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Stage

Roger Allam delivers a stunning performance [as John Christie] – killingly funny and achingly sad.

‘The Moderate Soprano’ review from The Independent

  • 2020 - Now
    • Frank and Percy (2023)
      © Jack Merriman, 2023

      Theatres

      Theatre Royal Windsor and Theatre Royal Bath

      Summary

      Frank and Percy is a poignant and witty take on the unexpected relationship that blossoms between two men. Devoted to their canine companions, they believe that human connection is far more temperamental, but as their dogs play in the park, can Frank, a widowed schoolteacher and Percy, a somewhat radical elder statesman, find the time for new infatuation, or should they just let sleeping dogs lie?

      Cast

      • Roger Allam – Frank
      • Sir Ian McKellen – Percy

      Creative team

      • Writer: Ben Weatherill
      • Director: Sean Mathias

      Production info

      Runs from 9 June until 22 July, 2023 in Theatre Royal Windsor, and from 25 July until 5 August, 2023 in Theatre Royal Bath.

      Tickets for Theatre Royal Windsor || Tickets for Theatre Royal Bath || get the script || pictures || interviews || reviews

    • Uncle Vanya (2020)

      Theatre

      Harold Pinter, London

      Summary

      In the heat of summer, Sonya and her Uncle Vanya while away their days on a crumbling estate deep in the countryside, visited occasionally only by the local doctor Astrov.

      However, when Sonya’s father Professor Serebryakov suddenly returns with his restless, alluring, new wife Yelena declaring his intention to sell the house, the polite facades crumble and long repressed feelings start to emerge with devastating consequences.

      Olivier Award-winner Conor McPherson’s new adaptation of Anton Chekhov’s masterpiece, Uncle Vanya, is a portrayal of life at the turn of the 20th century, full of tumultuous frustration, dark humour and hidden passions.

      Cast

      • Roger Allam – Serebryakov
      • Toby Jones – Vanya
      • Richard Armitage – Astrov
      • Rosalind Eleazar – Yelena
      • Aimee Lou Wood – Sonya
      • Anna Calder Marshall – Nana
      • Dearbhla Molloy – Grandmaman
      • Peter Wight – Telegin

      Creative team

      • Writer: Anton Checkov
      • Adaptor: Conor McPherson
      • Director: Ian Rickson
      • Designer: Rae Smith
      • Lighting: Bruno Poet
      • Composer: Stephen Warbeck
      • Sound: Ian Dickinson
      • Movement: Imogen Knight

      Production info

      When London went into lockdown and theatres were forced to close, Uncle Vanya was in the final weeks of its sold-out run in the West End.

      As the live production will not be able to return, a film version of the production was recorded in August 2020. Ciarán Hinds, who was unable to return due to conflicting schedules, is replaced by Roger Allam.

      Uncle Vanya will be shown in cinemas ahead of broadcast on the BBC and PBS.

      official website || get tickets || DVD / Blu-ray || gallery

    • A Number (2020)
      Colin Morgan and Roger Allam in A Number © Johan Persson, 2020
      © Johan Persson

      Theatre

      Bridge Theatre, London

      Summary

      How might a son feel to discover that he is only one of a number of identical copies? What happens when a father is confronted by the results of an outrageous genetic experiment?

      A Number won the 2002 Evening Standard Award for Best Play. It addresses the subject of human cloning and identity, especially nature versus nurture. The story, set in the near future, is structured around the conflict between a father and his sons.

      Cast

      • Roger Allam – Salter
      • Colin Morgan – Bernard 1, Bernard 2, and Michael Black

      Creative team

      • Writer: Caryl Churchill
      • Director: Polly Findlay
      • Set and costume designer: Lizzie Clachan
      • Composer: Marc Tritschler

      Production info

      Runs from February 14 until March 14, 2020.

      tickets and info || photography || video : rehearsal interview || video: plot interview || Evening Standard interview

  • 2016 - 2020
    • Rutherford and Son (2019)

      Roger Allam in Rutherford and Son, 2019

      Theatre

      Lyttelton Theater, London

      Summary

      Rutherford is the owner of a glass factory, an oppressive patriarch who, blind to his children’s hopes, has bullied and undermined them without questioning that one day they will take over the business.

      Githa Sowerby’s astonishing play was inspired by her own experience of growing up in a family-run factory in Gateshead. Writing in 1912, when female voices were seldom heard on British stages, she now claims her place alongside Ibsen and Bernard Shaw with this searing depiction of class, gender and generational warfare.

      Cast

      • Roger Allam – John Rutherford
      • Justine Mitchell – Mary Rutherford

      Creative team

      • Writer: Githa Sowerby
      • Director: Polly Findlay
      • Set and costume designer: Lizzie Clachan
      • Sound design: Paul Arditti

      Production info

      Runs from May 16 until June 19, 2019.
      Tickets and info

      watch ‘about the play’ || watch ‘who was Githa Sowerby’ || in conversation with Roger Allam || gallery

    • The Moderate Soprano (2018)

      Theatre

      Nancy Carroll and Roger Allam in The Moderate Soprano at the Duke of York's Theatre © Johan Perrson 2018
      © Johan Persson

      Duke of York Theatre, London

      Summary

      David Hare’s play about the love story at the heart of the foundation of Glyndebourne transfers from its sold-out run at Hampstead Theatre to the West End. In 1934 John Christie, his wife Audrey Mildmay, and three refugees from Nazi Germany founded the annual Glyndebourne Festival Opera. Christie’s admiration for the works of Wagner lead to an ambitious project: building an opera house on his Sussex estate. Passion alone may not be enough to see it through; when a famous violinist is accidentally fogged in overnight, Christie first hears word of a group of refugees – Carl Ebert, Fritz Busch and Rudolf Bing, who might be able to deliver Christie’s vision of the sublime… assuming, of course, that they’re willing to cast his wife in the lead.

      Cast

      • Roger Allam –  John Christie
      • Nancy Carroll – Audrey Mildmay
      • Paul Jesson – Dr Fritz Busch
      • Anthony Calf – Professor Carl Ebert
      • Jacob Fortune-Lloyd – Rudolf Bing
      • Jade Williams – Jane Smith

      Creative team

      • Writer: David Hare
      • Director: Jeremy Herrin
      • Set and costume designer: Bob Crowley

      Production info

      The play runs from 6 April until 30 June 2018. For more information and tickets, please visit ATG Tickets. tickets ||official website || reviews from 2015 || In Tune interview with Nancy Carroll and Roger Allam || Telegraph interview: “Calling opera elitist is absurd” || Glyndebourne website || news article || gallery: stage (2011 – now)

    • Whither Would You Go? (2017)

      Whither Would You Go? is a one-night-only, with a never-to-be-repeated company of actors, at the The Harold Pinter Theatre in London.

      Inspired by Shakespeare’s ‘refugee’ speech from The Book Of Sir Thomas More, written as a plea for tolerance during the London riots of May 1517, Whither Would You Go? pairs scenes from Shakespeare with genuine refugee stories from around the world to raise urgently needed funds for refugees worldwide. The show incorporates live theatre, video stories, projection and an original score. There is also a special guest performance by actor Jay Abdo, a refugee of his native Syria.

      Cast

      • Roger Allam
      • Jay Abdo
      • Kevin Bishop
      • Zoe Boyle
      • Bertie Carvel
      • Lee Evans
      • Martin Freeman
      • Kobna Holdbrook-Smith
      • Celia Imrie
      • Eleanor Matsuura
      • Wunmi Mosaku
      • James Norton
      • Jack Whitehall
      • Olivia Williams

      Creative team

      • Writer: Ella Smith & Emma West
      • Director: Jamie Lloyd

      All proceeds of the play went to the UN Refugee Agency, UNHCR. You can help refugees by donating on the website or by texting UNHCR to 70025 to donate £10.

      official website || donate || gallery: stage (2016 – now)

    • Limehouse (2017)

      Paul Chahidi, Roger Allam, Debra Gillett and Tom Goodman-Hill © Jack Sain and Donmar Warehouse, 2017

      image  © Jack Sain and Donmar Warehouse

      Theatre

      Donmar Warehouse, eondon

      Summary

      One Sunday morning, four prominent Labour politicians – Bill Rodgers, Shirley Williams, Roy Jenkins and David Owen – gather in private at Owen’s home in Limehouse, east London.  They are desperate to find a political alternative.  Should they split their party, divide their loyalties, and risk betraying everything they believe in? Would they be starting afresh, or destroying forever the tradition that nurtured them?

      Cast

      • Roger Allam – Roy Jenkins
      • Debra Gillett – Shirley Williams
      • Nathalie Armin – Debbie Owen
      • Paul Chahidi – Bill Rodgers
      • Tom Goodman-Hill – David Owen

      Creative team

      • Writer: Steve Waters
      • Director: Polly Findlay
      • Designer: Alex Eales
      • Lighting: Jon Clark
      • Sound: Emma Laxton
      • Composer: Rupert Cross

      Production info

      Limehouse runs from 2 March until 15 April 2017. For more information and tickets, please visit the Donmar Warehouse. more info || reviews || behind-the-scenes: the men of Limehouse warm up || gallery: stage (2016 – now)

    • Shakespeare Live! From the RSC (2016)
      King Learimage © The Royal Shakespeare Company and BBC2

      Theatre

      Royal Shakespeare Theatre, Stratford-upon-Avon

      Summary

      William Shakespeare died on 23 April 1616; the Royal Shakespeare Company commemorates the day with their tribute Shakespeare Live! From the RSC. The live show included scenes from the Bard’s greatest plays performed by a cast of household names, as well as music and dance inspired by his work. Roger Allam plays king Lear in act III, scene 2 of the tragedy. Lear is on the heath during a symbolic storm and the ageing king curses the weather and his daughters, while lamenting his frailty. With: Sanjeev Bhaskar, Benedict Cumberbatch, Judi Dench, Ann Marie Duff, Pappa Essiedu, Alex Gilbreth, Henry Goodman, Rufus Hound, John Lithgow, Nick Lumley, Ian McKellen, Tim Minchin, Helen Mirren, Al Murray, Rory Kinnear, Pippa Nixon, David Suchet, Meera Syal, Harriet Walter, Alex Waltmann, Rufus Wainwright, and the Prince of Wales. Presented by Catherine Tate and David Tennant. Directed by Gregory Doran.

      Reviews

      …it was a pleasure to hear Roger Allam as Lear. – The Guardian And it’s hard to quarrel with Roger Allam’s rich, impassioned “Blow you winds” from Lear. – The Sydney Morning Herald The show brilliantly balanced comedy and darkness. As the evening wore on, darker themes from Shakespeare’s tragedies were explored. Ian McKellen and Roger Allam gave intense and enthralling performances of extracts (as Sir Thomas More and King Lear respectively), with their iconic voices rippling through the theatre. – Redbrick BBC iPlayer || buy the DVD ||  full text || gallery: stage (2016 – now)

    • Shakespeare Solos (2016)

      Roger Allam as King Lear for Shakespeare Solos

      image © The Guardian

      Summary

      To mark the 400th anniversary of Shakespeare’s death, The Guardian asked leading actors to perform key speeches from his plays. Roger Allam reads the part of king Lear in act III, scene 2 of the tragedy. Lear is on the heath during a symbolic storm and the ageing king curses the weather and his daughters, while lamenting his frailty.

      Michael Billington said:

      ‘The stage gives you the total picture: the camera can process thought. Most actors playing King Lear have to shout themselves hoarse to compete with a battery of sound-effects during the storm scene. Roger Allam, in this version, is up against nothing more than a wisp of dry-ice and allows the words to do the work: there is an angry defiance about Allam’s Lear so that when he cries: “Spit, fire! Spout, rain!” the plosive consonants evoke the chaos of nature. I can’t wait to see Allam play the king on stage.’ (source) watch || more about Shakespeare Solos || full text

  • 2011 - 2015
    • The Moderate Soprano (2015)

      Nancy Carroll and Roger Allam in The Moderate Soprano © Hampstead Theatre / Manuel Harlan, 2015

      image © Manuel Harlan

      Theatre

      Hampstead Theatre, London

      Summary

      After last autumn’s Seminar, Roger Allam returns to Hampstead Theatre to play John Christie in David Hare’s new play, The Moderate Soprano. In 1934 John Christie, his wife and three refugees from Nazi Germany, founded the annual Glyndebourne Festival Opera. Christie’s admiration for the works of Wagner lead to an ambitious project: building an opera house on his Sussex estate. Passion alone may not be enough to see it through; when a famous violinist is accidentally fogged in overnight, Christie first hears word of a group of refugees – Carl Ebert, Fritz Busch and Rudolf Bing, who might be able to deliver Christie’s vision of the sublime… assuming, of course, that they’re willing to cast his wife, the opera singer Audrey Mildmay, in the lead.

      Cast

      • Roger Allam –  John Christie
      • Nancy Carroll – Audrey Mildmay
      • Paul Jesson – Dr Fritz Busch
      • Nick Sampson – Professor Carl Ebert
      • George Taylor – Rudolf Bing

      Creative team

      Writer: David Hare Director: Jeremy Herrin Designer: Rae Smith Music: Paul Englishby Lighting: James Farncombe Sound: Tom Gibbons

      Production info

      The play runs from 23 October until 28 November 2015. For more information and tickets, please visit the websites of Hampstead Theatre and Glyndebourne. reviews || In Tune interview with Nancy Carroll and Roger Allam || Telegraph interview: “Calling opera elitist is absurd” || Hampstead Theatre || Glyndebourne website || news article || gallery: stage (2011 – now)

    • Les Misérables: 30th Anniversary (2015)
      Singing 'One Day More' at the 30th anniversary of Les Misérables © Daniel Leal-Olivas, 2015 Image © Daniel Leal-Olivas

      Summary

      When asked in 1986 how long the show would last, Frances Ruffelle replied “At least another thirty years.” Three decades later, Les Misérables is the world’s longest running musical. On the 8th of October, the date of the first performance, members of the original company joined the current cast at the special charity gala performance at the Queen’s Theatre. All profit went in aid of the Syria Children’s Appeal by Save the Children Fund. The special finale can be watched online exclusively for a limited time from 23 October by donating at JustGiving.com to Save the Children Syria Children’s Appeal.

      Cast

      • Peter Lockyer – Jean Valjean
      • Jeremy Secomb – Javert
      • Rachelle Ann Go – Fantine
      • Carrie Hope Fletcher – Éponine
      • Phil Daniels – Thénardier
      • Katy Secombe – Madame Thénardier
      • Rob Houchen – Marius
      • Zoë Doano – Cosette
      • Bradley Jaden – Enjolras

      With: Roger Allam, Colm Wilkinson, Frances Ruffelle and Rebecca Caine (Original London Cast) as well as previous Valjeans John Owen-Jones and Gerónimo Rauch. Also present were John Caird, Trevor Nunn and Cameron Macintosh.

      • Author: Victor Hugo
      • Playwright: Alain Boublil
      • Music by: Claude-Michel Schonberg
      • Director: Cameron Mackintosh

      Jeremy Secomb (2015 Javert)’s favourite moment:

      “Roger Allam came up on stage and he pointed to me and said “You, come over here.” I was like, oh, right. That’s pretty cool!” Source Donate || Official website of Les Mis || gallery: stage (2011 – now)
    • T. S. Eliot's Four Quartets (2015 and 2016)
      Roger Allam Angela Hewitt image © Angela Hewitt (@HewittJSB)

      Theatre

      Sam Wanamaker Playhouse, London (2015) River house Barn, Surrey (2016)

      Summary

      First published as a collection in 1943, Four Quartets brought together four of Eliot’s timeless and meditative poems: Burnt NortonEast CokerThe Dry Salvages and Little Gidding. Roger Allam gave an intimate reading of the entire work, around which internationally renowned pianist Angela Hewitt performed the spiritual music of Bach and Messiaen. Part of a series of performances from Angela Hewitt at the Wanamaker Playhouse. A repeat performance was staged the following year at the River house Barn. gallery (stage: 2011 – now) || our review || Angela Hewitt’s website || ‘Concerts by Candlelight’ trailer

    • Winter's Tales: D.H. Lawrence (2014)

      Winter's Tales

       image © Richard Hubert Smith

      Theatre

      Sam Wanamaker Playhouse, London

      Summary

      The Winter’s Tales series involved a host of famous names reading works of classic literature. The storytelling was in each case paired with music, each performance including a different musician. Roger Allam’s ‘Winter Tales’ were three short stories from D.H Lawrence: The Christening, Second Best and Odour of Chrysanthemums. He was joined on stage by accordionist Martynas Levickis.

      Performed by

      • Roger Allam – Reader
      • Martynas Levickis – Accordionist

      gallery: stage (2011 – now)|| our review || ‘The Public Review‘ || website || D.H Lawrence stories: The Christening, Second Best and Odour of Chrysanthemums

    • Seminar (2014)

      tumblr_na7989Of6i1txj6byo2_1280

      image © Hampstead Theatre

      Theatre

      Hampstead Theatre, London

      Summary

      Four aspiring young writers have paid big bucks to seek wisdom at the feet of the fearsome editor Leonard, once a celebrated novelist, now a cantankerous editor, teacher and grandstanding chronicler of third-world war zones. Under Leonard’s recklessly brilliant but brutally unorthodox tuition, competition for his approval is intense and the students clash. Alliances are made and broken, tactical schemes are hatched – how far are they willing to go to make it to the top?

      Cast

      • Roger Allam – Leonard
      • Bryan Dick – Martin
      • Charity Wakefield – Kate
      • Oliver Hembrough – Douglas
      • Rebecca Grant – Izzy

      Creative team

      • Writer: Theresa Rebeck
      • Director: Terry Johnson
      • Designer: Lez Brotherston
      • Lighting: Howard Harrison
      • Sound: John Leonard
      • Composer: Colin Towns

      reviews || our review || twitter Q&A || website || gallery: stage (2011 – now)

    • Walton's Façade (2014)
      waltonsfacade
      image © Angela Hewitt (@HewittJSB Twitter)

      Venue

      Castle of the Knights of Malta, Magione (Italy)

      Summary

      As part of the Trasimeno Music Festival, Roger Allam featured as a reciter along with Dame Felicity Lott in a performance of Walton’s Façade – a series of poems by Edith Sitwell accompanied by William Walton’s instrumental accompaniment.

      Performed by

      • Roger Allam – Reciter
      • Dame Felicity Lott – Soprano and reciter
      • Angela Hewitt – Piano
      • Jeffrey Tate – Conductor
      • Soloists of the Aurora Orchestra

      gallery: stage (2011-now) || more information about the venue and the festival || also: reading Sonnet 130

    • The Queen's Command (2014)
      thequeen'scommandRogerAllam1image © Shakespeare’s Globe

      Theatre

      The Sam Wanamaker Playhouse, London

      Summary

      Queen Elizabeth I played the virginals and wrote poetry as a relaxation from the trials of state business. The Queen’s Command transports us back in time and pays tribute to her through the music and poetry of the finest composers and poets of the golden age, as well as reviving reported conversations between the Queen and her contemporaries. Allam’s readings, often in character, brought these Elizabethan letters and poems to life with the audience leaning forward in their seats, hanging off his every word. The intimate setting of the Sam Wannamaker Playhouse proved an excellent choice, suiting the mood of the music and texts- often passionate and amusing- perfectly. It’s a shame this ran for just two nights.

      Performed by

      • Roger Allam – reader
      • Trevor Pinnock
      • Phantasm
      • Dame Emma Kirkby
      • Stuart Jackson

      review || trailer || website || gallery: stage (2011 – now)

    • The National Theatre Live: 50 Years on Stage (2013)

      nt50

       screenshot © National Theatre

      Theatre

      National Theatre, London

      Summary

      One hundred actors celebrate the National Theatre’s 50th birthday by performing snippets from various plays. Amongst them is Roger Allam, performing a monologue from the play Copenhagen by Michael Frayn. In the play, the spirit of the German physicist Werner Heisenberg –  Hitler’s nuclear scientist – meets the spirits of his Danish colleague Niels Bohr and his wife Margrethe. They discuss the idea of nuclear power and its control, the rationale behind building or not building an atomic bomb, the uncertainty of the past and the inevitability of the future, all in attempt to answer one question: “Why did he [Heisenberg] come to Copenhagen” in 1941? In this scene, Heisenberg tells about a journey to see his family near the end of World War II. As Heisenberg is already dead, the plot does not exist in time and space, allowing him to speak out loud as if to no one. He questions the responsibility and the morality in science, and only seems to realise the madness of the War once he’s labelled a deserter by a German soldier. His papers – signed by himself – do not grant him his freedom; instead in a stroke of genius he is able to buy it for a pack of cigarettes.

      our review || buy the DVD || website NT50 || gallery (2011 – now)

    • The Tempest (2013)
      © Marc Brenner
      image © Marc Brenner

      Theatre

      Shakespeare’s Globe, London

      Summary

      Prospero, Duke of Milan, usurped and exiled by his own brother, holds sway over an enchanted island. He is comforted by his daughter Miranda and served by his spirit Ariel and his deformed slave Caliban. When Prospero raises a storm to wreck this perfidious brother and his confederates on the island, his long contemplated revenge at last seems within reach. Imbued with a spirit of magic and the supernatural, The Tempest is Shakespeare’s late great masterpiece of forgiveness, generosity and enlightenment.

      Cast

      • Roger Allam – Prospero
      • Jessie Buckley – Miranda
      • Colin Morgan – Ariel
      • James Garnon – Caliban
      • Joshua James – Ferdinand
      • Trevor Fox – Trinculo
      • Peter Hamilton Dyer – Alonso
      • Sam Cox – Stephano
      • Jason Baughan – Antonio
      • William Mannering – Sebastian
      • Matthew Raymond – Boatswain / Adrian
      • Sarah Sweeney – Iris
      • Amanda Wilkin – Ceres

      Creative team

      • Writer: William Shakespeare
      • Director: Jeremy Herrin
      • Designer: Max Jones
      • Composer: Stephen Warbeck

      gallery: stage (2011 – now) || reviews || buy the DVD || rent or buy on Globe Player || website

    • Uncle Vanya (2012)
      © Johan Persson
      image © Johan Persson

      Theatre

      The Minerva Theatre, Chichester

      Summary

      For years Vanya and his niece Sonya have worked tirelessly to keep the family’s dilapidated, remote estate from ruin. The return of Vanya’s brother-in-law Professor Serebryakov and his captivating second wife Yelena, and frequent visits from the charismatic Doctor Astrov, knock their lives off course as old loyalties and new loves conflict. When the Professor announces his plan to sell the estate, Vanya and Sonya are faced with an uncertain future and Vanya is provoked into a shocking act of violence. Funny and heartbreaking in turn as it moves seamlessly between humour and melancholy, Anton Chekov’s masterpiece lays bare his characters’ passions, hopes and desires with exceptional warmth and poignancy.

      Cast

      • Roger Allam – Vanya
      • Lara Pulver – Yelena
      • Dervla Kirwan – Sonya
      • Timothy West – Professor Serebryakov
      • Alexander Hanson – Astrov
      • Maggie Steed – Maria Vasilyevna
      • Maggie McCarthy – Marina
      • Anthony O’Donnell- Telegin

      Creative team

      • Writer: Anton Chekov
      • Translation by: Michael Frayn
      • Director: Jeremy Herrin
      • Designer: Peter McKintosh
      • Composer: Dario Marianelli

      gallery: stage (2011 – now) || reviews || pre-show talk || website

    • The Madness of the Extraordinary Plan (2011)
      madness03acc
      image © Manchester International Festival

      Theatre

      Bridgewater Hall, Manchester

      Summary

      A drama for three actors, supported by lighting and orchestral excerpts from Wagner’s Ring des Nibelungen. The central figure is that of Richard Wagner and the play dramatises the composer’s own letters, essays and conversations as well as wrtings about him by others.

      Allam’s character

      Richard Wagner

      Creative team

      • Writer: Gerard McBurney 
      • Director: Neil Bartlett

      gallery: stage (2011 – now) || reviews || website

  • 2006 - 2010
    • Les Misérables: 25th Anniversary Concert (2010)

      Les Miserables 25th

      Summary

      In 2010, Les Misérables celebrated its monumental  25th anniversary with a theatrical first – three different productions of the same musical staged at the same time in one city – the star-studded concerts at The O2, the acclaimed new 25th Anniversary Production (which completed its sell-out UK Tour at London’s Barbican Theatre) and the original production, which continues its record breaking run at the Queen’s Theatre, London. The O2 concert hosted a company of over 500 artists and musicians, the casts of the original production at the Queen’s Theatre, the New 25th Anniversary Production at the Barbican, London and members of the original 1985 London cast.

      Cast

      • Alfie Boe – Jean Valjean
      • Norm Lewis – Javert
      • Lea Salonga – Fantine
      • Samantha Barks – Éponine
      • Matt Lucas – Thénardier
      • Jenny Galloway – Madame Thénardier
      • Nick Jonas – Marius
      • Katie Hall – Cosette
      • Ramin Karimloo – Enjolras
      • Earl Carpenter – The Bishop
      • Robert Madge – Gavroche
      • Hadley Fraser – Grantaire

      With: Roger Allam, Colm Wilkinson, Frances Ruffelle, Alun Armstrong, Susan Jane Tanner, Michael Ball and Rebecca Caine (Original London Cast) For full cast & crew, please visit IMDb Review Roger Allam gets relatively little screen time for his appearance in ‘One Day More’ as Javert from the original London cast. Rather unfortunate, as he certainly hasn’t lost his voice! Readily available video recordings of Roger Allam as Javert are limited to his performance at the Olivier Awards in 1985, so to watch him – and the rest of the original cast – retake their famous roles is a real treat. gallery: stage (2006 – 2010) || buy the DVD || Les Misérables: Original London Cast || Olivier Awards 1985 ‘One Day More’

    • Henry IV (2010)
      henry008accimage © John Haynes

      Theatre

      Shakespeare’s Globe, London

      Summary

      Part I With his crown under threat from enemies both foreign and domestic, Henry IV prepares for war. As his father gets ready to defend his crown, Prince Hal is languishing in the taverns and brothels of London, revelling in the company of his friend, the notorious Sir John Falstaff. With the onset of war, Hal must confront his responsibilities to family and throne. Part II King Henry’s health is failing but he is uncertain Hal is a worthy heir. Meanwhile, Falstaff is sent to the countryside to recruit fresh troops, where he gleefully indulges in the business of lining his own pockets. As the King’s health continues to worsen, Hal must choose between duty and loyalty to an old friend in Shakespeare’s heartbreaking conclusion to this pair of plays.

      Cast

      • Roger Allam – Sir John Falstaff
      • Jamie Parker – Prince Hal
      • Paul Rider – Bardolph / Scroop
      • Danny Lee Wynter – Ned Poins
      • Oliver Cotton – King Henry IV
      • Joseph Timms – John of Lancaster
      • Sam Crane – Hotspur / Pistol
      • William Gaunt – Worcester / Shallow
      • Barbara Marten – Mistress Quickly
      • Lorna Stuart – Lady Percy
      • Patrick Brennan – Lord Chief Justice / Blunt / Sheriff
      • Jason Baughan – Westmoreland / Peto
      • Sean Kearns – Glendower / Bullcalf / Warwick
      • Phil Cheadle – Douglas / Davy / Lord Bardolph
      • Daon Broni – Mortimer / Hastings
      • James Lailey – Mowbray / Gadshill / Mouldy
      • Oliver Coopersmith – Clarence

      Creative team

      • Writer: William Shakespeare
      • Director: Dominic Dromgoole
      • Designer: Jonathan Fensome
      • Composer: Claire van Kampen

      Awards and nominations

      Roger Allam won the 2011 Best Actor Olivier Award for Henry IV. In 2017, Julian Curry followed up his book Shakespeare On Stage: Twelve Leading Actors on Twelve Key Roles with a second volume, in which Roger Allam discusses playing Falstaff. gallery: stage (2006 – 2010) || reviews || watch a scene || Olivier Award video || red carpet, highlights, 2012 nominations|| red carpet chat || audio interview || buy the DVDs || website || rent or own on Globe Player

    • La Cage aux Folles (2009)
      Roger Allam as Albin © broadwayworld image © Broadway World

      Theatre

      The Playhouse Theatre, London

      Summary

      Georges and his partner Albin run a St Tropez nightclub, ‘La Cage aux Folles’, where Albin stars as the dazzling Zaza alongside ‘Les Cagelles,’ a sparkling chorus consisting primarily of men in drag. Georges and Albin have lived an idyllic life together for many years. Together, they have raised Georges’s son, Jean-Michel (whose birth was the result of a casual liaison some twenty years before). In all the ways that matter, Albin is ‘Maman.’ This contented existence is about to be shattered, however: Jean-Michel has news. He’s engaged to Anne (the good part), whose father is head of the Tradition, Family and Morality Party, whose sworn aim is to close the local drag clubs (the very bad part). Anne’s parents want to meet their daughter’s future in-laws, including his real mother. Jean-Michel has described Georges as a retired diplomat, which could lead to trouble but he thinks he has a solution: Albin will absent himself for the visit – and all the furniture will be changed for something less spectacular. When he finds that he’s to be marginalised, Albin is deeply hurt. Has he not brought up Georges’ son, man and boy, and been a good mother? He quits the club in a thoroughly justified huff. Next morning, Georges finds Albin on the beach and suggests he attends the dinner dressed up as a macho ‘uncle Al’. Why not? What could possibly go wrong?

      Cast

      • Roger Allam – Albin (‘Zaza’)
      • Philip Quast – Georges
      • Abigail McKern – Mme. Renaud / Mme. Dindon
      • Stuart Neal – Jean-Michele
      • Tracie Bennett – Jacqueline
      • Iain Mitchell – M. Renaud / Edouard Dindon
      • Jason Pennycooke – Jacob
      • Adrian Der Gregorian – Francis
      • Alicia Davies – Anne

      Creative team

      • Music and lyrics: Jerry Herman
      • Basis: La Cage aux Folles by Jean Poiret

      Roger Allam said:

      “This is probably the best musical part that I’ve played.” (source) gallery: stage (2006 – 2010) || reviews || audio interview

    • God of Carnage (2009)
      goc003accimage © Clark Nobby

      Theatre

      UK tour

      Summary

      Set in the present-day France, God of Carnage  (originally Le Dieu du carnage) is the story of two married couples who meet for the first time shortly after their respective sons have a nasty schoolyard tangle. Michel and Veronique, whose son’s teeth were knocked out with a stick, invite Alain and Anette, whose son did the knocking, to their home to settle matters (such as who will pay for new teeth). But any attempt at having a civilized discussion about whose child is responsible for the fight, and how the parents may have influenced such destructive behavior, quickly devolves into finger-pointing, name-calling, stomping around and throwing things. And that’s before they break out the rum!

      Cast

      • Roger Allam- Michel Vallon
      • Veronique Vallon – Lia Williams
      • Richard E Grant – Alain Reille
      • Serena Evans – Anette Reille

      Creative team

      • Writer: Yasmina Reza

      Roger Allam said:

      “I’d seen the play in the West End and really liked it. I like this kind of material. It’s very unusual to be in a play with four very equally weighted parts (…)” (source)

      Awards and nominations

      The play won the 2009 Olivier Award for Best Comedy. gallery: stage (2006 – 2010) || reviews

    • Afterlife (2008)
      after002accimage © Geraint Lewis

      Theatre

      Lyttelton Theatre: The National Theatre, London

      Summary

      A man who has everything. Money, friends, a beautiful home. And then – pfft! It’s all vanished. Max Reinhardt, one the greatest impresarios of theatrical history, had a lifelong ambition– to dissolve the boundary between theatre and the world it portrays. Each year at the Salzburg Festival he directed the famous morality play, Everyman, about God sending Death to summon a representative of mankind for judgment. The victim he chooses is a man who, like Reinhardt, rejoices in his wealth and all the pleasures that money can buy. Then in 1938 Hitler declares his own day of reckoning and sends Death into Austria – whereupon Reinhardt, a Jew, is left as naked and vulnerable as Everyman himself. Michael Frayn’s Afterlife is the story of how Reinhardt achieves his great ambition; though in a way he can scarcely have foreseen.

      Cast

      • Roger Allam – Max Reinhardt
      • Abigail Cruttenden – Helen Thimig
      • Selina Griffiths – Gusti Adler
      • Peter Forbes – Rudolf ‘Katie’ Kommer
      • Glyn Grain – Franz
      • David Burke – Prince Archbishop of Salzburg
      • David Schofield – Friedrich Müller

      Creative team

      • Writer: Michael Frayn
      • Director: Michael Blakemore

      Roger Allam said:

      “There’s a sense in which he didn’t fully engage or even exist outside of theatre. Where he most fully lived was while he was rehearsing, or putting on a show, or thinking about putting on a show. It’s something I recognise, certainly. (…) There’s something about the odd, repetitious nature of it that I find hugely relaxing. All the problems of life are taken care of for that bit of time.” (source) gallery: stage (2006 – 2010) || reviews || watch a recording at the NT archive || audio interview

    • Boeing Boeing (2007)
      Boeing-Boeing - Curtain Call - 15th February 2007image © Nigel Norrington

      Theatre

      The Comedy Theatre, London

      Summary

      It’s the 1960s, and swinging bachelor architect Bernard couldn’t be happier: a flat in Paris a mere windsock away from Orly Airport, and three gorgeous stewardesses all engaged to him without knowing about each other. But Bernard’s perfect life gets bumpy when his friend Robert comes to stay and a new and speedier Boeing jet throws off all of his careful planning. Soon all three stewardesses are in town simultaneously, timid Robert is forgetting which lies to tell to whom, and catastrophe looms.

      Cast

      • Roger Allam – Bernard
      • Frances de la Tour – Bertha
      • Mark Rylance – Robert
      • Tamzin Outhwaite – Gloria
      • Daisy Beaumont – Gabriella
      • Michelle Gomez – Gretchen

      Creative team

      • Writer: Marc Camoletti

      gallery: stage (2006 – 2010) || reviews || watch a recording at the V and A theatre archive || interview

    • The Giant (2007)
      thegiant003accimage © Nigel Norrington

      Theatre

      Hampstead Theatre, London

      Summary

      A vast block of Carrara marble known as ‘Il Gigante’ becomes of the centre of conflict between two great artists, as Leonardo da Vinci and Michelangelo compete for the prestigious commission to carve a statue of David. Sir Antony Sher’s fascinating play, on the creation of one of the world’s great works of art, is a beguiling exploration of the link between creativity and sexual desire.

      Cast

      • Roger Allam – Leonardo da Vinci
      • John Light – Michelangelo
      • Simon Trinder – da Vinci’s muse
      • Stephen Noonan – Machiavelli
      • Stephen Hagan – Vito

      Creative team

      • Writer: Sir Antony Sher
      • Director: Gregory Doran
      • Designer: William Dudley

      gallery: stage (2006 – 2010) || reviews

    • Blackbird (2006)
      blackbird07accimage © Geraint Lewis

      Theatre

      Noël Coward Theatre, London

      Summary

      When Una was 12 she had a sexual relationship with 40-year old Ray. After 6 years in prison, he changed his name and moved, hoping to get on with his life and forget what is past. However, this is not a history that will be laid to rest so easily- years later, an adult Una finds his picture in a magazine and traces him to his workplace. Ray takes Una to the office break room, where the two engage in a long and difficult confrontation involving Una’s continuing struggles to understand and come to terms with the affair and her intensely conflicting emotions. These rocket back and forth between anger, curiosity, confusion, and even a persistent attachment to Ray, whom Una loved and believed loved her. The fearful, cornered Ray parries her demanding questions and descriptions of her feelings and experiences, all the while uncertain of her intentions.

      Cast

      • Roger Allam – Ray
      • Jodhi May – Una

      Creative team

      • Writer: David Harrower
      • Director: Peter Stein
      • Designer: Ferdinand Wögerbauer

      Roger Allam said:

      “[Peter Stein] worked very, very closely on the acting along with the physicality of the acting (…), and I’d never worked with such intensity on the physical aspect of a performance.” (source)

      Awards and nominations

      Blackbird won the 2006 Critics Awards for Theatre in Scotland for Best New Play and the 2007 Laurence Olivier Award for Best New Play. reviews || gallery: stage (2006 – 2010)

    • Pravda (2006)
      pravda004accimage © Geraint Lewis

      Theatre

      Chichester Festival Theatre, Chichester / Birmingham Repertory Theatre, Birmingham

      Summary

      With its title referencing the Russian Communist party newspaper of the same name, Pravda is a satirical play exploring the role of journalism in society. This modern Jonsonian comedy of menace took the theatre world by storm. It is about our western free press, which, as the authors point out, is about as free as the literal ‘Soviet Pravda’ of the title. Dominating the play is Murdoch-esque media mogul archetype Lambert Le Roux, a charming but totally unscrupulous South African newspaper magnate bent, it seems, on dominating England’s press as he has elsewhere in the world. As we see Le Roux accomplish his aims, we see also how the press is not the organ of truth we like to think it is. The dissemination of the truth is no longer its primary goal under the ‘Lambert Le Rouxs’ of our World. What is important now is what sells.

      Cast

      • Roger Allam – Lambert Le Roux
      • Michael Begley – Eaton Sylvester
      • Oliver Dimsdale – Andrew May
      • Zoe Waites – Rebecca Foley

      Creative team

      • Writer: David Hare and Howard Brenton
      • Director: Jonathan Church
      • Designer: Ruari Murchison

      Interesting note

      The play was first performed in 1985 and starred Sir Anthony Hopkins as Lambert Le Roux. reviews || gallery: stage (2006 – 2010)

  • 2001 - 2005
    • Aladdin (2005)

      © The Old Vic

      image © The Old Vic

      Theatre

      The Old Vic, London

      Summary

      The same as last year… but better. Widow Twankey is still a fashion icon, Aladdin is still love-struck (despite having regenerated into a different actor), and Dim is still… Dim, though now with a new ‘Frances Barber’ makeover. Most significantly, Abbanazar still doesn’t have his lamp, and he’s none too pleased about it.

      Cast

      • Roger Allam – Abbanazar
      • Sir Ian McKellen – Widow Twankey
      • Neil McDermott – Aladdin
      • Frances Barber – Dim Sum
      • Matthew Wolfenden – Hanky
      • Andrew Spillett – Panky
      • Kate Gillespie – Princess
      • Paul Grunert – Emperor
      • Tee Jaye – Genie

      Creative team

      • Writer: Bille Brown
      • Original score: Gareth Valentine
      • Director: Sean Mathias
      • Producer: David Liddiment
      • Designer: John Napier

      In rehearsal…

      “Considerable time is then spent on the cave scene, where Roger Allam’s Abbanazar is soon in full pantomime flight. Relishing the melodrama, he is by turns menacing, suave and monumentally furious. ‘Abbanazar’s anger management isn’t terribly good,’ he comments mildly afterwards ‘No, he didn’t take his tablets,’ Sean replies.” (source)

      Review

      “In fact the star of this pantomime for me was not so much Ian McKellen’s dame, who seems rather thin and less buxom than is traditional, but Roger Allam’s wonderful villain Abbanazar. I shall never forget the series of evil, echoing laughs so extreme which have him ultimately clutching at the stage pillars and descending into a fit of coughing. He is very, very funny. His full fruity over the top Abbanazar is totally gorgeous.” Curtain Up, 16th December 2005 gallery: stage (2001 – 2005) || website || programme 2005

    • Aladdin (2004)
      alladin001accimage © Keith Stern / Sir Ian McKellen

      Theatre

      The Old Vic, London

      Summary

      Widow Twankey is a glamorous landrette owner with an extensive wardrobe and even bigger dreams; Aladdin is a teenage boy with a crush on a princess and Dim Sum is… Dim. Everything is all very ordinary- much to Twankey’s dismay- until one day Aladdin’s ‘long lost uncle’ turns up out of the blue. The good widow is immediately smitten (the man has money, after all), but friend Dim is not so convinced, and neither, most importantly, are the boys and girls of the audience. To be fair on Twankey, though, there has been a lot of ‘behind the scenes’ action that she has not been privy to. As the boys and girls know, Abbanazar has learned of a magic lamp which could grant him three wishes (cue ‘maniacal laughter’ soundtrack as he imagines what dastardly plot he could concoct with a genie on side)- however, he can obtain this lamp with Aladdin’s help. And so, here he is, cosying up to poor old Twankey so that she might let him ‘borrow her son for a bit.’ Aladdin, however, might prove to be more of an obstacle than the dastardly Abbanazar had counted on- the boy does, after all, have a princess to woo, and a magic lamp would certainly work wonders for his chances…

      Cast

      • Roger Allam – Abbanazar
      • Sir Ian McKellen – Widow Twankey
      • Joe McFadden – Aladdin
      • Maureen Lipman – Dim Sum
      • Owen Sharpe – Hanky
      • Joanna Page – Panky
      • Cat Simmons – Princess
      • Sam Kelly – Emperor
      • Ramon Tikaram – Genie

      Creative team

      • Writer: Michael Frayn
      • Original score: Gareth Valentine
      • Director: Sean Mathias
      • Producer: David Liddiment
      • Designer: Peter J Davison

      Roger Allam said

      “I was constantly losing my voice because of the maniacal laugh. But then I found out that all Abbanazars lose their voice; they just do.” (source)

      Reviews

      “But, in places, he (Ian McKellen) is almost upstaged by Roger Allam, who exudes comic menace with every word he sarcastically spits at the audience.” BBC, 20th December 2004 “Every time Roger Allam appeared as scowling Abbanazar, contemptous of everything, including the script, my son hissed in my ear: ‘Isn’t he great?’ He was.” The Guardian, 26th December 2004 gallery: stage (2001 – 2005) || website || programme 2004

    • Democracy (2003)
      demo3accimage © Geraint Lewis

      Theatre

      Cottesloe Theatre / Wyndham’s Theatre: National Theatre, London

      Summary

      West Germany, 1969. Willy Brandt begins his brief but remarkable career as the first left-of-centre Chancellor for nearly forty years. Always present but rarely noticed is Günter Guillaume, Brandt’s devoted personal assistant – and no less devoted in his other role, spying on Brandt for the Stasi. “Three political parties, in and out of bed with each other like drunken intellectuals, fifteen warring cabinet ministers, and sixty million separate egos. All making deals with each other and breaking them. All looking round at every moment to see the expression on everyone else’s face. All trying to guess which way everyone else will jump. All out for themselves and all totally dependent on everyone else. Not one Germany. Sixty million separate Germanies. The tower of Babel!” Democracy takes us into a world of political intrigue, espionage and betrayal. Based on real life events during the final months in office of the charismatic Chancellor, this political tale unfolds as suspicions of Stasi infiltrating rise. Tensions mount as Brandt’s precarious coalition government is pushed to its limits.

      Cast

      • Roger Allam – Willy Brandt
      • Conleth Hill – Günter Guillaume
      • David Ryall – Herbert Wehner
      • Glyn Grain – Helmut Schmidt
      • Michael Simkins – Arno

      Creative team

      • Writer: Michael Frayn
      • Director: Michael Blakemore

      Roger Allam said:

      “I never ever, ever got bored with it. (…) Sometimes you can just put on a suit and you think, ‘Oh, yes, I’m Willy Brandt!’” ” (source)

      Awards and nominations

      Roger Allam was nominated for the 2004 Olivier award for Best Actor. reviews || gallery: stage (2001 – 2005) || Michael Frayn interview

    • The Woman in White (2003)
      sydmonton festival the woman in whiteAndrew Lloyd Webber’s private Summer arts festival, The Sydmonton Festival, is held at a deconsecrated 16th century chapel on the grounds of Sydmonton Court. The weekend of the 11th-13th July, the composer previewed his new musical The Woman in White. It tells the mysterious tale of damsels in distress, a wicked aristocrat, lunatic asylums, family fortunes, desolate mansions and a sinister Secret Society. The story is loosely based on a popular 19th-century novel by Wilkie Collins.

      The presentation was a workshop of Act One and included a couple songs from Act Two. Indeed the musical was still working towards production and only opened in London’s West End a year later, although with a different cast.

      Cast

      • Roger Allam – Count Fosco
      • Anna Hathaway – Laura Fairlie
      • Laura Michelle Kelly – Marian Halcombe
      • Kevin Colson – Sir Percival Glyde
      • Kevin McKidd –  Walter Hartright
      • Jaime Farr – Anne Catherick

      Creative team

      • Writer: Wilkie Collins (novel) and Charlotte Jones (book)
      • Writer: Andrew Lloyd Webber  and David Zippel
      • Lyrics: Charlotte Jones  and David Zippel
      • Director: Trevor Nunn
      • Musical director: Simon Lee

      website

    • What the Night is For (2002)
      What the Night is Forimage © Geraint Lewis

      Theatre

      The Comedy Theatre, London

      Summary

      Two former lovers, parted for eleven years and now both married, agree to meet in a hotel room away from their homes. Their given reasons are plain: both are in town and want to share a meal. But each has hidden motives which will only emerge with time. The result is a night of honesty and deceit, passion, hope and regret. Michael Weller’s play addresses timeless questions – ‘Am I with the right person? Or are they still out there, living another life?’ – in a fresh and lively way. Uncompromising in its attitude to modern marriage and infidelity, What the Night is For digs deep into the emotional exchanges between individuals with much to lose but even more to gain.

      Cast

      • Roger Allam – Adam Penzius
      • Gillian Anderson – Melinda Metz

      Creative team

      • Writer: Michael Weller
      • Director: John Caird
      • Designer: Tim Hatley

      Roger Allam said:

      “It certainly deals with sexual attraction, but you won’t find us giving gymnastic impersonations of the sex act on stage! It’s about former lovers who, now in their 40s, had an affair some ten years earlier. (…) Being in this play is fascinating for me in a purely practical way, in that I haven’t been in a two-hander before, and it’s an interesting dynamic.” (source) reviews || gallery: stage (2001 – 2005) || video interview

    • Privates on Parade (2001)
      pri01accimage © Geraint Lewis

      Theatre

      Donmar Warehouse, London

      Summary

      The play is set around the activities and exploits of the fictional Song and Dance Unit South East Asia (SADUSEA), a mostly gay British military concert party stationed in Singapore and Malaysia in the late 1940s during the Malayan Emergency. When Private Steven Flowers turns-up to start his new posting with SADUSEA, he finds himself in the ‘middle-sex regiment’ – one which is populated by numerous gay soldier-actors. In charge of the entertainment is Acting Captain Terri Dennis who wears an array of flamboyant dresses and makeup both on stage and off. The unit is commanded by the vaguely sinister and downright dangerous Major Giles Flack who counsels his soldiers against blasphemy and luxury and seeks to lead his ill-prepared unit against local insurgents.

      Cast

      • Roger Allam – Captain Terri Dennis
      • James McAvoy – Steven Flowers
      • Indira Varma – Sylvia
      • Giles Flack – Malcolm Sinclair
      • Justin Salinger – Len
      • Daniel Tuite – Eric

      Creative team

      • Writer: Peter Nichols
      • With music by: Denis King
      • Director: Michael Grandage
      • Designer: Christopher Oram
      • Choreography: Scarlett Mackmin

      Interesting note

      In 2004, Allam listed Privates on Parade as one of his ‘career highlights’, especially when followed by the ‘very non-showy’ Democracy. For Allam, ‘it’s all about contrasts.’ (source)

      Awards and nominations

      Roger Allam received the 2002 Laurence Olivier Award for Best Actor for his performance. reviews || gallery: stage (2001 – 2005) || Olivier Awards interview || Olivier Awards: Best Actor

  • 1996 - 2000
    • Albert Speer (2000)
      Albert Speer 5image © National Theatre

      Theatre

      Lyttelton Theatre: The National Theatre, London

      Summary

      Plucked from obscurity to be Hitler’s architect and Minister of War, Albert Speer became the second most powerful man in the Third Riech. Adapted from Gitta Sereny’s biography, Albert Speer: His Battle with Truth, this play tells the epic story of a man whose devotion to Hitler blinded him to genocide. The first half of this play is a reflection of Hitler as he was seen without the benefit of hindsight and, as such, Roger Allam does not play the evil caricature we are used to. In the second half, however, we are shown a brief ‘nightmare’ sequence of the truth. The performance in both halves is powerful and chilling.

      Cast

      • Roger Allam – Adolf Hitler
      • Alex Jennings – Albert Speer

      Creative team

      • Writer: David Edgar
      • Director: Trevor Nunn
      • Designer: Ian MacNeil

      Roger Allam said:

      “And then I noticed something about his eyes, that his eyebrows were lower than mine. So I blotted out the top of mine, left the middle, and drew them in lower, and that was really, really scary.” (source) reviews || gallery: stage (1996 – 2000)

    • The Cherry Orchard (2000)
      co01acc
      image © Geraint Lewis

      Theatre

      Cottesloe Theatre: The National Theatre, London

      Summary

      Madame Ranevskaya is a spoiled, aging aristocrat who returns (reluctantly) from a trip to Paris to face the loss of her magnificent Cherry Orchard estate after a default on the mortgage. In denial, she continues living in the past, deluding herself and her family, while the cherry trees are being axed down by the re-possessor Lopakhin, her former serf who is now a wealthy merchant. The play portrays the rise of the middle class and the decline of the aristocracy that was prevalent at the end of the 20th century in Russia, and ultimately led to revolution.

      Cast

      • Roger Allam – Yermolia Alexeievitch Lopakhin
      • Vanessa Redgrave – Madame Ranevskaya
      • Ben Miles – Peter Trofimov
      • William Gaunt – Boris Borisovich Simeonov-Pishchik
      • Charlotte Emmerson – Anya
      • Eve Best – Varya
      • Corin Redgrave – Leonid Andreieveitch Gayev
      • Richard Henders – Yepikhodov
      • Maxine Peake – Dunyasha
      • Michael Bryant – Firs
      • James Thornton – Yasha

      Creative team

      • Writer: Anton Chekov
      • Translation by: David Lan
      • Director: Trevor Nunn

      Roger Allam said:

      “I’d never understood why they didn’t chop it down, the Cherry Orchard, and do his perfectly sensible plan of building summer residences there. It seemed to me utterly practical, I just never, ever understood it. (…)And suddenly it all fell into place with me.” (source) reviews || gallery: stage (1996 – 2000)

    • Troilus and Cressida (1999)
      Troilus and Cressida
      image © Donald Cooper

      Theatre

      Olivier Theatre: The National Theatre, London

      Summary

      Seven years have passed since the Greeks first began their siege of Troy, and on the Trojan side of the walls the beautiful Cressida, aided and abetted by her hilariously intriguing uncle Pandarus, has embarked upon a passionate love affair with Prince Troilus. When Cressida is forced to join her treacherous father (a Trojan defector) in the Greek camp where also resides the cunningly philosophical commander Ulysses, can their love survive a difficult separation or will it join the other casualties of war? Shakespeare fills his ancient tale with savage comedy, great passion, vivid characters and all the heat and sweat of a long and painful campaign. He seems never more modern than in dealing with the subject of a tragic love pursued in the midst of a pointless war.

      Cast

      • Roger Allam – Ulysses
      • Sophie Okonedo – Cressida
      • Peter de Jersey – Troilus
      • David Bamber – Pandarus
      • Dhobi Oparei – Hector
      • Raymond Coulthard – Achilles
      • Daniel Evans – Patroclus
      • Jasper Britton – Thersites

      Creative team

      • Writer: William Shakespeare
      • Director: Trevor Nunn
      • Designer: Rob Howell
      • Composer: Gary Yershon

      Roger Allam said:

      ” …Ulysses, probably the most intelligent guy in the Greek camp. Yes, undoubtedly the most, the cleverest and frustrated and furious at being there for ten years, you know. Also probably thought he should be Agamemnon and Achilles.” (source) “Troilus and Cressida had many battle scenes, and for some reason the designer had decided that although the Greeks and Trojans had swords, shields and armour they didn’t have the technology for shoes, so we were all barefoot.” (source)

      Awards and nominations

      In 2000, Roger received the Clarence Derwent Award, Actors’ Equity Association, for Troilus and Cressida. reviews || gallery: stage (1996 – 2000)

    • Money (1999)
      money1accimage © Catherine Ashmore

      Theatre

      Lyttelton Theatre: The National Theatre, London

      Summary

      The penniless Alfred Evelyn is the unpaid and little respected secretary to his social climbing cousin Sir John Vesey, a social climber who has duped London into thinking him rich and therefore important. When Evelyn inherits a fortune from a distant relative, Vesey promptly seeks to become his father-in-law. But Vesey is not the only one to jump on Evelyn’s bandwagon. Tradesmen and politicians seek him out. Evelyn is meanwhile heartbroken after having been turned down by Clara, the companion to Vesey’s likeable sister, Lady Franklin. Clara’s rejection of him was not for lack of love but because she feared a marriage without money will be a drag on his life as it was for her father (and, having turned him down when he was poor she felt she could hardly accept him when he was rich for fear he get the wrong impression). With his hopes for a life with Clara seemingly dashed, Evelyn is almost persuaded to marry the scatter-brained Georgina. Georgina, while as greedy as her father, much prefers the foppish (but not as wealthy), lisping Sir “Fwedwick” Blount. A third romance demanding a happy ending involves Georgina’s aunt, the merry and inclined to marry Lady Franklin and the chronically bereaved widower Sir Henry Graves. All the while, Sir John is still scheming- but it would appear he’s not the only one with a few tricks up his sleeve…

      Cast

      • Roger Allam – Henry Graves
      • Simon Russell Beale – Alfred Evelyn
      • Patricia Hodge – Lady Franklin
      • Denis Quilley – Sir John Vesey
      • Victoria Hamilton – Clara Douglas

      Creative team

      • Writer: Edward Bulwer-Lytton
      • Director: John Caird

      Interesting note

      Allam reprised the role of Henry Graves for a BBC radio production of the play in 2011.

      Awards and nominations

      Roger Allam won the 2000 Olivier award for Best Supporting Actor for his performance in Money.

      Reviews

      A step further from the centre, Roger Allam almost steals the show as a man determined to be gloomy, dragged back to good cheer against his will by Patricia Hodge’s wise and witty widow. Theatre Guide London, Autumn 1999 MONEY is an average comedy made good by a smashing cast. London Theatre Archive, 19 June 1999 gallery: stage (1996 – 2000)

    • Summerfolk (1999)
      Summerfolk
      image © Catherine Ashmore

      Theatre

      Olivier Theatre: The National Theatre, London

      Summary

      In Nick Dear’s version of Gorky’s naturalistic masterpiece a diverse group of Russians meet, as they do every year, at their summer holiday retreat. Some are frightened at the prospect of change, some are angry and some yearn for a new life. As they question the value of their work, their art and leisure, they’re shocked by the responses their disputes reveal. Relationships break under the strain and scandals of business and infidelity are laid bare. This tale of Russian upheaval  is based in part on the life of playwright Anton Chekov who died in 1904, the same year the play is set.

      Cast

      • Roger Allam – Sergei Bassov
      • Patricia Hodge – Maria
      • Jennifer Ehle – Varya
      • Raymond Coulthard – Vlass
      • Henry Goodman – Shalimov
      • Simon Russell Beale – Dr Dudakov

      Creative team

      • Writer: Maxim Gorky
      • Translation by: Nick Dear
      • Director: Trevor Nunn

      Awards and nominations

      Roger Allam was nominated for the 2000 Olivier award for Best Actor for Summerfolk. reviews || gallery: stage (1996 – 2000)

    • ART (1997)
      © Hugo Glendinning, V&A Archives
      © Hugo Glendinning, V&A ArchivesTheatre

      Theatre

      Wyndham’s Theatre, London

      Summary

      This comedy, which raises questions about art and friendship, concerns three long-time friends, Serge, Marc, and Yvan. Serge, indulging his penchant for modern art, buys a large, expensive, completely white painting. Marc is horrified, and their relationship suffers considerable strain as a result of their differing opinions about what constitutes “art.” Yvan, caught in the middle of the conflict, tries to please and mollify both of them.

      Cast

      • Roger Allam – Serge (1997) / Marc (1998)
      • Henry Goodman – Marc (1997)
      • Stanley Townsend – Yvan (1997)
      • Mick Ford – Serge (1998)
      • Jack Dee – Yvan (1998)

      Creative team

      • Writer: Yasmina Reza

      Director: Matthew Warchus The story of Art, The Independent (1998) Only one person so far – other than the understudies – has played two roles. And was good both times. Roger Allam played Serge, who buys the painting, and is now appearing as Marc, who detests it. In the dressing room after the show, he pours out glasses of red wine. “This is the only West End job I’ve done that I’ve not been screaming to get out of the theatre by the end.” The run is short and the money good: “especially if you’ve worked a lot for the RSC.” Allam thinks it’s about the male crisis, which is “fashionable”, it’s about people passing 40, and it’s very French, like Moliere. The joy in the acting, he says, quoting an aunt who came to see it, is that there’s “so much going on”. So what does he think of the painting? “I’d have it on my wall,” he says, adding a neat rider, “Lit like that.” interview

    • Macbeth (1996)
      Mac96RSimage © Donald Cooper

      Theatre

      RSC Theatre, Stratford-upon-Avon / Barbican Theatre, London

      Company

      Royal Shakespeare Company

      Summary

      Macbeth is one of Shakespeare’s four great tragedies, encompassing witchcraft, bloody murder, ghostly apparitions as well as high poetry, blended in such a way as to demonstrate the assured dramatic touch of Shakespeare’s maturity. Macbeth and Banquo, generals in the service of King Duncan of Scotland, are returning victorious from battle when they are hailed by three witches or ‘weyard sisters’ who prophesy that Macbeth will become Thane of Cawdor and then King of Scotland, whereas Banquo’s descendants will be kings. With fierce encouragement from his wife, Macbeth takes bloody and drastic action to ensure that his portion of the witches’ prophecy comes true (and that his friend’s does not). Macbeth’s tragedy is that of a good, brave and honourable man turned into the personification of evil by the workings of unreasonable ambition.

      Cast

      • Roger Allam – Macbeth
      • Brid Brennan – Lady Macbeth
      • Philip Quast – Banquo
      • Arthur Cox – Duncan
      • Colum Convey – Macduff
      • Jan Chappell – Lady Lady Macduff

      Creative team

      • Writer: William Shakespeare
      • Director: Tim Albery
      • Designer: Stewart Laing

      Reviews

      When he comes back from murdering Duncan, you’d think from his manner that he’d just been unblocking the sink – if it weren’t for the gory knife in his clasp. Allam speaks the verse intelligently and improves in the later scenes when projecting a man drained of feeling and dryly contemptuous of existence. But of the preceding psychological turmoil, he gives a colourless account. The Independent, 18 May 1996 … Roger Allam’s finely spoken Macbeth is clearly haunted, in this respect, by the contrast between himself and Banquo. He murderously fondles Fleance, is wickedly mocked in the apparition scene by a succession of child Banquos, all – a brilliant touch – adorned with their father’s moustache, and even turns up for the slaughter of Macduff’s son as if to destroy what he cannot have. The Guardian, 18 May 1996 gallery: stage (1996 – 2000)

    • The Learned Ladies (1996)

      Theatre

      The Pit, London

      Company

      Royal Shakespeare Company

      Summary

      Les Femmes savantes (The Learned Ladies) is a comedy by Molière in five acts, written in verse. A satire on academic pretention, female education, and préciosité (French for preciousness), it was one of his most popular comedies. Two young people, Henriette and Clitandre, are in love, but in order to marry, they must overcome a significant obstacle: the attitude of Henriette’s family. Her sensible father and uncle are in favour of the match; unfortunately, however, her father is under the thumb of his wife, Philaminte, who, supported by Henriette’s aunt and sister, wishes for her to marry someone else. The proposed husband-to-be is Trissotin, a foppish ‘scholar’ and mediocre poet with lofty aspirations, who has these three women completely in his thrall. For these three ladies are “learned”; their obsession in life is learning and culture of the most pretentious kind, and Trissotin is their special protégé and the fixture of their literary salon.

      Cast

      • Roger Allam – Trissotin
      • Jane Gurnett – Henriette
      • Sebastian Harcombe – Clitandre
      • Niamh Cusack – Armande
      • Caroline Blakiston – Philaminte
      • Alison Fiske – Belise
      • Robert Demeger – Ariste
      • John Quayle – Chrysale
      • David Foxxe – Vadius
      • Susannah Elliot-Knight – Martine

      Creative team

      • Writer: Jean Baptiste Moliere
      • Translation by: A. R. Waller
      • Songs by: Jason Carr
      • Director: Steven Pimlott
      • Designer: Sue Blane

      gallery: stage (1996 – 2000)

  • 1990 - 1995
    • The Way of the World (1995)

      wayworld001acc

       image © National Theatre

      Theatre

      Lyttelton Theatre: The National Theatre, London

      Summary

      The Way of the World is a comedy of manners in five acts by William Congreve, first performed and published in 1700. The play, which is considered Congreve’s masterpiece, ridicules the assumptions that governed the society of his time, especially those concerning love and marriage. The play is based around two lovers, Mirabell and Millamant. In order for the two to get married and receive Millamant’s full dowry, the cynical yet gracious Mirabell must receive the blessing of Millamant’s aunt, Lady Wishfort. Unfortunately, she is a very bitter lady, who despises Mirabell and wants her own nephew, country bumpkin Sir Wilful, to wed Millamant.

      Cast

      • Roger Allam – Mirabell
      • Frank Kovacs – Servant to Mirabell
      • Julian Rhind Tutt – Anthoy Witwoud
      • Anthony O Donnell – Sir Wilful Witwoud
      • Geraldine McEwan – Lady Wishfort
      • Francis Maguire – Servant to Lady Wishfort
      • Mistress Marwood – Sian Thomas
      • Mistress Millamant – Fiona Shaw
      • Amanda Drew – Mincing
      • Catherine Tate – Peg
      • Cyril Nri – Petulant
      • Foible – Marianne Jean Baptiste
      • Waitwell – Kenneth Macdonald
      • Veronica Quilligan – Mrs Fainall

      Creative team

      • Writer: William Congreve
      • Director: Phyllida Lloyd
      • Designer: Anthony Ward

      Roger Allam said:

      “That play is a bag of eels. You think you’ve got hold of an idea, and it slips out of your grasp.” (source) gallery: stage (1990 – 1995)

    • The Importance of Being Earnest (1995)
      Importance of Being Earnest
      image © Henrietta Butler

      Theatre

      The Old Vic, London

      Summary

      In 1890s England two young men learn the vital importance of being ‘Earnest’ as their use of the same pseudonym in their romantic pursuits leads to a comedy of mistaken identity. Algernon Moncrieff has discovered that he has a secret in common with his friend Jack Worthing – they both use alter egos when in a tight spot. However, when Algernon decides to pose as Jack’s alter ego – a brother Earnest from London – for a weekend in the country, he finds that Jack’s ward Cicely has developed an infatuation with the mysterious brother; and now she has finally met him. Meanwhile, Algernon’s cousin Gwendolyne is also staying for the weekend and knows Jack as his alter ego. Gwendolyne’s mother, the stern Lady Bracknell, has to be convinced to give her blessing to the blossoming romances.

      Cast

      • Roger Allam – Jack Worthing
      • Philip Franks – Algernon Moncrieff
      • Patrick Godfrey – Rev Canon Chasuble
      • Martin Wimbush – Merriman / Lane
      • Barbara Leigh Hunt – Lady Bracknell
      • Abigail Cruttenden – Gwendolen Fairfax
      • Jacqueline Defferary – Cecily Cardew
      • Rosalind Knight – Miss Prism

      Creative team

      • Writer: Oscar Wilde
      • Director: Terry Hands
      • Designer: Mark Bailey

      Ouch!

      “One night, in the middle of Importance, he ruptured a calf muscle, but, says Barbara Leigh-Hunt, ‘altered his movements slightly, so that very few people in the audience knew anything was wrong’, and then continued, since he had no understudy, to play every performance.” (Rhonda Koenig, The Sunday Telegraph Magazine- October 1995)

      Review

      “Allam’s intensely masculine presence balances the dainty foolishness of the rest of the piece, just as his attempts to cling to any fleeting shred of reality are a hilarious counterpoint to the other characters’ pursuit of fancy.” (source) gallery: stage (1990 – 1995)

    • Arcadia (1994)

      Scene From 'Arcadia'

       image © Robbie Jack / Corbis

      Theatre

      Lyttelton Theatre: The National Theatre, London

      Summary

      This play moves back and forth between 1809 and the present at the elegant estate owned by the Coverly family. The 1809 scenes reveal a household in transition. As the Arcadian landscape is being transformed into picturesque Gothic gardens, complete with a hermitage, thirteen year old Lady Thomasina and her tutor delve into intellectual and romantic issues. Present day scenes depict the Coverly descendants and two competing scholars (one of whom is Bernard Nightingale) who are researching a possible scandal at the estate in 1809 involving Lord Byron.

      Cast

      • Roger Allam – Bernard Nightingale

      Creative team

      • Writer: Tom Stoppard

      Awards and nominations

      Arcadia won the Evening Standard Best Play of the Year Award and the Olivier Award for Best New Play gallery: stage (1990 – 1995)

    • City of Angels (1993)
      cit01accimage © Prince of Wales Theatre

      Theatre

      Prince of Wales Theatre, London

      Summary

      The setting of this musical is Hollywood in the late 1940s, with two stories occurring simultaneously: the “real” world story of a writer trying to turn his book into a screenplay, and the “reel” world of the fictional detective film he is creating. While trying to maintain his artistic integrity and his marriage, a young novelist, Stine, is attempting to write a screen play for fast-talking Hollywood producer, Buddy Fidler. As he creates the story about a private detective, Stone, the characters of Stine’s imagination come to life on stage. Beautiful socialite Alaura Kingsley hires Stone to find her missing step-daughter. Stone receives a brutal beating from two thugs who are hired to get him off the Kingsley case, and he is additionally framed for a murder. As the plot thickens, Stone’s own past comes to haunt him and he in turn haunts his ‘author’ (as well he might).

      Cast

      • Roger Allam – Stone
      • Martin Smith –  Stine
      • Susannah Fellows – Alaura Kingsley
      • Henry Goodman – Buddy Fidler
      • Fiona Hendley – Bobbi
      • Neil Rutherford – Mallory Kingsley

      Creative team

      • Writer: Larry Gelbart
      • Music by: Cy Coleman
      • Lyrics by: David Zippel
      • Director: Michael Blakemore
      • Designer: Robin Wagner

      Awards and nominations

      City of Angels won the Olivier Award for Best New Musical. Roger Allam was nominated for Best Actor in a Musical. gallery: stage (1990 – 1995) | full synopsisbuy the cast recording

    • Una Pooka (1992)

      unapookaTheatre

      Tricycle Theatre, London

      Summary

      The year is 1979: it’s the eve of the Pope’s visit to Ireland, and everybody in Dublin has somebody sleeping on their floor. Aidan and Nuala have the whole Kevitt family up from the country – Aidan’s pious tyrant of a mother, his malcontented brother Liam, and his reserved sister Una. And then there’s his father’s cousin, Fr Simeon, a self-effacing, bland monk. Everyone is primed with goodwill in expectation of the Holy Father’s arrival. Predictably, however, as the evening wears on, masks slip, tensions erupt and it might take more than even a ‘pooka’ (a Celtic fairy) to resolve matters.

      Cast

      • Roger Allam – Father Simeon
      • Julia Dearden – Una

      Creative team

      • Writer: Michael Hardin
      • Director: Nicolas Kent

      Roger Allam said:

      “I went out to Ireland to meet the writer, who’d trained as a priest. [Michael Harding] basically made me very, very drunk for about five days and took me (…) to bars and discos and people’s houses. He said: ‘I went to the seminary there, because it was a very good place for girls.’ And I said, ‘Oh!’ And he said, ‘I’m still a celibate, I’ve always been celibate. You see celibacy means not getting married, that’s the vow the priests take. I’ve never been married in my life, but I never took a vow of chastity.’ (source)

      Review

      “Apart from a baffling denouement, everything about Una Pooka is superb. It’s a virtuoso piece, thoroughly unnerving and funny, its intricate time-scheme handled with exhilarating facility by the director, Nicolas Kent, and his excellent cast. In particular, Julia Dearden’s sympathetic, steely Una and Roger Allam’s magnetic Simeon are outstanding.” The Independent, 10 July 1992

    • The Madras House (1992)

      madras01accTheatre

      Lyric Hammersmith Theatre, London / Royal Lyceum Theatre, Edinburgh

      Summary

      Philip Madras, the unsentimental scion of a drapery and dressmaking business, plans to sell his company and has found an American buyer. That man, Mr State, is a big-talking capitalist who quotes Goethe and sees the new women’s movement as a great market opportunity.

      Cast

      • Roger Allam – Philip Madras
      • John Hallam – Constantine Madras
      • Helen Ryan – Amelia Madras
      • Eve Matheson – Philip’s wife, Sessica
      • Suzanna Hamilton – Miss Yates
      • Bill Bailey – American businessman

      Creative team

      • Writer: Harley Granville-Barker
      • Director: Peter James
      • Designer: Pamela Howard

      Reviews

      “Roger Allam brings out well the sexless, kindly priggishness of Philip, another of Barker’s ‘worms,’ though his performance comes unstuck a bit in the awkward last act discussion with his wife, which Barker extensively revised for a 1925 revival. This production opts for the 1910 text.” The Independent, 27 August 1992 “The cast are all in fine fettle, particularly Roger Allam as Philip Madras.” Contemporary Review, 1 November 1992

    • The Strange Case of Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde (1991)
      jekyll01acc image © Royal Shakespeare Company

      Theatre

      Barbican Theatre, London

      Company

      Royal Shakespeare Company

      Summary

      The famous tale of Dr Jekyll, the outwardly respectable and virtuous man whose darker side is given terrifying life in the form of murderous Mr Hyde, has been vividly and thrillingly adapted for the stage. Jekyll and Hyde are played by two actors; as a result, the divisions in Jekyll’s character are presented in a compelling and truly theatrical style. The tussle between the two is an absorbing and eventually physical one as the split central roles struggle for possession of their shared body.

      Cast

      • Roger Allam – Dr Henry Jekyll
      • Simon Russell Beale – Mr Hyde
      • Oliver Ford-Davies – Gabriel Utterson
      • Richard Enfield – Michael Bott
      • Katrina Levon – Annie Loder
      • Pippa Guard – Katherine Urquhart
      • Leonard Kavanagh – Sir Danvers Carew
      • Alec Linstead – Dr Hastie Lanyon

      Creative team

      • Novel by: Robert Louis Stevenson
      • Adaptation by: David Edgar
      • Director: Peter Wood
      • Designer: Carl Toms

      Review

      “Roger Allam’s Jekyll is a paradigm of period repression, against which Simon Russell Beale’s Hyde lurks sinisterly but not disturbingly. Their daring co-presence during most transformations is dissipated in dialogues of mutual psychoanalysis, becoming in the final phase a staged novel-of-ideas.” City Limits, 1991 gallery: stage (1990 – 1995)

    • Much Ado About Nothing (1990)
      Ado90RSimage © Royal Shakespeare Company

      Theatre

      RSC Theatre, Stratford-upon-Avon / Barbican Theatre, London

      Company

      Royal Shakespeare Company

      Summary

      Claudio loves Hero and Hero Claudio and nothing seems capable of keeping them apart. Claudio’s friend Benedick loves Beatrice and Beatrice Benedick, but (because neither will admit it) nothing seems capable of bringing them together. Only the intrigues of a resentful prince force Benedick to prove his love for Beatrice – by killing his best friend. Driven along by a romance all the more charming for being in denial, Much Ado About Nothing is a miracle of comic and dramatic suspense and gives us, in the bantering Beatrice and Benedick, one of Shakespeare’s wittiest, most lovable pair of lovers.

      Cast

      • Roger Allam – Benedick
      • Susan Fleetwood – Beatrice
      • John McAndrew – Claudio
      • Alex Kingston – Hero
      • John Carlisle – Don Pedro
      • Paul Webster – Leonato
      • Vincent Regan – Don John
      • Mary Chater – Margaret
      • Ken Shorter – Borachio
      • Dominic Mafham – Conrad
      • George Raistrick – Dogberry
      • Andrew Havill – George Seacoal
      • Arnold Yarrow – Verges
      • Trevor Martin – Antonio
      • Jamie Hinde – Balthazar
      • Andrew Wray – Ursula

      Creative team

      • Writer: William Shakespeare
      • Director: Bill Alexander
      • Designer: Surrey Kit

      gallery: stage (1990 – 1995)

    • The Seagull (1990)

      Susan Fleetwood and Roger Allam in The Seagull © Alassair Muir, 1990

       image © Alassair Muir

      Theatre

      Swan Theatre, Stratford-upon-Avon

      Company

      Royal Shakespeare Company

      Summary

      Written in 1895, this is the first of what are considered to be Anton Chekov’s four major plays. Despite its premier performance in 1896 being a famous flop, the play remains a firm theatrical favourite, characteristic of the playwright’s subtle style. Set against the backdrop of a country estate, The Seagull dramatises the romantic and artistic conflicts between its four central characters. Roger Allam plays Trigorin, a famous writer who arrives at the estate for a holiday with his lover.

      Cast

      • Roger Allam – Trigorin
      • Simon Russell Beale – Treplev
      • Susan Fleetwood – Arkadina
      • Amanda Root – Nina
      • Alfred Burke – Sorin
      • John Carlisle – Dorn
      • Kay Behean – Masha
      • Trevor Martin – Shamrayev
      • Graham Turner – Medvedenko
      • Cherry Morris – Polina

      Creative team

      • Writer: Anton Chekov
      • Translation by: Michael Frayn
      • Director: Terry Hands
      • Designer: Johan Engels

      Review

      This production was very well-received and is frequently used as a standard by which other performances of the play are measured. As one critic stated, ‘some productions of classics become classics themselves, setting a standard as long as their audiences’ memories.’ (source) gallery: stage (1990 – 1995)

  • 1985 - 1989
    • La Reine des Fées - The Fairy Queen (1989)

      fairy02acc

      DVD screenshot

      Summary

      Written shortly before his death, Henry Purcell’s ‘masque’ (semi-opera) is based on Shakespeare’s A Midsummer Night’s Dream. Hermia loves Lysander and Helena loves Demetrius – but Demetrius is supposed to be marrying Hermia… When the Duke of Athens tries to enforce the marriage, the lovers take refuge in the woods and wander into the midst of a dispute between Oberon and Titania, the king and queen of the fairies. Shakespeare put some of his most dazzling dramatic poetry at the service of this teasing, glittering, hilarious and amazingly inventive play, whose seriousness is only fleetingly glimpsed beneath its dreamlike surface.

      Cast

      • Roger Allam – Oberon
      • Christopher Ryan – Puck
      • Gemma Jones – Titania
      • Sean Murray – Lysander
      • John Elmes – Demetrius
      • Sylvestra Le Touzel – Hermia
      • Niamh Cusack – Helena
      • David Killick – Egeus
      • Paul Greenwood – Theseus
      • Geoffrey Freshwater – Nick Bottom
      • Allan Corduner – Peter Quince
      • Philip Fox – Francis Flute
      • Albie Woodington – Robin Starveling
      • Arthur Cox – Tom Snout
      • Brian Parr – Snug

      Creative team

      • Writer: William Shakespeare
      • Director: Yvon Gerault

      Interesting note

      Roger Allam’s performance was recorded live in July 1989 at the French Festival d’Aux-en-Provence buy the DVD (poor quality)

    • Twelfth Night (1987)
      tn01accimage © Shakespeare Birthplace Trust

      Theatre

      Royal Shakespeare Theatre, Stratford-upon-Avon / Barbican Theatre, London

      Company

      Royal Shakespeare Company

      Summary

      Believing her twin brother Sebastian to have drowned after a shipwreck which she has survived, the young Viola is stranded on the mysterious island of Illyria. Disguising herself as the page Cesario, she enters the service of the handsome Duke Orsino, who is madly in love with the beautiful Countess Olivia. But when, while delivering a letter, the Countess falls helplessly in love with the disguised messenger herself, Viola realises her problems have only just begun. Meanwhile, the annual night of fun and feasting is being enjoyed to the full by Olivia’s roguish cousin Sir Toby Belch. Together with the gentlewoman Maria and his guest – Olivia’s hapless suitor Sir Andrew Aguecheek – the prankster Belch schemes to embarrass the pompous steward Malvolio …

      Cast

      • Roger Allam – Sir Toby Belch
      • Harriet Walter – Viola
      • Donald Sumpter – Orsino
      • Deborah Findlay – Olivia
      • Paul Spence – Sebastian
      • Antony Sher – Malvolio
      • Bruce Alexander – Feste
      • Pippa Guard – Maria
      • Paul Webster – Antonio
      • David Bradley – Sir Andrew Aguecheek

      Creative team

      • Writer: William Shakespeare
      • Director: Bill Alexander
      • Designer: Surrey Kit

      gallery: stage (1985 – 1989)

    • Measure for Measure (1987)
      MM87RS
      image © Royal Shakespeare Company

      Theatre

      Royal Shakespeare Theatre, Stratford-upon-Avon / Barbican Theatre, London

      Company

      Royal Shakespeare Company

      Summary

      Vincentio, Duke of Vienna, departs from his kingdom suddenly and inexplicably, resigning power to his deputy Angelo in his absence. Under Angelo’s rule, a vigorous campaign against lechery and sexual license begins. It seems that love is no defence under the newly-fortified laws and one of the first to suffer is Claudio, arrested and sentenced to death for making his lover, Juliet, pregnant before making her his wife. In desparation, Claudio sends for his sister Isabella, hoping that her virtuous pleading can move the rigid Angelo to repeal his sentence. but when Angelo demands a higher price than Isabella is prepared to pay, it becomes evident that not only love but justice is at risk. The Duke returns disguised as Friar Ludovcio, but will he intervene to spare his people from the not-so-upright Angelo, and how can he respond when young lovers are imprisoned alongside brothel keepers and bawds?

      Cast

      • Roger Allam – Duke Vincentio
      • Josette Simon – Isabella
      • Hakeem Kae-Kazim – Claudio
      • Sean Baker – Lord Angelo
      • Mark Dignam – Escalus
      • Alex Jennings – Lucio
      • Janet Amsbury – Mariana
      • Linda Spurrier – Mistress Overdone
      • Phil Daniels – Pompey
      • David Howey – Provost
      • George Raistrick – Elbow
      • Gordon Case – Barnadine
      • Kate Littlewood – Juliet
      • Derek Hutchinson – Abhorson
      • Bill McGuirk – Justice
      • David Pullan – Froth
      • Carlton Chance – Gentleman
      • Steven Elliot – Angelo’s Servant

      Creative team

      • Writer: William Shakespeare
      • Music by: Jeremy Sams
      • Director: Nicholas Hytner
      • Designer: Mark Thompson

      Roger Allam said:

      Measure for Measure leaves me with the sense that life is all there is, so we might as well live it as best we can; that being human is not a given something we have to strive for. That the reason we are here is to live and that this involves making many difficult judgements.” (source)

      Interesting note

      Roger Allam reprised his role for the Arkangel dramatisation of Measure for Measure which can be purchased here. He also played Angelo in a 1978 performance of the play at Contact Theatre, Manchester. gallery: stage (1985 – 1989)

    • Julius Caesar (1987)
      JC88RSCimage © Royal Shakespeare Company

      Theatre

      Royal Shakespeare Theatre, Stratford-upon-Avon / Barbican Theatre, London

      Company

      Royal Shakespeare Company

      Summary

      When Caesar returns to Rome from the wars a virtual dictator, Brutus and his republican friends resolve that his ambition must be curbed – which in Rome can mean only one thing: the great general must be assassinated. But once the deed is done, the idealistic conspirators must reckon with the forces of a new power bloc, led by Mark Antony and Caesar’s nephew Octavius. When their armies close at Philippi, will Caesar’s ghost be avenged? Opposing dictatorship and republicanism, private virtue and mob violence, Shakespeare’s tense drama of high politics reveals the emotional currents that flow between men in power.

      Cast

      • Roger Allam – Brutus
      • David Waller – Julius Caesar
      • Nicholas Farrell – Antony
      • Sean Baker – Cassius
      • Gregory Doran – Octavius
      • Geoffrey Freshwater – Casca
      • Susan Colverd – Calpurnia
      • Janet Amsbury – Portia
      • Ian Barritt – Flavius
      • Dennis Clinton – Lepidus
      • Mike Dowling – Murellus
      • William Chubb – Decius / Titinius
      • Gordon Case – Cinna / Lucilius
      • Carlton Chance – Claudius / Clitus / Octavius’ servant
      • Ian Barritt – Ligarius / Volumnius
      • Mike Dowling – Messala / Servant / Soldier
      • Steven Elliot – Pindarus / Trebonius
      • Derek Hutchinson – Strato
      • Hakeem Kae-Kazim – Cinna the Poet

      Creative team

      • Writer: William Shakespeare
      • Music by: Guy Woolfenden
      • Director: Terry Hands
      • Designer: Farrah

      Reviews

      In October 1995 The Sunday Telegraph Magazine remarked that Allam’s was the ‘definitive Brutus,’ an opinion that is shared widely. In One Night Stands: A Critic’s View of Modern British Theatre, Michael Billington states that ‘Mr Allam is first rate’ and gives a rave review of his performance: ‘Mr Allam has a voice, dignity and that vital Shakespearean ability to weigh a phrase so as to give us an insight into character. When he says, after the assassination, he will go into the pulpit and ‘show the reason of our Caesar’s death’, his emphasis on the noun exposes the flawed liberal assumption that you can persuade people into acceptance. I was also moved, for the first time, by Brutus’s acknowledgement of Portia’s death: as Mr Allam revealed she ‘swallowed fire’, he burned the letter bearing the news and poignantly watched it fade to ashes’. (One Night Stands: A Critic’s View of Modern British Theatre pg. 277-278) These two players [Sean Baker and Roger Allam] carry the evening. They make improbable comrades. “Noble” is not the first word that comes to mind for Mr Allam’s admirably spoken Brutus but this is a man of honour who hates having to act dishonourably. ‘Not the noblest Roman of them all,’ Eric Shorter (PDF) gallery: stage (1985 – 1989)

    • Heresies (1986)
      heresies01acc
      image © Royal Shakespeare Company

      Theatre

      Pit Theatre, London

      Company

      Royal Shakespeare Company

      Summary

      In this juxtaposition of two worlds, Leah, a music instructor, and Violet, a teacher, go to the East to find a new self. This self is contrasted with Pimm’s constructed, western self.

      Cast

      • Roger Allam – Pimm
      • Susan Colverd – Leah
      • Clive Russell – Clive
      • Miriam Karlin – Betty
      • Paola Dionisotti – Violet
      • Ann Mitchell – Mary
      • Caroline Goodall – Cholla
      • Stella Gonet – Bridie
      • Nimmy Marsh – Lindiwie
      • Tina Marian – Marissa
      • Susan Tracy – Mayonnaise
      • Penelope Freeman – Roman

      Creative team

      • Writer: Deborah Levy
      • Music by: Ilona Sekacz
      • Director: Susan Todd
      • Designer: Iona McLeish

      Interesting note

      The play was directed by Lily Susan Todd who had worked with Allam in the feminist ‘Monstrous Regiment’ theatre company. set pictures || gallery: stage (1985 – 1989)

    • The Archbishop's Ceiling (1986)
      Archbishop's Ceiling 2image © Pit Theatre

      Theatre

      Pit Theatre, London

      Company

      Royal Shakespeare Company

      Summary

      Set in an ornate (and possibly bugged) room in a former Archbishop’s palace, Arthur Miller’s play explores the complex relationship between four main characters who are bound by politics, art, sex and the constant threat posed by the secret police in the play’s Eastern European backdrop.

      Cast

      • Roger Allam – Adrian
      • Jane Lapotaire – Maya
      • John Shrapnel – Sigmund
      • David De Keyser – Marcus
      • Stella Gonet – Irina

      Creative team

      • Writer: Arthur Miller
      • Director: Nick Hamm
      • Designer: Fotini Dimou

      Interesting note:

      Arthur Miller frequently expressed a degree of astonishment at what he deemed to be a brave decision on Allam’s part- that of leaving the successful production of Les Misérables in order to take on a relatively low-key role. Allam himself underplays his decision, stating that he chose to make the change because he ‘thought it would be interesting’. “To play Adrian….in the 1986 Royal Shakespeare Company production of The Archbishop’s Ceiling, Roger Allam gave up the leading role as Javert in the monster hit Les Misérables because he had done it over sixty times and thought my play more challenging for him at that moment of his career. Nor did he consider his decision a particularly courageous one. This is part of what a theatre culture means and it is something few New York actors would have the sense of security even to dream of doing.” Timebends by Arthur Miller, 1987. gallery: stage (1985 – 1989)

    • Les Misérables (1985)

      Les Mis 5

       image © Royal Shakespeare Company

      Theatre

      Barbican Theatre, London / Palace Theatre, London

      Company

      Royal Shakespeare Company

      Summary

      Based on Victor Hugo’s epic novel of contrition and the power of forgiveness, Jean Valjean’s bitterness at having been sent to prison for stealing a loaf of bread is salved by the great mercy and charity shown to him by a bishop who ‘buys his soul for God.’ Unfortunately, Inspector Javert (‘do not forget my name’) is considerably less able to forgive and forget, pursuing Valjean even beyond the barricades of an attempted student uprising on the streets of 19th century Paris.

      Cast

      • Roger Allam – Inspector Javert
      • Colm Wilkinson – Jean Valjean
      • Fantine – Patti LuPone
      • Rebecca Caine – Cosette
      • Alun Armstrong – Thénardier
      • Susan Jane Tanner – Madame Thénardier
      • Michael Ball – Marius
      • David Burt – Enjolras
      • Eponine – Frances Ruffelle
      • Grantaire – Clive Carter
      • Ian Tucker / Oliver Spencer / Liza Hayden – Gavroche
      • Ken Caswell – Bishop
      • Paul Leonard – Combeferre
      • Craig Pinder – Courfeyrac
      • Caroline Quentin – Blind beggar / Diner / Worker / Whore

      Creative Team

      • Author: Victor Hugo
      • Playwright: Alain Boublil
      • Music by: Claude-Michel Schonberg
      • Director: John Caird and Trevor Nunn
      • Designer: John Napier

      The making of…

      Cameron Mackintosh: ‘Stars was written because Roger Allam pointed out that his character, Javert, needed to express why he was so driven’

      Interesting fact:

      Along with several other members of the original cast, Allam performed ‘One Day More’ at the 25th Anniversary concert. gallery: stage (1985 – 1989) || reviews || buy the original cast recording || ‘One Day More’ at the Olivier Awards (1985)

    • Dreamplay (1985)
      Roger Allam and Cecile Paoli in Dreamplay ©RSC 1985 image © RSC/Sarah Ainslie

      Theatre

      Pit Theatre, London

      Company

      Royal Shakespeare Company

      Summary

      The primary character in this play is Agnes, the daughter of the Vedic god Indra. Descending to earth to bear witness to the problems faced by human beings, she meets about 40 characters, some of whom have a clear symbolic value (the four deans, for example, represent theology, philosophy, medicine and law). After experiencing many varieties of human suffering, including poverty and cruelty, the daughter of the gods realises that human beings are to be pitied. Eventually she returns to the heavens, an event which corresponds to the awakening from a dream-like sequence of events.

      Cast

      • Roger Allam – The Officer
      • Penny Downie – The God’s Daughter
      • George Raistrick – The Lawyer
      • Jan Revere – Edith
      • Miles Hoyle – Chancellor / The Glazier / The God / The Opera Singer / The Quarantine Maste
      • Cecile Paoli – Chorus / Dean of Medicine / The Blind Woman / The Wife
      • Simon Templeman – The Poet / Policeman
      • Liz Moscrop – Coquette / Dean of Philosophy / Schoolgirl / The Mother / The Stagedoor Keeper
      • John Rogan – Officer’s Father / Dean of Theology / The Husband / The Prompter

      Creative team

      • Writer: August Strindberg
      • Music by: Martin Best
      • Director: John Barton
      • Designer: Louise Belson
    • 'Not the RSC' Summer Festival (1985)

      Theatre

      Almeida Theatre, London

      Company

      Royal Shakespeare Company

      Summary

      Roger Allam performed in ‘Doom Doom Doom Doom,’ ‘Jaques and His Master’ and ‘After the Assassinations’ as part of the festival.

      Cast

      Doom Doom Doom Doom: 

      • Roger Allam – Brian Maxwell / Man
      • Nicholas Farrell – John Fogg
      • Kenneth Branagh – Denis
      • Frances Barber – Jane
      • Guy Fithen – Geoff
      • Rowena Roberts – Carol
      • Jimmy Yuill – Bill
      • Sarah Woodward – Monique / Yvonne

      Jaques and His Master: 

      • Roger Allam – Jaques’ Master
      • Henry Goodman – Jaques
      • Joanna Scanlon – Mother / Justine
      • Ian Mackenzie – Chevalier / Marquis
      • Sarah Berger – Agathe
      • Simon Templeman – Agathe’s Father
      • Don McKillop – Constable

      After the Assassinations:

      • Roger Allam – Performer
      • Ian McDiarmid – Performer
      • Josette Simon – Performer
      • Martin Jacobs – Performer
      • Steve Swinscoe – Performer
      • Brian Parr – Performer
      • Martin Jacobs – Performer
      • Nicholas Woodeson – Performer
      • Penny Downie – Performer

      Creative Team

      Doom Doom Doom Doom: 

      • Writer: Jonathan Gems
      • Director: Frances Barber

      Jaques and His Master:

      • Writer: Milan Kundera
      • Translator: Simon Callow
      • Director: A. J Quinn
      • Designer: Kate Burnett

      After the Assassinations:

      • Writer: Edward Bond
      • Music by: David Shaw-Parker
  • 1980 - 1984
    • Romeo and Juliet (1984)

      © Joe Cocks

      image  © Royal Shakespeare Company

      Theatre

      RSC tour and The Other Place, Stratford-upon-Avon

      Company

      Royal Shakespeare Company

      Summary

      In spite of the hatred of their long-feuding families, Romeo and Juliet meet at a masked ball and fall instantly in love. At first, things go relatively smoothly for the young couple- they manage to meet and even to marry in secret- but Juliet’s cousin recognised Romeo at the ball. Incensed, the Capulet cousin, Tybalt, challenges Romeo to a duel, not knowing that they are now related by marriage. Romeo refuses to fight, but his friend Mercutio is confused and irritated by his friend’s submission. Though a member of neither of the warring families, Mercutio decides to duel Tybalt instead and he is eventually stabbed under Romeo’s arm when his friend tried to intervene. Enraged by the death of his friend, Romeo slays Tybalt in turn and is exiled for his offence. Juliet concocts a plain to join him, but, when a message is fatally left undelivered, tragedy strikes, uniting both families in woe.

      Cast

      • Roger Allam- Mercutio / The Apothecary
      • Simon Templeman – Romeo
      • Amanda Root – Juliet
      • Frank Middlemass – Friar Lawrence
      • Polly James – The Nurse
      • Andrew Hall – Tybalt
      • George Raistrick – Capulet
      • Penny Downie – Lady Capulet
      • Donald McKillop – Montague
      • Liz Moscrop – Lady Montague
      • Steven Pinner – Paris
      • James Simmons – Benvolio
      • Martin Jacobs – Prince Escalus
      • Guy Fithen – Friar John
      • Jummy Yuill – Balthasar

      Creative team

      • Writer: William Shakespeare
      • Director: John Caird
      • Designer: Bob Crowley

      gallery: stage (1980 – 1984)

    • A Midsummer Night's Dream (1984)

      Midsummer Night's Dream 2

      image  © Royal Shakespeare Company

      Theatre

      The Other Place Theatre, Stratford

      Company

      Royal Shakespeare Company

      Summary

      A Midsummer Night’s Dream is perhaps the best loved of Shakepeare’s plays. It brings together aristocrats, workers, and fairies in a wood outside Athens, and from there the enchantment begins. Lysander loves Hermia, and Hermia loves Lysander. Helena loves Demetrius; Demetrius used to love Helena but now loves Hermia. Egeus, Hermia’s father, prefers Demetrius as a suitor, and enlists the aid of Theseus, the Duke of Athens, to enforce his wishes upon his daughter. According to Athenian law, Hermia is given four days to choose between Demetrius, life in a nunnery, or a death sentence. Hermia, ever defiant, chooses to escape with Lysander into the surrounding forest. Complications arise in the forest. Oberon and Titania, King and Queen of Fairies, are locked in a dispute over a boy whom Titania has adopted. Oberon instructs his servant Puck to bring him magic love drops, which Oberon will sprinkle on the Queen’s eyelids as she sleeps, whereupon Titania will fall in love with the first creature she sees upon awakening. Meanwhile, Helena and Demetrius have also fled into the woods after Lysander and Hermia. Oberon, overhearing Demetrius’s denouncement of Helena, takes pity upon her and tells Puck to place the magic drops upon the eyelids of Demetrius as well, so that Demetrius may fall in love with Helena. Puck, however, makes the mistake of putting the drops on the eyelids of Lysander instead. Helena stumbles over Lysander in the forest, and the spell is cast; Lysander now desires Helena and renounces a stunned Hermia. In the midst of this chaos, a group of craftsmen are rehearsing for a production of “Pyramus and Thisbe,” to be played for the Duke at his wedding. Puck impishly casts a spell on Bottom to give him the head of a donkey. Bottom, as luck would have it, is the first thing Titania sees when she awakens…

      Cast

      • Roger Allam- Oberon / Theseus
      • David Whitaker – Puck
      • Penny Downie – Titania
      • James Simmons – Lysander
      • Christopher Baines – Demetrius
      • Amanda Root – Hermia
      • Katharine Rogers – Helena
      • Donald McKillop – Egeus
      • Penny Downie – Hippolyta
      • Philip Jackson – Nick Bottom
      • Frank Middlemass – Peter Qunice
      • Andrew Hall – Francis Flute
      • Simon Templeman – Robin Starveling
      • George Raistrick – Tom Snout
      • Jimmy Yuill – Snug
      • David Whitaker – Philostrate

      Creative team

      • Writer: William Shakespeare
      • Director: Sheila Hancock
      • Designer: Bob Crowley

      gallery: stage (1980 – 1984)

    • Richard III (1984)

      Sion Probert, Roger Allam and Brian Parr in Richard III © RSC 1984

       image  © Royal Shakespeare Company

      Theatre

      Royal Shakespeare Theatre, Stratford

      Company

      Royal Shakespeare Company

      Summary

      Richard, the deformed Duke of Gloucester, lies, murders and cheats his way to the throne of England as he systematically slaughters his enemies, allies and family (including his own brother, The Duke of Clarence, and his boy nephews). As the Wars of the Roses rage on around him, his mind and his power start to disintegrate, until his final deadly encounter with the Duke of Richmond at the Battle of Bosworth.

      Cast

      • Roger Allam – Clarence
      • Antony Sher – Richard III
      • Malcolm Storry – Buckingham
      • Harold Innocent – King Edward IV
      • Frances Tomelty – Queen Elizabeth
      • Penny Downie – Anne
      • Brian Blessed – Hastings
      • Yvonne Coulette – Duchess of York
      • Patricia Routledge – Margaret
      • Ian Mackenzie – Ratcliffe
      • Simon Templeman – Catesby
      • Jim Hooper – Tyrrell
      • Christopher Ravenscroft – Richmond
      • Peter Miles – Stanley
      • Andy Readman – Earl of Surrey

      Creative team

      • Writer: William Shakespeare
      • Music by: Guy Woolfenden
      • Director: Bill Alexander
      • Designer: William Dudley

      gallery: stage (1980 – 1984)

    • Today (1984)

      today01acc

       image © Royal Shakespeare Company

      Theatre

      Other Place Theatre, Stratford-upon-Avon / The Pit, London

      Company

      Royal Shakespeare Company

      Summary

      Encompassing events from the Great Depression of the 1930s as well as those from the Spanish Civil war, Robert Holman’s play was written for a specific group of RSC actors with whom he had lived for a period in Stratford-upon-Avon.

      Cast

      • Roger Allam – Victor Ellison
      • Rowena Roberts – Dorothy Ellison
      • George Raistrick – Thomas Ellison
      • Alison Rose – Lucy Ellison
      • Jimmy Yuill – Wilfred Fox
      • Katharine Rogers – Sister Mary Joseph
      • Simon Templeman – Heinz Bayer
      • Penny Downie – Peggy Smith
      • Donald McKillop – Constable Price
      • Jim Hooper – Peter Dean

      Creative team

      • Writer: Robert Holman
      • Music by: Richard Springate
      • Director: Bill Alexander
      • Designer: William Dudley

      gallery: stage (1980 – 1984)

    • The Party (1984)
      David Threlfall, Kate Buffery, Ian McDiarmid, Malcolm Storry and Roger Allam in The Party © RSC, 1984 image © Royal Shakespeare Company

      Theatre

      Gulbenkian Studio, Newcastle-upon-Tyne, The Pit and The Other Place

      Company

      Royal Shakespeare Company

      Summary

      Set in 1968 during the Paris student riots, the story is on one level a political discussion about the finer points of Western radicalism. It all takes place in the salubrious London flat of woolly liberal BBC-TV producer Joe Shawcross, who is host to a gathering of a group of ardent leftists, including a journalist, a university student, a politics professor, and a playwright. They’ve come together ‘to do something’ to support their Parisian brothers and sisters, and they spend the rest of the evening trying to settle on ‘a theory to underpin action.’

      Cast

      • Roger Allam – Andrew Ford
      • David Threlfall – Joe Shawcross
      • Ian McDiarmid – John Tagg
      • Josette Simon – Lindie Mann
      • Ian Mackenzie – Eddie Shawcross
      • Nicholas Woodeson – Jeremy Hayes
      • Brian Parr – Grease Ball
      • Malcolm Storry – Malcolm Stoman
      • Martin Jacobs – Richard Maine
      • Kate Buffery – Susie Plaistow

       Creative team

      • Writer: Trevor Griffiths
      • Sound by: John Leonard
      • Director: Howard Davies
      • Designer: William Dudley
    • Melons (1984)

      Theatre

      The Other Place, Stratford-upon-Avon

      Company

      Royal Shakespeare Company

      Summary

      “In the second act of Bernard Pomerance’s ‘Melons,’ there is a confrontation between a once fierce Apache chief now posing as a peaceful Pueblo farmer and a young Indian doctor who has a pragmatic attitude about the achievement of equal rights for their people. It is 1906, wars are over but old wounds remain raw. The meeting of the two Indians – in a melon field in the New Mexico countryside – is both sharp and succinct, and strikes at the heart of the conflict in Mr. Pomerance’s otherwise discursive play.” (source)

      Cast

      • Roger Allam – Carlos Montezuma
      • Geoffrey Hutchings – Stolsky
      • Arthur Kohn – Trueborn
      • Ben Kingsley – Caracol
      • Yvonne Coulette – Edna Brightman
      • Rowena Roberts – Georgia Tolson

      Creative team

      • Writer: Bernard Pomerance
      • Director: Alison Sutcliffe
    • 'One Year On' Festival (1983)

      One Year - RSC Barbican Festival: The Charge of the Light Brigade © Royal Shakespeare Company 1893

      image © Royal Shakespeare Company

      Theatre

      The Pit, London

      Company

      Royal Shakespeare Company

      Summary

      Roger Allam performed in both ‘Typhoid Mary’ and ‘The Charge of the Light Brigade’ as part of this festival.

      Cast

      Typhoid Mary: 

      • Roger Allam – Dr Soper / Father John / Customs Official
      • Juliet Stevenson – Mary Mallon
      • Noelyn George – Statue of Liberty
      • Bess Black – Dawg
      • Robert Hickson – Dr Kendall / O’Rorke
      • Andrew Thomas James – Otis / Detective
      • Susan Leong – Esther / Arabella

      Charge of the Light Brigade: 

      • Roger Allam – Terence Gawain Hackett
      • Harriet Walter – Cloudesley Shovell

      Creative Team

      Typhoid Mary:

      • Writer: Shirley Gee
      • Director: Susan Todd
      • Designer: Martyn Wood

      Charge of the Light Brigade:

      • Writer: Partick Barlowe and Susan Todd
      • Director: T.G Hackett
      • Designer: Di Seymour
    • Our Friends in the North (1982)
      Anthony O'Donnell, David Whitaker and Roger Allam © Donald Cooper
      image © Royal Shakespeare Company

      Theatre

      The Other Place, Stratford-upon-Avon / The Pit, London

      Company

      Royal Shakespeare Company

      Summary

      The play follows the stories of four young friends from Newcastle through the 1960s and 1970s. Nicky is a left-wing political idealist who goes into local politics to change things for the better but discovers it runs by corruption and back-handers. Tosker and Mary marry and have a child and, thanks to Nicky, get a brand new council flat, but the building of the flats was given to builder John Edwards after some bribes to members of the housing committee and they soon start to fall apart. Geordie goes to London, works for a small-time gangster who runs porn shops and strip clubs, goes to prison after the police they had been bribing turn on them when they are being investigated for corruption and then fights against the black militants in Rhodesia as a mercenary.

      Cast

      • Roger Allam – John Browne, Kruger and Ronald Conrad (The Other Place) / Ronald Conrad and John Bourne (The Pit)
      • Peter Chelsom – Nicky
      • Andrew Jarvis – John Edwards
      • David Whitaker – Geordie Hurst
      • Anthony O’Donnell – Tosker Cox
      • Jane Carr – Mary Cox / Debbie
      • Fred Pearson – Alan Whitaker
      • Gillian Webb – Florrie / Mrs Kelly / Henny
      • Julia Hills – Rusty
      • Jim Broadbent – Austin Donohue
      • James Garbutt – Sir William Sampson
      • Peter Ellis – Dennis Cockburn / Walter Sykes

      Creative team

      • Writer: Peter Flannery
      • Director: John Caird
      • Designer: Ultz

      gallery: stage (1980 – 1984)

    • Poppy (1982)
      Susan Leong and Roger Allam in Poppy © RSC 1982image © Royal Shakespeare Company

      Theatre

      The Barbican, London

      Company

      Royal Shakespeare Company

      Summary

      Poppy is a ‘celebration’ of Victorian values and exposes the hypocrisy, racism, drug dealing, money worship and sexual repression of the time through the favourite entertainment form of the period: pantomime. Dick Whittington, his man Jack, Sally the Principal Girl, the Dame, two pantomime horses, a flying ballet, a transformation scene and even the traditional song-sheet are all brought on to tell the serious and finally devastating story of the single most profitable crop of the British East India Company.

      Cast

      • Roger Allam – Lin Tse-Tsii
      • Tony Church – Tao-Kuan
      • Jane Carr – Queen Victoria
      • Stephen Moore – Jack Idle
      • Christopher Hurst and Andrew Thomas James – Jack’s horse, Randy
      • Julia Hills – Sally Forth
      • Noelyn George and Sara Finch – her mare, Cherry
      • Geoffrey Hutchings – Lady Dodo
      • Geraldine Gardner – Dick Whittington
      • Bernard Lloyd – Obadiah Upward
      • Brian Poyser – Teng T’ing Chen
      • David Whitaker – Lord Palmerston / Elephant
      • Susan Leong – Yo-Yo
      • Ken Robertson – Albert / Elephant

       Creative team

      • Writer: Peter Nichols
      • Music by: Monty Norman
      • Director: Terry Hands
      • Designer: Farrah
    • Twin Rivals (1981)
      © Joe Cocks
      image  © Joe Cocks

      Theatre

      Other Place Theatre, Stratford-upon-Avon / The Pit, London

      Company

      Royal Shakespeare Company

      Summary

      The Twin Rivals is a play by George Farquhar first produced at Drury Lane Theatre. Hermes Wouldbe, the elder brother, is going to be swindled out of the family estate and the hand of his fiancée, Constance, by the younger, Benjamin, with the help of the lawyer, Subtleman, who offers to bring a cargo-load of perjuring witnesses from Ireland.

      Cast

      • Roger Allam- Subtleman (The Other Place) / Richmore (The Pit)
      • Miles Anderson – Hermes Wouldbe
      • Harriet Walter – Constance
      • Mike Gwilym – Benjamin Wouldbe
      • Paul Shelley – Richmore (The Other Place)
      • James Fleet – Subtleman (The Pit)
      • Ronan Wilmot – Teague
      • George Raistrick – Fairback / Balderdash
      • Simon Templeman – Captain Trueman
      • Jane Carr – Aurelia
      • Miriam Karlin – Mrs Mandrake
      • Peter Ellis – Alderman / Mr Clearaccount
      • Andrew Jarvis – Gaoler / Valet

      Creative team

      • Writer: George Farquhar
      • Music by: Domenico Scarlatti
      • Director: John Caird
      • Designer: Ultz
    • The Two Gentlemen of Verona (1981)

      Two Gentlemen of Verona

      image  © Donald Cooper

      Theatre

      Royal Shakespeare Theatre, Stratford-upon-Avon

      Company

      Royal Shakespeare Company

      Summary

      Valentine and Proteus are best friends until they fall in love with the same girl. Having travelled to Milan in search of adventure, they both fall for the Duke’s daughter Silvia. But Proteus is already sworn to his sweetheart Julia at home in Verona, and the Duke thinks Valentine is not good enough for his Silvia. With friendship forgotten, the rivals’ affections quickly get out of hand as the four young lovers find themselves on a wild chase through the woods, confused by mistaken identity and threatened by fierce outlaws before they find a path to reconciliation.

      Cast

      • Roger Allam- Outlaw
      • Peter Land – Proteus
      • Peter Chelsom – Valentine
      • Diana Hardcastle – Silvia
      • John Franklyn-Robbins – Emperor of Milan
      • Diana Berriman – Lucetta
      • Geoffrey Hutchings – Launce
      • Joseph Marcell – Speed
      • Paul Shelley – Thurio
      • Patrick Stewart – Sir Eglamour
      • Bernard Lloyd – Antonio
      • Leonie Mellinger – Ursula
      • Sheila Hancock – Outlaw
      • Bert Parnaby – Host
      • Christopher Hurst – Gentleman / Outlaw

      Creative team

      • Writer: William Shakespeare
      • Music by: Nick Bicat
      • Director: John Barton
      • Designer: Christopher Morley
    • Titus Andronicus (1981)
      © Shakespeare Birthday Trust
      image  © Royal Shakespeare Company

      Theatre

      Royal Shakespeare Theatre, Stratford-upon-Avon

      Company

      Royal Shakespeare Company

      Summary

      Returning to Rome from a war against the Goths, the general Titus Andronicus brings with him the queen Tamora and her three sons (Alarbus, Demetrius and Chiron) as prisoners of war. Titus’ sacrifice of Tamora’s eldest son to appease the ghosts of his dead sons, and his decision to refuse to accept the title of emperor, initiates a terrible cycle of mutilation, rape and murder. And all the while, at the centre of the nightmare, there moves the villainous, self-delighting Aaron. Grotesquely violent and daringly experimental, Titus was the smash hit of Shakespeare’s early career, and is written with a ghoulish energy he was never to repeat elsewhere. By S. Clarke Hulse’s count, the play has “14 killings, 9 of them on stage, 6 severed members, 1 rape (or 2 or 3, depending on how you count), 1 live burial, 1 case of insanity and 1 of cannibalism–an average of 5.2 atrocities per act, or one for every 97 lines.”

      Cast

      • Roger Allam- Demetrius
      • Patrick Stewart – Titus Andronicus
      • Sheila Hancock – Tamora
      • Hugh Quarshie – Aaron
      • Leonie Mellinger – Lavinia
      • Bernard Lloyd – Saturninus
      • Philip Franks – Bassianus
      • Paul Shelley – Lucius
      • Colin Tarrant – Chiron
      • Nigel Le Vaillant – Quintus
      • John Franklyn-Robbins – Aemilius
      • Christopher Hurst – Mutius
      • Peter Chelsom – Alarbus
      • Kevin Wallace – Martius
      • Geoffrey Hutchings – Clown
      • Diana Berriman – Nurse

      Creative team

      • Writer: William Shakespeare
      • Music by: Nick Bicat
      • Director: Peter Stevenson
      • Designer: Christopher Morley

      gallery: stage (1980 – 1984)

    • All's Well That Ends Well (1981)

      AWW81RSC

      image  © Donald Cooper

      Theatre

      Royal Shakespeare Theatre, Stratford-upon-Avon / Barbican Theatre, London

      Company

      Royal Shakespeare Company

      Summary

      Helena loves the arrogant Bertram, and when she cures the King of France of his sickness, she claims Bertram as her reward. But her brand-new husband, flying from Helena to join the wars, attaches two obstructive conditions to their marriage – conditions he is sure will never be met. All’s Well That Ends Well grinds the romantic against the realistic at every turn and brilliantly reverses all the usual expectations of Shakespearean comedy. And some of Shakespeare’s most inventive language gives life to not just his single-minded heroine and her churlish lover, but a fantastic cast of frauds, cynics, sentimentalists and buffoons.

      Cast

      • Roger Allam – Morgan
      • Harriet Walter – Helena
      • Mike Gwilym – Bertram
      • John Franklyn-Robbins – King of France
      • Robert Eddison – Lord Lafeu
      • Stephen Moore – Parolles
      • Cheryl Campbell – Diana
      • Gillian Webb – Widow Capilet
      • John Rogan – Duke of Florence
      • Geoffrey Hurchings – LaVache
      • Peggy Ashcroft – Countess of Rossillion
      • Peter Chelsom – Gentleman

      Creative team

      • Writer: William Shakespeare
      • Music by: Guy Woolfenden
      • Director: Trevor Nunn
      • Designer: John Gunter
  • 1975 - 1980
    • The Monstrous Regiment

      After studying drama at Manchester University, Roger Allam co-founded the feminist theatre group The Monstrous Regiment.

      For more information, company photos, press cuttings, interviews, recordings and much more, please visit the treasure trove that is The Monstrous Regiment‘s official website.

      The company’s archives are lodged with the Theatre and Performance Archives at the Victoria and Albert Museum and a complete online catalogue is now available.