Park Theatre hosts Emanuele Aldrovandi’s Sorry We Didn’t Die at Sea

Park Theatre will host the first translation of Sorry We Didn’t Die at Sea, Italian playwright Emanuele Aldrovandi’s satirical, absurdist play about Europe’s migration crisis. 

Set in a not-too-distant future, the continent’s economies have collapsed and three travellers find that the tables have turned as they are forced to flee the very countries which had once closed their borders to migrants. Placing their lives at the mercy of a mysterious people-smuggler, they embark on a journey in a claustrophobic shipping container in the hopes of a better life. 

The cast will feature Yasmine Haller (Comédie-Française), Felix Garcia Guyer (Lift), Will Bishop (Entropy) and Marco Young (Another America). Aldrovandi’s play is translated by Marco Young and directed by Daniel Emery.

Aldrovandi is an Italian playwright with multiple awards in his home country. His plays have been translated, performed and published in English, German, French, Spanish, Polish, Slovenian, Czech, Catalan and Arabic, and the plays he has translated into Italian include Trainspotting, The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time and The Laramie Project.

The production comes from Riva Theatre and The Playwright’s Laboratory in association with Park Theatre.

Sorry We Didn’t Die at Sea will run at Park Theatre’s Park90 from September 13-30, 2023.

Park Theatre uncovers rugby show Bones

Park Theatre will play host to Bones, a show that uses rugby to explore mental health, toxic masculinity and gender stereotyping.

Written by Lewis Aaron Wood and directed by Daniel Blake in partnership with rugby mental health charity LooseHeadz, it tells the story of a rugby player on the brink of a professional career, but struggling in a way he can’t seem to fix. The show examines the toll pressure can take on mental health and questions why it isn’t treated with the same concern as a physical injury, when the effects can be just as serious.

Ed is an up-and-coming amateur rugby player being scouted by professional teams. Pressure’s mounting as his team qualifies for the Semi Finals of the regional cup, but his head isn’t in the game. Ed feels the full weight of expectation and hope, and it’s impacting him in ways he could have never imagined.

From production company Refine, local rugby clubs will also be able to stream the production during the summer off-season to bring players together to promote, prevent and raise awareness of mental health within the sports community. This filmed performance will be captured at Windsor RFU, on the pitch.

The cast includes Ronan Cullen, Samuel Holt, James Mackay and Ainsley Fannen. The artistic director is Aaron Templeman.

Bones will play at Park 90, Park Theatre, from July 5–22.

Park Theatre to host world premiere of The Garden of Words

Park Theatre will host the world premiere of The Garden of Words , the first stage adaptation of Makoto Shinkai’s Anime and novel, ahead of its Japanese opening later this year.

The Garden of Words is described as a story of what it is to feel alone in the biggest metropolis in the world. Whilst seeking solace in a rainy Japanese garden, an out-of-step woman and an offbeat teenager meet by chance. Takao and Yukari are escaping; when they find each other, the social misfits develop an unlikely bond over classical poetry, shoemaking, bad cooking and a shared sense of loneliness.

But what at first seems to be a simple and poetic story of connection begins to cloud. Can an inter-generational friendship can genuinely exist, regardless of age and position?

Performed in English with occasional Japanese, The Garden of Words is an Anglo-Japanese collaboration from the UK’s Whole Hog Theatre, creators of the world’s first stage adaptation of Hayao Miyazaki film Princess Mononoke, and Tokyo’s Anime stage production specialists Nelke Planning (Attack on Titan, Naruto, Sailor Moon).

Originally by Shinkai, it is adapted by Susan Momoko Hingley and Alexandra Rutter. It is directed by Rutter and produced by Shuang Teng.

The original music is by Mark Choi, set and costume design by Cindy Lin, puppets design by Mikayla Teodoro, lighting design by Rajiv Pattani, sound design by Nicola T Chang and projection design by Kenichi Arakaki. 

The cast features Hiroki Berrecloth, Aki Nakagawa, James Bradwell, Mark Takeshi Ota, Arina Ii, Shoko Ito and Iniki Mariano.

Following its UK run, from August 10 – September 9, the show will have its Japanese premiere in Tokyo in November.

Rutter said: “After a wait of more than three years, we could not be more delighted to finally be opening the doors to the garden. We are truly honoured to bring the world-class, complex and beautiful work of Makoto Shinkai to London.

“Following an unimaginable period of global isolation, the world is rightly questioning the status-quo on what, with whom and how we tell stories. Shinkai’s work speaks to this on a deep level. In an increasingly loud and digitalised world, his meticulously crafted visual storytelling, juxtaposed with complex characters struggling for human connection, is all the more poignant.

“It is a privilege to stage this authentic Tokyo tale that goes beyond the cultural zeitgeist of Japan, and we hope to be part of a reimagining of anime in popular imagination that encourages both traditional and non-traditional audiences. Our thanks to our Tokyo partner of almost 10 years, Nelke Planning, and our amazing female-led team of Japanese, British East Asian and British artists’. We are no doubt at the crest of a wave of Japanese stories on stage so there has never been a more exciting time for Anglo-Japanese collaboration. We are very excited to share this with you all.”