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The National Theatre presents

Grief

A new play written and directed by Mike Leigh

25 - 29 October

A New Play by Mike Leigh

A New Play by Mike Leigh

Overview

1957. War widow Dorothy lives in a London suburb with her 15-year-old daughter Victoria and her older bachelor brother Edwin.

More and more isolated from her married friends with their successful children, Dorothy tries to cope with Victoria's increasingly hostile behaviour. But is she doing her best, as she thinks, or is she in fact responsible for what threatens to become an unendurable situation?

A devastating portrait of family dependencies and stifling domesticity, Grief is the new stage work by Mike Leigh. His many stage plays include Babies Grow Old (RSC 1974), Abigail’s Party (Hampstead Theatre 1977), Goose-Pimples (Hampstead Theatre 1981), It’s A Great Big Shame! (Theatre Royal Stratford East 1993), Two Thousand Years (National Theatre 2005) and Ecstasy (1979), which has recently been revived under Leigh’s direction at Hampstead Theatre and in the West End.

Mike Leigh is re-united on this project with Lesley Manville – his most frequent collaborator – and with regulars Marion Bailey, Sam Kelly and Wendy Nottingham. He worked with them variously on the films Who’s Who (1978), Grown-Ups (1980), Meantime (1984), The Short & Curlies (1987), High Hopes (1988), Secrets & Lies (1996), Topsy-Turvy (1999), All or Nothing (2002), Vera Drake (2004), Another Year (2010) and A Running Jump (2012).

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  • Reviews

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    4 Star Rating Leigh’s meticulous production potently captures the pain that lurked behind stiff upper lips in the England of the Fifties... Lesley Manville is extraordinary as the widowed Dorothy. - Telegraph

    The acting is superb... Marion Bailey is unforgettable... Ruby Bentall is excellent... Sam Kelly also paints an astonishing portrait of a man who is semi-detached from life. - Guardian

    4 Star Rating Meticulously evocative - Independent

    Marion Bailey is a scream as ‘garrulous Gertie’. Wendy Nottingham is spot-on as jaunty Muriel. And their male counterpart is David Horovitch’s hilariously tiresome Hugh, a doctor who believes himself to be fearfully amusing. - Observer

    A moving, minimalist tribute to middle-class despair. An exquisitely observed, profoundly quiet slice of 1950s suburban life ... Lesley Manville… a devasting unflashy performance. - Sunday Times

    4 Star Rating A haunting portrait of loss and loneliness, exquisitely acted throughout and led by a riveting performance by Manville. - Financial Times

    4 Star Rating Leigh makes you laugh and laugh until you cry - Time Out

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  • Info

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    Designer Alison Chitty, Lighting Designer Paul Pyant, Music Gary Yershon, Sound Designer John Leonard

    Performance Times

    Tuesday – Wednesday: 7.30pm
    Thursday – Saturday: 8.00pm
    Matinees: Wednesday & Saturday 2.30pm

    Prices

    £17.50 - £33.50

    Running Time: 2 hours with no interval

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