Book by Terrence McNally.
Lyrics by Lynn Ahrens.
Music by Stephen Flaherty.
Director: Ben De Wynter
Choreographer: Phyllida Crowley-Smith
Musical Director: Christopher Peake
Design: James Turner
Prodcer : Regan De Wynter
Winner, 2003 Outer Critics Circle Award for Best Off-Broadway Musical
"Rich in the necessary ingredient needed to make musicals sing — people about whom you care" - Michael Kuchwara, Associated Press
Wednesday November 11th - Saturday December 5th
Tuesday to Saturday @ 7:30pm, Saturday & Sunday @ 3:00pm
Tickets £15, box office 0207 261 9876
A chamber musical about the power the theatre has to transform our lives and the capacity each of us has to love one another, A Man of No Importance is a rare gem in the musical theatre canon.
Based on a 1994 independent film starring Albert Finney, A Man of No Importance is about the journey of self-discovery and acceptance of Alfie Byrne, a Dublin bus conductor who is prone to reciting poetry to the patrons on his bus. He is also the director of the local community theatre, which operates out of a small parish hall in the neighbourhood church. Alfie’s passengers are also his performers: amateur thespians that come to see the magic the theatre offers through Alfie’s eyes.
They inhabit the world of working-class Dublin in the 1960s, a world where the budding sexual freedom happening in other places is barely whispered about. Through the beautiful book by Terrence McNally, and the lyrical grace of the score by Lynn Ahrens and Stephen Flaherty, the team that brought us the magnificent Ragtime The Musical now shine their light on A Man of No Importance. Here is a musical that illuminates the feeling we have all felt at one time or another of being an outsider, our universal need to love and be loved in return, and connecting to something larger than ourselves.
Starring Paul Clarkson as Alfie.
With Ruth Berkeley, Anthony Cable, Barra Collins, Adam Davenport, Kimberly Ensor, Jamie Honeybourne, Emily Juler, Patrick Joseph Kelliher, Daniel Maguire, Paul Monaghan, Joanne Nevin, A.J O’Neil, Niall O’Sheehy, Nicola Redman, Róisín Sullivan and Dieter Thomas.
