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Details

The Sugar House archiveNarelle is Sydney born and bred, but lately she's lost her sense of belonging. The city changes all the time, places are torn down and with them go her certainties. She finds herself drawn back to Pyrmont, formerly the working-class industrial heartland of the city, but now newly gentrified as 19th century factories become shiny apartment blocks with million-dollar views of Sydney Harbour. But it remains her family's bedrock, and the home of her extraordinary grandmother June. As she keeps going over the forces that formed her - the last man hanged in Australia, the mistakes that changed lives, her mother's divorce, her grandfather's decline - she tries to make sense of what she, her city, and her country have become. And what has been lost along the way. Focusing on three generations of remarkable women, The Sugar House is a deeply moving family drama that distils the conflict of how we are raised against what we choose, and how the hope of social transformation as we move forward to embrace the future sometimes means the irretrievable loss of what built us.

Creatives/Company

Author: Alana Valentine

What's On By Year ...

Archive listings for The Sugar House (2021)

Work type: Play.

T0276911585

European Premiere.Presented byA Million Freds (in association with Neil McPherson for the Finborough Theatre). Director Tom Brennan. Design Justin Nardella. Costume Justin Nardella. Lighting Sherry Coenen. Sound Ellie Showering. Director Lucy Casson (casting). Performer Lea Dube (Jenny / Prin). Performer Adam Fitzgerald (Ollie McCreadie / Zee). Performer Jessica Zerlina Leafe (Narelle McCreadie). Performer Fiona Skinner (Margo McCreadie). Performer Patrick Toomey (Sidney McCreadie / Others). Performer Janine Ulfane (June McCreadie).
26 Oct 21 to 20 Nov 21Finborough, Inner London :: V199
listing details L1406599881

Reviews

No UKTW or User reviews available.
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CORONAVIRUS: All venues in the UK were shut down on March 16, 2020, and the restrictions were finally lifted on July 19, 2021. It is important to mention that the UK Theatre Web archive listings (iUKTDb) from March 2020 to July 2021 might not be accurate due to the lack of information regarding rescheduled and cancelled shows.

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