Dear Lupin
New Era Players' production is absolutely superb.
A poignant dramatisation of letters to a wayward son
Dry humour in Roger Mortimer's correspondence to hedonist Charlie
New Era Players: Dear Lupin, at New Era Theatre, Wash Common, until Saturday, September 16
Roger Mortimer was a renowned horseracing correspondent for the Sunday Times. He lived with his family at Budds Farm, Burghclere, before moving to Kintbury. His letters to his wayward son Charlie, affectionately known as Lupin, and his replies form a fascinating insight into their relationship and were published in a book, Dear Lupin, and adapted into a very humorous and poignant stage play by Michael Simkins.
New Era Players’ production is absolutely superb. It’s set in the attic of Mortimer’s house after his death when Charlie finds a shoebox containing a hundred or so letters from his father.
The cast are exceedingly impressive. Peter Hendrickx embraces the character of Mortimer with vigour and a sardonic wit as he tries to keep his son on the straight-and-narrow over three decades. He also plays the key figures that Charlie meets during his life, with beautifully-created cameo characters. These include Montgomery, a job centre official, a camp auctioneer, an army drill sergeant and even a Soho prostitute.
Samuel Prentice deftly plays the part of Charlie. His life is filled with catastrophe, from his sacking from Eton to getting caught poaching in Windsor Great Park. His holiday adventure in Greece is greeted with dismay by his father, who tells him “Don’t get diarrhoea out there. If nothing else it’s not an easy word to spell”.
Lupin follows a hedonistic lifestyle of drinking, drugs and gay sex in a time when the Aids epidemic was wreaking havoc in the nation and he tests positive for HIV. His foray into joining the army, where he started as a raw squaddie, was a turning-point in his life, but he turned down an opportunity to become an officer, in a defiant gesture against his father.
After the interval, the play took on a darker tone, with Roger in poor health and admitted to Basingstoke hospital, with disastrous consequences. The scene towards the end when father and son said their goodbyes and were reconciled was most moving.
Astutely directed by Margaret Rigby and Vikki Goldsmith, this was a most enjoyable production and is highly recommended. The run continues until Saturday.
Robin Strapp
© 2017 Newbury Weekly News
Cast
Charles Mortimer – Sam Prentice
Roger Mortimer – Peter Hendrickx
Crew
Director – Margaret Rigby & Vikki Goldsmith
Stage Manager – Graham Salter
Technical Director – John Cordery
Lighting / Sound – John Cordery / Crispin Bishop
Prompt – Margaret Rigby & Vikki Goldsmith
Set Construction – Nigel Winter
Costumes – Lisa Harrington / Maddy Winter
Design & Props – Jane Read
Keyboard – Daphne George
Front of House – Vikki Goldsmith
Publicity – Graham Salter / Jane Read
Box Office – Stephen Bennett
Producer – Lisa Harrington
Programme – Editor Webb
The New Era September production is a stage adaptation of the bestselling book Dear Lupin, the witty and touching collection of letters written by the Sunday Times racing correspondent, Roger Mortimer, to his son, Charlie, a ‘middle class spiv’.
Dear Lupin covers nearly twenty-five years of family life in the Newbury area. Audiences are treated to entertaining re-enactments of Charlie’s dubious journey through youth and adulthood in the 60s and 70s – one that was characterised by relentless, but futile attempts to achieve financial success as well as parental satisfaction. Alongside this amusing tale of transgressions we learn about his despairing but doting father, who unfailingly offers parental wisdom and support, despite the fact that his own life is neither smooth running nor stable.
Margaret Rigby and Vikki Goldsmith direct this charming, on the nose comedy.
A poignant dramatisation of letters to a wayward son
Dry humour in Roger Mortimer's correspondence to hedonist Charlie
New Era Players: Dear Lupin, at New Era Theatre, Wash Common, until Saturday, September 16
Roger Mortimer was a renowned horseracing correspondent for the Sunday Times. He lived with his family at Budds Farm, Burghclere, before moving to Kintbury. His letters to his wayward son Charlie, affectionately known as Lupin, and his replies form a fascinating insight into their relationship and were published in a book, Dear Lupin, and adapted into a very humorous and poignant stage play by Michael Simkins.
New Era Players’ production is absolutely superb. It’s set in the attic of Mortimer’s house after his death when Charlie finds a shoebox containing a hundred or so letters from his father.
The cast are exceedingly impressive. Peter Hendrickx embraces the character of Mortimer with vigour and a sardonic wit as he tries to keep his son on the straight-and-narrow over three decades. He also plays the key figures that Charlie meets during his life, with beautifully-created cameo characters. These include Montgomery, a job centre official, a camp auctioneer, an army drill sergeant and even a Soho prostitute.
Samuel Prentice deftly plays the part of Charlie. His life is filled with catastrophe, from his sacking from Eton to getting caught poaching in Windsor Great Park. His holiday adventure in Greece is greeted with dismay by his father, who tells him “Don’t get diarrhoea out there. If nothing else it’s not an easy word to spell”.
Lupin follows a hedonistic lifestyle of drinking, drugs and gay sex in a time when the Aids epidemic was wreaking havoc in the nation and he tests positive for HIV. His foray into joining the army, where he started as a raw squaddie, was a turning-point in his life, but he turned down an opportunity to become an officer, in a defiant gesture against his father.
After the interval, the play took on a darker tone, with Roger in poor health and admitted to Basingstoke hospital, with disastrous consequences. The scene towards the end when father and son said their goodbyes and were reconciled was most moving.
Astutely directed by Margaret Rigby and Vikki Goldsmith, this was a most enjoyable production and is highly recommended. The run continues until Saturday.
Robin Strapp
© 2017 Newbury Weekly News
Cast
Charles Mortimer – Sam Prentice
Roger Mortimer – Peter Hendrickx
Crew
Director – Margaret Rigby & Vikki Goldsmith
Stage Manager – Graham Salter
Technical Director – John Cordery
Lighting / Sound – John Cordery / Crispin Bishop
Prompt – Margaret Rigby & Vikki Goldsmith
Set Construction – Nigel Winter
Costumes – Lisa Harrington / Maddy Winter
Design & Props – Jane Read
Keyboard – Daphne George
Front of House – Vikki Goldsmith
Publicity – Graham Salter / Jane Read
Box Office – Stephen Bennett
Producer – Lisa Harrington
Programme – Editor Webb
The New Era September production is a stage adaptation of the bestselling book Dear Lupin, the witty and touching collection of letters written by the Sunday Times racing correspondent, Roger Mortimer, to his son, Charlie, a ‘middle class spiv’.
Dear Lupin covers nearly twenty-five years of family life in the Newbury area. Audiences are treated to entertaining re-enactments of Charlie’s dubious journey through youth and adulthood in the 60s and 70s – one that was characterised by relentless, but futile attempts to achieve financial success as well as parental satisfaction. Alongside this amusing tale of transgressions we learn about his despairing but doting father, who unfailingly offers parental wisdom and support, despite the fact that his own life is neither smooth running nor stable.
Margaret Rigby and Vikki Goldsmith direct this charming, on the nose comedy.