Pride and Prejudice
Adapted by Simon Read. Based on the novel by Jane Austen.
Pride and Prejudice is the most famous love story our country has ever produced. In Georgian England, men had property whilst women had smelling salts and piano lessons. At that time women had no legal status. Just as children, they were the property of fathers until marriage when that ownership passed to their husbands. Women could not own or rent property, they could not vote or have a bank account.
With this backdrop, the Bennet daughter’s prospects are not rosy. Without financial independence they have few if any choices. Women sold themselves for a roof over their heads. How could such an arrangement have a happy outcome and yet Jane Austen wrote Pride and Prejudice as a romantic comedy.
The histrionic attempts at match-making by Mrs Bennet and her daughters are undeniably funny but why is it that this back drop of repression still holds our interest today? Is it because Elizabeth Bennet’s and Mr Darcy’s passion is reliant on the restrictions of Regency culture, their passion created by its repression? Or is it that love flourishes no matter how awful the situation in which people find themselves and we do so cherish a love story against all the odds!
Simon Reade’s adaptation for the stage looks with affection at the wit and romance of Jane Austen’s most famous literary romance. An ingenious set and a large cast led by Imogen Willetts, James Slacke, Gini Comyns and Mike Poole will bring you into the enchanting and very funny world of Jane Austen.
A Stables Theatre Production directed by Carol Hunt.
Austen’s Women
From the creators of Jane Eyre: An Autobiography, Christmas Gothic, Dalloway, I, Elizabeth, Female Gothic and The Unremarkable Death of Marilyn Monroe…
Thirteen of Jane Austen’s heroines come to life in this bold revisiting of some of literature’s most celebrated works. In this much-loved Edinburgh sell-out hit, using only Austen’s words, Rebecca Vaughan (Jane Eyre: An Autobiography, Dalloway, I, Elizabeth, Christmas Gothic) becomes Emma Woodhouse, Lizzy Bennet, Mrs Norris, Miss Bates and nine other beautifully observed women in critical moments from Austen’s major novels (including Pride and Prejudice, Sense and Sensibility and Emma) and lesser known or unfinished works.
Directed by Olivier Award winner, Guy Masterson (Morecambe).
★★★★★ ’Truly extraordinary… one of the most exciting young performers on the British stage’ (British Theatre Guide)
★★★★★ ’A theatrical masterpiece… utterly faultless and vastly entertaining’ (Three Weeks)