Florence and Jamie team up for first time in Black Treacle Theatre’s Educating Rita

Florence Poskitt’s Rita and Jamie McKeller’s Frank in Black Treacle Theatre’s Educating Rita

WILLY Russell’s Educating Rita returns to the York stage in Black Treacle Theatre’s production at Theatre@41, Monkgate, York, from June 9 to 13.

Premiered in 1980 and updated in 2003, the Liverpool playwright’s two-hander tells the story of Rita, a working-class hairdresser hungry for something more, who signs up for an Open University literature course.

There she meets Frank, a disillusioned academic whose passion for teaching has long faded. Their weekly tutorials become a battle of ideas, humour and honesty as Rita’s confidence blossoms and Frank reckons with his own choices and the possibility of a second chance.

“Frank is so wonderfully brilliant and articulate, but also an absolute disaster,” says Jamie McKeller

As Rita discovers the worlds of art, culture and self-expression, she begins to question the life others expect her to live. Change, however, comes with difficult choices, and both teacher and student must reconsider who they are and who they want to be.

Transformed into a film by Lewis Gilbert in 1983, starring Julie Walters, reprising her stage role as Rita opposite Michael Caine, Educating Rita will be performed in York by Florence Poskitt as Rita and Jamie McKeller as Frank.

Director Jim Paterson says: “Even though Educating Rita was written in 1980, it’s not a period piece in the slightest. The play’s themes of the value and purpose of education, how women’s emancipation is still not universal, and how the choices we have depend so much on our class and background, all still have a lot of relevance today and it felt like a good time to revive it.

Jim Paterson: Director of Black Treacle Theatre’s Educating Rita

“Plus it has two brilliantly written characters in Rita and Frank. You worry when staging a well-known play whether you can meet people’s expectations, but I’ve been blown away by how Flo and Jamie have brought a host of different ideas and interpretations to their performances,  which I can’t wait for an audience to see.”

Florence says “Educating Rita is such a brilliant, timeless play, and I cannot thank Jim enough for the opportunity to play Rita. Working alongside Jamie is a joy, and not only are we collaborating well as a team, it feels like were creating something really special.”

Reflecting on playing lecturer Frank, Jamie says: “Frank is genuinely a dream for an actor. He’s so wonderfully brilliant and articulate, but also an absolute disaster. A huge challenge to take on, but to face it with Flo and Jim is nothing but a pleasure. It’s possibly one of the saddest, funniest and most heartfelt scripts I have ever read and I feel very lucky to be a part of this production.”

Up to her eyes in books: Florence Poskitt’s Liverpool hairdresser, Rita, in Black Treacle Theatre’s Educating Rita

Jim had just finished directing Black Treacle in Laura Wade’s The Watsons when Florence pitched the idea of staging Educating Rita. “I didn’t say he had to cast me,” she points out.

Last staged in York in September 2021 in Max Roberts’s touring production starring Jessica Johnson and Stephen Tompkinson at the Theatre Royal, Educating Rita became Jim’s choice for Summer 2026 as soon as he read Russell’s script. “The characters grabbed me; the dialogue crackles – and I said to Flo, ‘OK, what are you doing next June?’.

“Then, when I was speaking to Jamie about something else, I happened to mention Educating Rita, and he said it was a play he’d always been keen to look at. I put Flo and Jamie together and – brilliant! – you could see the chemistry between them straightaway.”

Florence Poskitt and Adam Sowter, her partner in York musical comedy and children’s theatre duo Fladam

To Flo’s surprise, “Somehow we’ve never performed together before, which feels a bit bonkers because we’re so similar in that we both do lots of comedy,” she says.

“It’s been really nice coming together from comedy backgrounds, doing fun stuff, and because we both run our own theatre companies [Flo’s Fladam, with partner Adam Sowter, and Jamie’s Neon Crypt], flying by the seat of our pants, we know about being in the moment and having each other’s back, which is a good feeling in rehearsals.”

Working with Florence for the fourth time and Jamie for the first, Jim notes: “They’re both very empathetic performers and one of the things you notice is how they dive into their roles, where you’ll think about putting yourself in their situation, and in Frank and Rita’s situation, thinking ‘what might come from this?’. From the director’s point of view, it’s fascinating thinking, ‘what will you guys do here.”

Jamie McKeller in his guise as Dr Dorian Deathly, ghost walk host of Deathly Dark Tours

Florence says: “It’s just so exciting to have the challenge of doing a two-hander, lots of lines to learn, and the Liverpool accent for Rita too, and we’ve loved the experience. One of the things that’s been useful is that Vic [stage technician Victoria Ryan] is from Liverpool; she’s given me some amazing pointers.

“Vic says everything is ‘lazy’ in the Scouse accent, under-pronouncing words and dropping ‘Gs’ from the end of [‘ing’] words and ‘Hs’. I’ve decided to refer to it as ‘theatrical Scouse’  the way I’m speaking it on stage.”

In the educating of Rita in Educating Rita, she changes, but what about the heavy-drinking Frank? “We’ve discussed this a lot,” says Jamie, who will employ a weariness of voice in his performance. “You would hope that Frank has a transformation too, but he doesn’t really change in that there’s only false hope; he talks about tragedy instead.

“Somehow we’ve never performed together before, which feels a bit bonkers because we’re so similar in that we both do lots of comedy,” says Florence Poskitt of appearing on stage with Jamie McKeller for the first time

“In encountering Rita, it doesn’t do anything to redeem or save him. He has a certain lightness in her presence, but then, in her prolonged absence, he is quick to return to the bass line [in his behaviour].”

Jim adds: “Frank’s tragedy is he has the chance to change but he doesn’t like himself enough to make that change permanent.”

Jamie rejoins: “I’m definitely a lighter shade of Frank, but I could see how this situation could happen, but the difference between me and Frank is that I would not allow it to happen to me. Where he is comfortable in these circumstances and is unwilling to make changes, when it comes to ambition, we’re poles apart.”

Florence Poskitt in rehearsal for Educating Rita

Jim is giving Educating Rita an unspecified setting that evokes both the 19080s and 1990s. “It can’t be set in 2026, given how things have changed in education,” he says.

“But the only thing that really dates it is Frank’s drunken rant,” suggests Jamie, “To be that dismissive of that behaviour dates it to earlier times.”

Black Treacle Theatre in Educating Rita, Theatre@41, Monkgate, York, June 9 to 13, 7.30pm. Box office: https://tickets.41monkgate.co.uk.

Black Treacle Theatre: back story

FOUNDED by Jim Paterson, York company Black Treacle Theatre has produced Nick Payne’s Constellations (March 2022); Gary Owen’s Iphigenia in Splott (March 2023), Nassim Soleimanpour’s White Rabbit Red Rabbit (November 2023); Dario Fo’s Accidental Death Of An Anarchist (October 2024); Laura Wade’s The Watsons (July 2025, co-production with Joseph Rowntree Theatre), and Howard Brenton’s Anne Boleyn (March 2026).

JIM Paterson is joined in the Educating Rita production team by set and prop designer Richard Hampton, lighting designer Sage Dunn-Krahn and stage technician Victoria Ryan.

Jamie McKeller in rehearsal for Educating Rita