Mikron Theatre Company must go down to the sea in Operation Beach Hut… at the Scarcroft Allotments

Mikron Theatre Company actor-musicians Catherine Warnock, left, Georgina Liley, James McLean and Robert Took in Harvey Badger’s debut play Operation Beach Hut. Picture: Robling Photography

First published on May 17 2025

MIKRON Theatre Company will tour to 138 venues by van and narrowboat in 2025, none more outdoor than Scarcroft Allotments, their regular fertile ground for quirky comedy, song and enlightenment in York.

The travelling players from the Pennine village of Marsden, West Yorkshire, are on the canal, river and road for a 53rd year from April 4 to October 18 with the world premiere of Mikron acting alumnus Harvey Badger’s debut play, Operation Beach Hut, setting up base camp amid the Scarcroft Road  flowers and vegetable plots on Sunday afternoon.

As is their custom on their pop-up theatre travels to halls, community centres, pubs and village greens , Mikron will pop back to York in the autumn to present a second world premiere, Hush Hush!, wherein Lucie Raine infiltrates the clandestine world of wartime code-breaking to expose the vital contributions of the unsung heroes of Bletchley Park, whose ingenuity and unwavering resolve helped secure victory. More on that world of secrets, cyphers and song later.

First, let’s dig into Operation Beach Hut at the allotments. Badger’s musical will whisk Sunday’s inland audience off to the golden sands of Fiddling-On-Sea for the annual Best Beach Hut competition when stressed-out city dweller Holly seeks solace by the sea.

As the competition draws closer, the history of the seaside floats to the surface, washing up a host of characters and stories from centuries gone by, delivered by Marianne McNamara’s quartet of actor-musicians:  Georgina Liley, Robert Took, Catherine Warnock and familiar face James McLean.

Soon Holly realises far more is at stake than merely a prize for best beach hut in a play that combines Mikron’s signature bright and brisk storytelling with original songs  (composed by musical director Amal El-Sawad with lyrics by Badger).

Guaranteeing you will have a “whale of a time” in Badger’s slice of seaside nostalgia, Marianne says: “This production is a celebration of British seaside culture, filled with heart-warming stories, catchy tunes and plenty of laughter. We’re excited that we have integrated audio description at every performance too.”

Harvey Badger is delighted to be making his Mikron bow as a playwright after touring on board  Mikron’s narrowboat Tyseley as part of the cast for the 2023 productions of Poppy Hollman’s Twitchers and Amanda Whittington’s A Force To Be Reckoned With.

“I was at the opening night, packed out with Mikronites in Marsden, and it’s been lovely to hear how well the play’s going down,” he says.

“This is my first experience of opening a play where I’ve been the one working on it and then handing it over to the director and actors. That was a lovely moment.”

Harvey had studied on the actor musicianship course at Rose Bruford College, in London.“They really push you to try our your own work there,” he recalls. “I wrote music, did little play projects, bits and bobs, nothing that you would call professional, but enjoyable to do.

“Then while I was on tour in 2023, Mikron did a call-out for new writers, and I felt I had the gist of what they’d be looking  for. I submitted an initial application with an idea for a potential show and a sample of the first ten pages  – and it’s pretty much ended up as that play!”

His submission involved two rounds: those opening pages to show his writing style, the patter between characters, the dialogue. “But I still had to show I could handle three acts. So the second round  was more of the structural side, showing how I would develop the character arcs,” says Harvey.

Mikron has a structured way of commissioning plays, where the first two months are given over to research. “I knew the play was always going to be about an out-of-towner, from London, but I’m from Brighton originally, which is where the drive to write this play came from,” says Harvey.

“Having lived in London for eight years now, it’s been lovely to revisit Brighton  – I’m getting married this year and we went to The Lanes in Brighton to get our rings.

“My parents now live in St Leonards on Sea, my grandparents live In Brighton, and I think the love of the sea is embedded in all of us because we’re a small island, where the sounds of the sea and our beaches are inherently part of our culture. It’s a big part of who we are.

“I grew up on the sea front, looking out of the window, seeing the sea every day, so  I find a big sense of calm standing by the sea, feeling very grounded there.”

 Harvey decided it would be important in Operation Beach Hut to represent both those who live all year round by the sea and those who visit. “They are two different communities, and I’m aware of the gentrification of some places that has led almost to ghost towns being created, when people only come for three months of the year when the weather’s good.

“I wanted to show the difficulties but also that if the two communities could support each other, they can create the magic that these places can be. There are no perfect answers, and I don’t think plays are meant to provide answers but to ask lots of questions.”

Mikron Theatre Company in Operation Beach Hut, Scarcroft Allotments, Scarcroft Road, York, Sunday (18/5/2025), 2pm to 4pm. No tickets required; a pay-what–you-feel collection will be taken post-show.

REVIEW: Mikron Theatre Company in Atalanta Forever **** and A Dog’s Tale ***

Come on, Atalanta Forever: Elizabeth Robin, left, Thomas Cotran, Rachel Benson and James McLean, on commentary duty, in Amanda Whittington’s women’s football drama, at the Piece Hall, Halifax. Picture: Elizabeth Baker

Mikron Theatre Company in Atalanta Forever and A Dog’s Tale, on tour on boat, road and holding on to a lead until September 19

AFTER a Covid-cancelled year of no shows but resolute fund-raising to secure their future, Marsden’s Mikron Theatre Company are on their travels once more, giving plays the canal route treatment where possible aboard narrowboat Tyseley.

This should have been their 50th year of “theatre anywhere for everyone”, but those celebrations must wait until 2022. Nevertheless, the refreshing sight of company stalwart James McLean back on stage, in the company of fellow actor-musicians Rachel Benson, Elizabeth Cotran and luxuriant-haired Thomas Cotran, was cause enough to bring out the cheers at the Piece Hall press night for Amanda Whittington’s “fight for women’s football” drama, Atalanta Forever, in the Halifax open air.

Two nights later, and the same cast parked up at Scarcroft Allotments, in York, just as bushy tailed and bright eyed for the musical canine comedy caper A Dog’s Tale, Poppy Hollman’s debut professional commission after taking part in Mikron’s Writers’ Scheme in 2018.

Halifax, first. Noises off could be heard, nothing too distracting, not only from the bars around the Piece Hall but the peregrines that have taken over the Square Chapel gothic tower as their aerie. Then again, the players of Huddersfield’s Atalanta AFC women’s football team would have been used to crowds at fund-raising games for wounded soldiers, especially when playing the mighty Preston factory team Dick, Kerr’s Ladies FC, legendary gay star winger Lily Parr et al.

Thomas Cotran, left, Rachel Benson, Elizabeth Robin and James McLean in a scene from Atalanta Forever. PIcture: Elizabeth Baker

Parr was the first woman to be inducted into the National Football Museum Hall of Fame, her pioneering story being told on stage in both Benjamin Peel’s Not A Game For Girls and Sabrina Mahfouz and Hollie McNish’s Offside, a play football, feminism and female empowerment.

Little is known of Atalanta AFC, however, who played for only a couple of seasons from 1920 before folding in 1924. “All that remains is a fixture list, a few newspaper reports and precious team photos,” writes Whittington in her programme notes.

“Who are those pioneering women and girls,” she asks. “The silence around them gave us space to imagine who played for Atalanta and why? It also allowed me to draw on my experience in the long shadow of the FA ban [on woman’s football that ran from 1921 to 1971].”

Aged 11, Whittington was the only girl who played in a 1980s’ Nottinghamshire boys’ village tournament and was promptly advised to stop because it “wasn’t appropriate”. She still feels the injustice, the sense of shame of wanting to do something she was “not meant to”.

Playwright Amanda Whittington: “Atalanta Forever is my revenge play,” she says, after being told it “wasn’t appropriate” for her to be playing in a boys’ football tournament at the age of 11

Atalanta Forever is her revenge play, she says. Amanda has written 30-plus plays, from Be My Baby to Ladies Day, Bollywood Jane to Mighty Atoms, and this time it’s personal. But not too personal, and not too, too serious either.

Although written with a campaigning zeal for the female empowerment of these ground-breaking players of the Twenties, Atalanta Forever is irreverent too about the beautiful game that is often anything but that, typified by the opening Rules Of The Game song. Ruby Of The Rovers and Girl’s Own adventures meet Match Of The Day and John Godber’s Rugby League physical comedy Up’n’Under.

Atalanta AFC blue-and-white scarves knitted by Mikron supporters decorate the fencing – and were tempting to purloin as the second half turned chillier – as we learn of the back stories of Annie (Benson) and Ethel (Robin), one a fireworks factory worker, the other a tram driver, when they join the new team.

Into the story come the multi-role playing Cotran (as team captain Constance, radical coach Ms Waller, Huddersfield Town legend Billy Smith and more besides) and McLean (as scoffing groundsman Arthur, a disapproving mother and John Motson send-up, Motty Johnson).

MIkron Theatre Company performing Atalanta Forever to a socially distanced full house at the PIece Hall, Halifax

In Mikron tradition, Whittington’s play is as educative as it is entertaining, balanced between righteous ire and humour, football match highlights and life off the pitch. She weaves in accounts of being stopped from writing left handed, the fate of a conscientious objector, massive post-war unemployment and strikes and a mother’s scorn for suffrage and socialism, but at the same she revels in an impromptu match with beret-wearing French tourists and even a Boris Johnson cameo.

How else could the play end but with a tribute to Lily Parr, a cheer for women’s football now thriving and a “nod to the brave girls who carried on”. Atalanta Forever is a resilient triumph, from Whittington’s stirring writing to Marianne McNamara’s pacy direction, Kieran Buckeridge’s playful songs to a chameleon cast of multiple talents. Back of the net!

Two evenings later, it was sunnier by far as dog owners took their pooches along the lane beside the Mikron van at Scarcroft Allotments. Again, they had brought only the simplest of set designs with a rail for hanging myriad costumes, instruments and props to the side, a raised stage and no lighting.

One of the joys of a long Mikron summer is the chance to see the same cast tackling two plays (although, alas, the 2021 tour being restricted to outdoor performances means no Clements Hall show this year in York, so you will have to travel farther afield).

Actor-musicians Elizabeth Robin, left, Thomas Cotran, James McLean and Rachel Benson in Mikron Theatre Company’s A Dog’s Tale

After football in Atalanta Forever, McLean, Benson, Robin and Cotran head into another competitive environment, the Cruft’s dog show, in A Dog’s Tale: cat-loving Poppy Hollman’s look at canines past and present, Cruft’s now and Cruft’s when started by cat-owning Charles Cruft, a suitably dogged late-19th century showman of Barnum instincts, puppy-keen to take on the stuffy Kennel Club.

The bond between people and their ‘best friends’ is ever present, ever enduring, even if shenanigans and skullduggery blight the competition in Hollman’s tale, one informed by her visit to Cruft’s in the name of an intrigued novice’s research.

History combines with a little mystery, a sense of mischief with an outsider’s initiation, in the world of “heroic hounds, pampered pooches and naughty nobblers”, as Benson’s Linda and her wayward rescue mutt, Gary, find themselves pursued by security through the halls of Crufts, accused of a “terrible crime”.

Robin and McLean have much fun as Margo and Carl, unbearably precious, ever-panicking, regular Cruft’s competitors; Cotran reels off all manner of accents in a multitude of roles; McLean twinkles as Cruft and has the best cameo in a spoof on Barbara Woodhouse.

Don’t be misled by the dog! A Dog’s Tale playwright Poppy Hollman is really a cat lover

Hollman challenges her cast with 20 characters between them, and in her first full-scale play, the characters and caricatures are her strongest suit, along with her sense of fun, both sharper than the dialogue and the slightly clunky storyline involving Gary’s crime and the naughty nobbler.

By comparison with McNamara’s Atalanta Forever, Rachel Gee’s direction has to work harder to maintain momentum and maximise the humour, but the performances are typically energetic, inventive, engaging and diverse, and the one scene with interloping cats is a gem of physical comedy and knowing contrast with the otherwise omnipresent dogs, topped off by a Dogs V. Cats rap battle.

Musical director Rebekah Hughes’s compositions for Hollman’s smart lyrics are a blast and Celia Perkins delivers fabulous costume designs that accentuate character superbly. The stiff dog’s leads with simply a collar where the head would be (rather than puppets) are particular favourite among the props.

Ultimately a little overstretched, the eager-to-please A Dog’s Tale nevertheless has much to enjoy, announcing a new talent in Hollman with the tools to take her comedy writing to the next level.  

For the full tour itineraries and booking details, go to: mikron.org.uk. P.S. Dogs are welcome at most performances of A Dog’s Tale.

Catty comment: Thomas Cotran, Elizabeth Robin and Rachel Benson’s moggies revel in their show-stealing cameo in A Dog’s Tale