REVIEW: Badapple Theatre Company in Kate Bramley’s The Thankful Village, York Theatre Royal Studio ****

Pip Cook’s Edie/Tommy, left, Josie Morley’s Nellie/Sydney and Keeley Lane’s Victoria/Mr Proud in Kate Bramley’s The Thankful Village

THIS revival of Kate Bramley’s feminist wartime comedy-drama on the home front marks the 11th anniversary of its commission on the centenary of The Great War.

The Thankful Village has been toured nationally four times by Bramley’s “theatre on your doorstep” company from Green Hammerton, near York, and premiered in France, rather further from your doorstep, in 2018, when an original Badapple cast member joined an all-French cast and crew.

For this all-too-brief return that will conclude with sold-out performances in Whitechapel, Preston on May 2 and Wath on May 3, writer and artistic director Bramley takes to the stage herself in tails to play a live score for the first time in a Badapple show after 27 years, calling on her skills as an international touring musician from the age of 17 to perform Jez Lowe’s score of original songs and music.

Receiving news from the war front: Keeley Lane’s Victoria in Badapple Theatre Company’s The Thankful Village. Picture: Louise Grazia

Her presence, whether on instrumental underscoring duty or accompanying the cast of Keeley Lane, Josie Morley and Pip Cook in song, adds even more poignancy to her story of hope, humour and humanity inspired by her trip to Ypres and the Flanders battlefield and written in honour of three remarkable figures: Staff Nurse Nellie Spindler, Sister Edith Appleton, whose diaries were invaluable for Bramley’s research, and Chaplain Tubby Clayton, whose legacy lives on at Talbot House, Poperinge.

“Amid tragedy, I was struck by the glimpses of joy, beauty and humour found in the darkest moments,” says Kate in The Thankful Times theatrical notes. “We invite you to share in a few laughs and a few tall stories as we pay our respects, in our own way, to those who have gone before.”

In harmony in song in The Thankful Village: Pip Cook, left, Keeley Lane and Josie Morley. Picture: Louise Grazia

The Thankful Villages were those that lost no men in The Great War. Six such villages were in the north of Yorkshire, although Bramley chose to create the fictitious Thankful-in-the-Vale as her setting for a story seen through the eyes of three Yorkshire women from the same rural household, below and above stairs, from August 1914 to the war’s end.

She presents a recognisably Edwardian Yorkshire rural community, where superior, starchy, cold Victoria (Keeley Lane) is in charge of chatterbox house maid Nellie (Josie Morley) and daydreaming, wide-eyed scullery maid Edie (Pip Cook) in the White Horse coaching inn.

The village men – Victoria’s officer-class husband, Arthur, and the fresh-faced girls’ boyfriends, Sydney and Tommy – have signed up for the war effort, and to emphasise their absence, Bramley places her play in the gentlemen’s smoking room of the inn, designed in compact, fold-away travel-friendly Badapple tradition  by Catherine Dawn.

Founder, director and writer – and international musician – Kate Bramley playing live in a Badapple show for the first time in the Green Hammerton company’s 27-year history

As in Bramley’s two Land Girl plays from the Second World War, The Great War unfolds predominantly through the women’s eyes, with news sent home in letters and postcards from loved ones. This is complemented by interludes where the trio plays the men on the front, when Lowe’s songs reveal his customary ear for a folk tune and his witty, poignant way with a line.

They mirror the songs of the time with such elan that you would swear they must have originated from wartime. They add to the storytelling, provide commentary and context, and plenty have the defiant humour so necessary to survive in the field of battle or in the loneliness and fear of separation, all the better for Bramley’s live, undemonstrative accompaniment.

Each woman progresses and changes through the heightened experience of war, Edie losing her naive wonderment, if not her innocence; Nellie becoming a field nurse (in a storyline inspired by Nellie Spindler and Sister Edith Appleton); and Victoria finally breaking her cold front.

Josie Morley’s Nellie, left, and Pip Cook’s Edie on scrubbing duty at the White Horse in The Thankful Village. Picture: Louise Grazia

Bramley’s feminist undercurrent to these individual stories is the rising swell of the suffrage movement, as women took on roles previously the preserve of men, and so the play is a hymn of praise to suffragette activist Emmeline Pankhurst too.

Cook, who will spend the summer touring Twelfth Night as Viola and Maria with Miracle Theatre, draws on her talent for comedy, peppered with pathos too, as the ever-willing Edie.

Lane captures Victoria’s implacable, impervious, sometimes imperious nature, her frugality and winter-chill harshness, before a redemptive conversion at the close that would make Scrooge leap for joy. Her Victoria even says “We are not amused” at one point.

“A passion for living life in a fury”: Josie Morley’s Nellie in Badapple Theatre Company’s The The Thankful Village. Picture: Louise Grazia

The best-drawn character is Nellie, with her diarist turn of phrase in her journal despatches, performed so movingly by Morley, and it is her journey – and her passion for living life with a fury – that gives The Thankful Village its emotional clout and poignant final twist.

As in its 2014 premiere, and now amid the warmongering and rutting stags of today’s worsening  male domination, it makes you thankful for the under-appreciated Great War service of women, whose story too often has been drowned out by the fusillade of men’s deeds fired off  by history books. Bramley’s poetic work is more of a distaff companion piece to the War Poets.

Badapple Theatre Company in The Thankful Village, York Theatre Royal Studio, today at 2.30m and 7pm. Box office: 01904 623568 or yorktheatreroyal.co.uk.

Barrie Rutter films with the sharks at The Deep for Hull Truck’s online short stories

Hull actor Barrie Rutter filming Sam Caseley’s short story Aquarium at The Deep on December 14. Picture: Sean Spencer/Hull News & Pictures

BARRIE Rutter OBE returns to his home city of Hull to star in Hull Truck Theatre’s mini-film season, Miracle On The Humber, appearing online in Aquarium from 5pm today (22/12/2020).

The Ferensway theatre has joined forces with KCOM to present four festive short stories, written by Maureen Lennon and Sam Caseley expressly as a magical digital experience for families, in particular children aged five upwards, to enjoy for free.

Rutter, founder and former artistic director of Halifax theatre company Northern Broadsides and now Hull Truck patron, recorded Caseley’s tale Aquarium at The Deep, home to 3,000 creatures, from sharks to sawfish, in Tower Street, Hull.

“It’s a little Christmas story set in The Deep, where we filmed it last Monday,” says Barrie, 74-year-old son of a Hull dockworker. “It was brilliant because we had free rein as no-one else was there, filming with the Blacktip Reef Sharks, the big  Rays and the Sawfish behind me and these massive tortoises above me. I’m delighted to be taking part in this project; the films are just five minutes each and they’re fun.”

Aquarium forms part of a series spun around the themes of kindness, joy, family and love, linked by the simple idea of performing or experiencing a Christmas miracle and filmed at such Hull and East Riding locations as The Deep, Ferens Art Gallery and DoubleTree by Hilton Hull.

The mini-films are being released on Hull Truck’s YouTube channel from December 21 to 24, with Rutter, Channel 5’s Milkshake presenter Amy Thompson, Middle Child Theatre regular Josie Morley and Emmerdale, War Horse and Remould Theatre Company actor Matthew Booth each narrating a story to “celebrate our unique region while instilling local pride”.

The series opened yesterday with Lennon’s re-telling of Cinderella, followed by Aquarium today, The Christmas Kitten tomorrow and The Christmas Lights on Christmas Eve. Each can be watched on Hull Truck’s YouTube channel, accessible to online audiences in the East Riding and beyond, free of charge.

In at The Deep end: Barrie Rutter narrating Aquarium, filmed at the Hull attraction for Hull Truck Theatre’s Miracle On The Humber. Picture: Sean Spencer/Hull News & Pictures

Janthi Mills-Ward, Hull Truck’s executive director, says: “We’re delighted to be working with KCOM to deliver this fantastic project for our communities this Christmas. Born from the idea of KCOM’s ‘Father Christmas line’ in the 1950s. the idea was to bring magical storytelling back to life for the digital age.

“This project celebrates Hull Truck’s experience in great storytelling and KCOM’s digital expertise of connecting friends, families and wider communities. We live in a really special corner of the world, and these short films really bring this home.

“All of the venues featured in the films have had a hard year and have been in some way affected by the pandemic. It’s extra special to be able to bring these spaces back to life again, especially at this time of year.”

John Rooney, managing director of KCOM Retail, says: “We’re thrilled to join forces with Hull Truck Theatre for this fantastic online experience this Christmas. After what has been a very challenging year for many people, we hope that our festive-flavoured short stories bring some Christmas magic into homes across our region as parents and children settle down to watch them together.

“Hull Truck Theatre has pulled together a brilliant cast list of local talent to bring these original tales to life, from writers to actors and filmmakers, and I’m sure, after all the trials and tribulations of the past 12 months, these can herald a positive new chapter for the area and the brilliant people who live here.

“Happy Christmas from everyone at KCOM and we hope you enjoy our heart-warming Yuletide stories.”

Each film will be available online from 5pm on its allotted day to be enjoyed as a bedtime story experience.