Billy Elliot writer Lee Hall's new play Our Ladies of Perpetual Succour is going to be a riot
It centres on a bunch of hell-raising choirgirls
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Your support makes all the difference.Playwright Lee Hall is best known for Billy Elliot, the inspirational, heart-warming film and musical about a boy who wants to be a ballet dancer and who overcomes the odds to achieve his dream. Now, Hall has turned his attention to the story of a Scottish Catholic schoolgirl choir, travelling to Edinburgh to compete in a singing competition. Hankies at the ready for the big emotional numbers, right?
Er, more like hankies ready to mop up the booze and bodily fluids flying round the stage .... Our Ladies of Perpetual Succour, which opens at the Traverse Theatre during Edinburghâs Fringe Festival this month, is based on Alan Warnerâs 1997 novel, The Sopranos, and is set to be a riot.
Whether itâs drinking 18 tequilas and falling off a bar stool, being propositioned by man standing on his head with an erection, or burning down a bouncerâs house with fireworks, these teenagers get into all sorts of scrapes in their quest to lose the singing competition. Thatâs right â their aim is to lose. Forget your X Factor or Glee-style narratives â all this underage lot wants is to get back to their small townâs club for the last dance (and chance of a shag).
Still, the contrast between voice-of-an-angel Catholic schoolgirls and their smoking, swearing, sex-hungry behaviour makes The Sopranos particularly ripe for reinvention. And theyâve assembled quite a team, with Vicky Featherstone, artistic director of the Royal Court, returning to the National Theatre of Scotland (which she helped found in 2004) to direct. The show will go on a no-doubt hellraising tour of Scotland and to Newcastle after the Fringe ⊠then, given the pedigree involved, who knows where?
Hallâs an exciting choice of adaptor, but anyone expecting a straight-forward musical might be in for a shock. Both Hall and Featherstone love the book for its outrageousness, and knew that to do justice to the unabashed, unapologetic force of Warnerâs words, it wouldnât work to simply stage the girlsâ misdemeanours in chronological order, with songs.
Most importantly, they did not want the girls to be objectified, whether judged or leered at. âThere is a voyeuristic version of this play, and we never wanted it to be voyeuristic at all,â says Featherstone. âThey get dressed up in these mad outfits, and theyâre very sexual, and sometimes theyâre in control of that and sometimes theyâre not âŠ.â If they were going to do Our Ladies, our ladies would have to be in charge. âThe main conceit is that it should be the girls telling the story, it should be owned by them,â says Hall, who explains it will be more like a gig than a musical, with the girls forming a band (with accompaniment from three young female musicians). âOne of the reasons for doing it was to upturn that âCatholic school girls in troubleâ clichĂ© ⊠itâs the anti-St Trinianâs!â
So, it is the six friends, addressing the audience directly, who recount their day in Edinburgh, as well as their more emotional backstories. Dead parents, serious illness, identity crises and class issues lurk in the considerable shadows of Warnerâs tale, underscored by freewheeling wit and wickedness â you might just need to dab away the odd tear after all.
This âself-presentationalâ style of theatre also allows the cast to let rip musically, singing a mixture of traditional choral which, having heard the girls in rehearsal, promises to be bone-achingly beautiful, and pop hits, to guide us through the charactersâ emotional journeys. âItâs not a musical, but the music does an awful lot of work,â says Hall.
However, curiously for a show set in the mid-Nineties, theyâre opting for a Seventies soundtrack; rather than covering, say, The Spice Girls, the girls will warble, er, ELO. âWeâre trying to make it universal, so to pick something iconic from a different time seemed â weirdly â to open it up,â Hall explains.
The other key thing about having the girls tell their own story is that the six young actresses also play every other character they encounter â which, in Warnerâs sharp-eyed telling, are largely pervy, pathetic men.
âItâs actually quite shocking, what they go through and the men that they meet,â says Featherstone. âIf you put that dynamic onstage girls will always be weak, and we didnât want the women to have any weakness at all: itâs about their empowerment. So, it became clear that they had to play the men as well. Thatâs been really liberating â itâs making me think a lot about who has the power onstage.â
Hall acknowledges that heâs written âa lot of plays with mostly menâ; this was an excellent chance to redress the balance. âI was really interested to see what itâs like to be a young woman with all of that, the male gaze, from inside-out â itâs something we really donât see very much on stage.â
This is true, and not just in the theatre. More widely in society, we often seem scared of the realities of young womenâs experience, notably their sexuality, either packaging it up as something to be slathered over and objectified, or criticising and condemning it (or often, both simultaneously). The Sopranos may be set in the mid-Nineties, but its subjects â binge drinking, teenage pregnancy, âunsuitableâ clothing et al â still push all sorts of moral panic buttons today.
Hall and Featherstone see the book as a forceful corrective to that pervasive public attitude of condescension and containment. And while their show may conceivably upset moralising red-top newspapers and have parents breaking out in a cold sweat, they refuse to tone down or apologise for the girlsâ behaviour. These moments of reckless abandon arenât an embarrassing blot on your reputation, Hall argues, but a rite-of-passage we should all have.
âThe bit that I recognised from growing up in Newcastle was the girlsâ absolute want â and need â to do this,â says Hall. âThe idea is that theyâre going to go fucking mental, and that going fucking mental is a great thing. Thatâs so reviled by a lot of stuck-up people, but itâs the most human thing. The girls come through it, battered and bruised, but we love them because of their spirit and attitude.â
The cast are in their early twenties, but look younger, and are certainly near enough to school days for the show to have the tang of authenticity. When I ask in rehearsals if they find their characters recognisable, thereâs a long pause, a little âyeahâ⊠and peals of laughter all round.
âIâm in the book!â declares Dawn Sievewright. âThis is exactly what I used to do on my weekends, on my nights out!â
The cast agree that itâs rare to see such behaviour on stage or screen without judgement or glamorisation. âItâs good because it isnât trying to glorify it in any way, itâs just basically saying âthis is how we areâ. Itâs not like âoh, now weâre going to shock youâ,â argues Kirsty MacLaren.
[âBut] itâs not rose-tinted, itâs not scared to be a little bit outrageous,â says Caroline Deyga. âItâs all the things you pretend you werenât as a teenager but you actually were.â
âI think weâve all got a story in there that we might connect closely with â and the audience will as wellâ concludes Sievewright with a naughty twinkle. In fact, never mind fireworks â it looks like these young ladies wonât need any help to set the Fringe on fire.
âOur Ladies of Perpetual Succourâ is at the Traverse, Edinburgh, 18 to 30 Aug, and on tour until 24 Oct; nationaltheatrescotland.com
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