Blue Apple Theatre

Founded in 2005, Blue Apple Theatre is an ambitious charity based in Winchester, Hampshire, England, that supports people with learning disabilities in their personal development through theatre arts activities. Over 15 years Blue Apple Theatre has become one of the most well-known disability arts organisations in the south of England, presenting high quality productions to the widest possible audiences – performing and touring drama, dance, film and song within a variety of indoor and outdoor venues locally, nationally and even internationally.

Blue Apple Theatre's logo

In June 2012, Blue Apple Theatre was named as the 1000th winner of the Queen's Award for Voluntary Service[1] in recognition of the efforts of its voluntary staff.An award-winning BBC documentary about our tour of Hamlet and a Channel 4 news feature about our performance at Shakespeare’s Globe, which has been viewed 7.5 million times online, have given our performers a high national and international profile. Our performers were the first actors with Down syndrome to perform the play professionally. Other prominent work has included Living Without Fear – a drama about disability hate crime, led and devised by our members, that toured England including to the House of Commons where it informed national policy change. In 2019 Blue Apple Theatre developed See No Evil, a new film project about exploitation and abuse that has been touring Hampshire schools.

In 2019-2020 Blue Apple Theatre worked with 175 participants and nearly 3,500 people saw a Blue Apple performance. The growth of the charity has been steady and sustained, attracting a growing range of funding and donations alongside its increasing earned income. In 2018, we moved to the University of Winchester as artists in residence where we are developing innovative collaborative projects.

At the outbreak of the coronavirus crisis, Blue Apple quickly transformed its regular participatory programme into online sessions to ensure its highly vulnerable members were able to continue to maintain the many documented personal benefits they gain. Blue Apple's sessions have been reported as the highlight of many people’s weeks whilst they struggle with social isolation and Blue Apple received some major coverage with a feature story on the BBC South Today news programme.

History

Blue Apple was founded in 2005 by Jane Jessop to provide opportunities for people with a wide range of learning difficulties to participate in high quality theatre and dance opportunities. Her aim was to enable them to discover and explore their talents on and off stage and to challenge expectations, with no ceiling on the opportunities given to them or on our expectations of them. She was inspired by the experience of her son Tommy Jessop who was acting with the BBC. Over 50 people came to each of the pilot workshops and Blue Apple has had a waiting list ever since.

Jessop led the company for over ten years during which time Blue Apple won several awards, gained Arts Council funding, developed a film programme and broke through many barriers, enabling Blue Apple's performers to work in a professional environment, bring celebrated performances to mainstream theatres, and attract audiences of several thousand to touring productions. Jane's final project was a tenth birthday performance event on stage at Shakespeare's Globe Theatre in London.

Blue Apple now delivers over 400 drama and dance workshops a year for over 70 members, in addition to two professional theatre shows and one touring production each year. The company attracts audiences from all over England and has become respected as a leading producer of theatre and dance by performers who have disabilities.

The company's first show was a basic Variety show called "Born to be Blue". This was followed by a costumed pantomime "Cinderella and the Wolf" written with the cast by the playwright and film maker William Jessop. The company has created two full-scale productions a year ever since and launched a touring programme.

In 2008 the Apple Core auditioned theatre training group was established, Blue Apple launched its dance programme, made its first film and had a membership of around 50 people with learning disabilities. Blue Apple actors and dancers performed to a standing ovation in London, and in Brighton, Birmingham and around London. Blue Apple won its first award for changing the way people see and understand learning disability in spring 2009.

In Autumn 2009, Blue Apple appointed their first arts consultant Peter Clerke, who in 2012 became the company's first Artistic Director.[2] Peter Clerke worked with the playwright William Jessop [3] to create various productions including promenade performances of A Midsummer Night's Dream to mark Blue Apple's fifth anniversary in June 2010,[4] an original play called "Captain Miserable and the Book Guardian" for Christmas 2010, a lively comic adaptation of Gogol's The Government Inspector for Summer 2011, a groundbreaking touring adaptation of Hamlet for 2012, an adaptation of Feydeau's Hotel du Paradis for full company performance in 2013[5] and adaptations of Much Ado About Nothing for both the touring and main company productions in 2014.

Volunteer support has always been vital to the success of the company. The crucial support of nearly 200 volunteers who have supported Blue Apple since its foundation was recognised by the Queen when in 2012 Blue Apple became the 1,000th winner of the Queen's Award for volunteering.

Apple Cores

The Apple Core Actors

In 2008, Blue Apple Theatre introduced an intensive theatre training scheme for auditioned actors and dancers which has evolved into Blue Apple's touring company. The "Apple Core" began by creating various theatre and dance productions for performance at local and national events such as the Winchester Hat Fair, Mencap conferences, medical schools and universities and two of the actors performed scenes from Hamlet in the cabinet office as part of the Diamond Jubilee of Elizabeth II.

In Autumn 2011, the six Apple Core actors (four with Down syndrome) created the company's first major touring production, the hard-hitting "Living Without Fear", which addressed the difficult subject of disability hate crime as perpetrated towards people with learning disabilities. The play toured nationally and was performed to over 4,000 people including MPs and ministers in Parliament and over 600 school children and 800 police personnel. The Hampshire Chronicle described the play as "the most powerful production seen in Winchester for many years".[6] "Living Without Fear" had its second tour in March and April 2013.[7] In March 2012, Blue Apple Theatre received funding from the Home Office for the filmmaker William Jessop to create a film adaptation of the play for and with Hampshire Constabulary.[8]

In May 2012, the Apple Core actors created a new touring production of Hamlet and in 2014 toured Much Ado About Nothing to theatres across the south of England and at RADA.

Hamlet

The Cast of Blue Apple's Hamlet Tour

In 2012, Blue Apple received Arts Council England funding[9] for its Core actors to tour a production of Hamlet to theatres across the South of England, playing at illustrious venues like the Minack Theatre in Cornwall and the Rose Theatre, Kingston. The production received positive reviews in The Stage[10] and the Hampshire Chronicle. Blue Apple's Hamlet[11] was performed to over 3,500 people in all and scenes were performed by Tommy Jessop, and Lawrie Morris in the cabinet office in 2012 and by Tommy Jessop and Katy Francis on stage at Shakespeare's Globe Theatre's Sam Wanamaker Playhouse in 2016. The other actors were Anna Brisbane, Ros Davies, James Elsworthy, Katy Francis and Lawrie Morris.

At the end of June 2012, the Core actors returned to the main company for three performances of "Hamlet" at the Theatre Royal, Winchester.

The story of Blue Apple's Hamlet is the subject of William Jessop's Emmy-nominated BBC3 feature documentary, "Growing Up Down's" [12][13] The Times reviewed it as "a triumph for the cast, for BBC Three, and for everyone involved in this life-enhancing project." University of York academic, Dr Sarah Olive, argued that there was scope for the documentary to give greater opportunity for self-advocacy to the actors with learning disabilities featured.[14]

Other work

As well as producing plays, Blue Apple runs an award-winning dance programme and makes films.

"Perils of Penelope " is a short film made in 2008 by the whole company in the style of early silent movies.

"Freddie's Story" is a 40-minute training DVD starring Tommy Jessop, which tackles diagnostic overshadowing, gaining consent from someone with a learning disability, communication and care in hospital through dramatized scenes and face to face training by people who have learning disabilities and a hospital consultant. "Freddie's Story" is being used for training medical staff by the National Health Service in hospitals across Britain.[15]

"Paul's story" is a short training film commissioned by the police and funded by the Home Office. "Paul's Story" stars James Elsworthy and tackles difficult issues around hate crime aimed at people with learning disabilities.

Our support has enabled our participants to develop their creativity, confidence, independence, and their communication and social skills, and present the outcomes of this work to diverse audiences at, for example, Theatre Royal Winchester, Hat Fair and Heritage Open Days, as well as within other arts venues and community settings – primarily in Winchester but also in other locations across Hampshire as well as nationally and internationally.


gollark: https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-asia-57845644 ← politic
gollark: If you wanted to make it efficient that would be harder, but I doubt gecko did this.
gollark: It's just an off the shelf perceptual hashing thing and some kind of fuzzy matching on the results of that.
gollark: I don't think it's a difficult technical problem. I could add it to my bot if I cared.
gollark: 2026.

References

  1. Volunteers honoured in Queen's Award for Voluntary Service : Directgov - Newsroom Archived May 23, 2012, at the Wayback Machine
  2. "Scottish Arts Council - Archive - Profile: Peter Clerke". Scottisharts.org.uk. 2010-07-01. Retrieved 2013-08-07.
  3. "William Jessop". Ink Pellet. Retrieved 2013-08-07.
  4. "Blue Apple tackles the Bard (From Hampshire Chronicle)". Hampshirechronicle.co.uk. 2010-06-09. Retrieved 2013-08-07.
  5. https://web.archive.org/web/20140423235733/http://blueappletheatre.hampshire.org.uk/hotel.html
  6. Curtis, Joseph (9/6/2011). "Living Without Fear". The Hampshire Chronicle. Check date values in: |date= (help)
  7. "Living Without Fear to tour". Entertainment Focus. 2013-03-02. Retrieved 2013-08-07.
  8. Home Office (2012-03-29). "Community action against crime: innovation fund successful applicants - Publications". GOV.UK. Retrieved 2013-08-07.
  9. "To Be or Not to Be: Blue Apple Theatre's Hamlet Goes on Tour". Arts Council. 2012-05-01. Archived from the original on 2013-07-08. Retrieved 2013-08-07.
  10. Francesca Morrison (2012-05-15). "The Stage / Reviews / Hamlet". Thestage.co.uk. Retrieved 2013-08-07.
  11. https://web.archive.org/web/20160423153452/http://www.blueappletheatre.hampshire.org.uk/hamlet.html
  12. "The DFG Pitch - Winner Announced". DFG. 2011-06-13. Archived from the original on 2014-10-06. Retrieved 2013-08-07.
  13. "BBC Three Growing Up Down's". BBC Three. Retrieved 3 March 2015.
  14. Olive, Sarah (Forthcoming). Dunn, Leslie; Heetderks, Angela (eds.). Performing Disability in Early Modern England. London: Palgrave. Check date values in: |date= (help)
  15. "Blue Apple Theatre's latest success (From Hampshire Chronicle)". Hampshirechronicle.co.uk. 2011-10-17. Retrieved 2013-08-07.

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.