humour is that what they say is much more direct, whereas in England, it’s all about what’s not being said!” says Alex.

Curtain call for a “show about theatre”

“Mind you, the director of the play within the play [Christopher Belling] is English and he’s very flamboyant, never holding back with his criticisms. I don’t think that if I took his approach there would be many people left in the company! I take a more compromising position.

“The director will be played by Ben Huntley, who’s been in our shows since Kiss Me Kate in smaller roles, so to give him this opportunity and see him shine in this principal role has been fantastic.”

Set up to raise funds for the Joseph Rowntree Theatre, JRTC has raised £23,000 from its productions so far, and once more proceeds will go the Haxby Road community theatre. “One of the advantages of this show, especially when we’re fundraising for the Rowntree Theatre, is that it’s a show about theatre, so we’ve made the theatre itself the set, with pretty minimal staging required for the play within the play,” says Alex.

Joseph Rowntree Theatre Company in Curtains, Joseph Rowntree Theatre, York, February 7 to 10, 7.30pm and 2.30pm Saturday matinee. Box office: 01904 501935 or josephrowntreetheatre.co.uk.

Joseph Rowntree Theatre Company in rehearsal for Curtains. Picture: Mike Darley

REVIEW: Joseph Rowntree Theatre Company in Hello, Dolly! ***

Helen Spencer’s Dolly Levi in Joseph Rowntree Theatre Company’s Hello, Dolly!

Hello, Dolly!, Joseph Rowntree Theatre Company, Joseph Rowntree Theatre, York, 7.30pm tonight; 2.30pm, 7.30pm tomorrow. Box office: 01904 501935 or josephrowntreetheatre.co.uk

THE Joseph Rowntree Theatre Company’s fifth production as the JoRo’s in-house fundraising troupe since 2017 is their “most ambitious yet” and first to be directed by company regular Kathryn Lay.

She brings experience of directing for several Gilbert & Sullivan companies to the task, along with a familiar right-hand man for this bright and breezy production, husband Martin Lay, a figure in constant motion in white tie and tails as conductor and musical director in the dozen-strong orchestra pit.

Hello, Dolly!, with its book by Michael Stewart and music and lyrics by Jerry Herman, had its day as the longest-running show on Broadway after its 1964 debut, further buoyed by Gene Kelly’s 1969 film starring the irrepressible Barbra Streisand.

Based on Thornton Wilder’s 1938 farce The Merchant Of Yonkers, re-written as The Matchmaker in 1954, it is a lightweight, gently amusing piece, not dissimilar in spirit to those works from the other side of the Big Pond, G&S’s light operas. Or, you could call it “an absolute hoot”, as the JoRo’s publicity puts it.

The setting is 1885 New York, where wily widow and meddling matchmaker Dolly Levi (Helen Spencer) has her eye on hooking tight-fisted half-a-millionaire Horace Vendergelder (Alex Schofield), a man short on joy and even shorter on humour.

Ever chirpy Dolly has calling cards for all manner of skills she claims to have, but resourcefulness is her primary asset, along with an ability to confuse all around her in pursuit of her goal. Spencer triumphs, both in song, especially her ballads, and as leading lady with an artful yet appealing air and bags of brio. Vandergelder is a stick in the mud, all the more so for Schofield playing him so straight.

The path to love may not run smoothly, but Hello, Dolly! is giddy with a supporting bill of billing and cooing involving Stuart Sellens’s Cornelius Hackl and Jennie Wogan-Wells’s Irene Molloy, alongside Jamie Benson’s Barnaby Tucker and Jennifer Jones’s Minnie Fay. They make a swell foursome, amusing, smartly attired and characterful in their singing.

“Flouncing around in a feather boa”, Sophie Cooke is a good sport as Ernestina, the butt of Dolly’s meddling with a voice to launch a thousand cough lozenges.  Abigail Atkinson and Jonathan Wells make their mark too as artist Ambrose Kemper and young Ermengarde.

Supporting roles and ensemble players add to the jollification, particularly in the big numbers, whether beneath twirling brollies or on waiter duty in Lorna Newby’s lively choreography.

Tickets are in limited supply for tonight’s show and tomorrow’s matinee with better availability for tomorrow night’s finale. All proceeds go back to the JoRo in support of York’s community theatre and the chance to put on more big musicals with big casts to match.

Review by Charles Hutchinson