News on your favorite shows, specials & more!

SCHISM, A Play From Leading Disabled Playwright, Athena Stevens, Comes To Park Theatre

By: Mar. 15, 2018
Enter Your Email to Unlock This Article

Plus, get the best of BroadwayWorld delivered to your inbox, and unlimited access to our editorial content across the globe.




Existing user? Just click login.

SCHISM, A Play From Leading Disabled Playwright, Athena Stevens, Comes To Park Theatre  Image

Aegis Productions in association with Park Theatre are proud to present Schism, a stunning play from disabled playwright, Athena Stevens. Questioning the power dynamics between male and female, and disabled and non-disabled, at its heart Schism is a play about two people finding each other, which questions the point where dreams and relationships become unrealistic or out of date. The official press night will be on Thursday 17th May at 7pm.

Failed architect Harrison had plans end his life. The last thing he needed was Katherine, a young student with cerebral palsy, breaking into his house begging for his help...

As their chaotic first encounter turns into the beginning of a twenty-year relationship, the unlikely couple grow to realise that they are capable of either building something great together - or absolutely destroying each other.

Schism, which was first performed at the Finborough Theatre, London (Neil McPherson, Artistic Director) is written and co-performed by playwright Athena Stevens, who, like her character, has cerebral palsy.

Athena comments, "Schism took me years to write because I needed to understand the unhealthy power dynamics I was being asked to accept as a woman. People would set me up on a pedestal and call me 'inspirational' until I would ask to be their equal. To have a woman with a disability call you out for discrimination, or promoting an unhealthy power dynamic, or to say 'your actions are hurting me' throws a lot of people into shock. They get defensive and start gas-lighting because it's easier to brush things under the rug than to take responsibility for their actions. So the question that this play presents is 'how long do I hold onto the hope people will change and when do I need to let go and live my life without those people?"

Athena's previous plays include The Amazing Vancetti Sisters (Tristan Bates Theatre) and Detours Ahead (Victory Gardens Theatre, Chicago). Her first online series Day of Small Things was commissioned as a full length documentary by Channel 4. Athena is currently on the Channel 4 screenwriters course, as well as a playwright in attachment for the Finborough Theatre. Athena's acting credits include Schism (Finborough Theatre), The Amazing Vancetti Sisters (Tristan Bates Theatre) and The Death of Hector (Sadler's Wells). In 2016, she was elected the national spokesperson for equality in the media for the Women's Equality Party. In 2017, she was named a member of the Shakespeare's Globe Creative Council, and will be directing there later in the year.

Jonathan McGuinness will be playing the role of Harrison. Theatre includes Bodies (Royal Court Theatre), Imogen (Globe Theatre), Four Minutes Twelve Seconds (Hampstead Theatre), The Oresteia (Almeida), Love's Sacrifice (RSC), The Ritual Slaughter of Gorge Mastromas (Royal Court Theatre), Metamorphosis (Vesturpost/Lyric Hammersmith), Comedy of Errors (RSC), The Tempest (RSC), Twelth Night (RSC), Fatherland (Gate Theatre), Alice (Sheffield Crucible Theatre), 1984 (Manchester Royal Exchange), Orphans (Paines Plough/Traverse/Birmingham Rep/Soho Theatre), The Cleansing of Constance Brown (Stand's Cafe), Love (Lyric Hammersmith), Once in a Lifetime (National Theatre), Playing with Fire (National Theatre) and The U. N Inspector (National Theatre). Television includes Holby City (BBC), Wolf Hall (Company Pictures), The Bletchley Circle (ITV), Silk (BBC), Casualty (BBC), Robin Hood (BBC), Catherine Tate Show (BBC/Tiger Aspect), A Touch of Frost (Yorkshire Television), In Search of the Brontes (BBC), The Convicts (BBC) and Have Your Cake and Eat It (Talk Back).

Schism is directed by Lily McLeish. She is a creative fellow of the RSC, associate director to Katie Mitchell and is the director of Fizzy Sherbet, a new writing initiative for women playwrights. As director her work includes The White Bike by Tamara von Werthern at The Space; Unlocked, a site specific installation for Glenside Hospital Museum in collaboration with alldaybreakfast; a colder water than here by Matt Jones for the Vaults Festival; Housekeeping by Rory Platt for Little Pieces of Gold at Southwark Playhouse; Absence by In-Sook Chappell directed as part of the Jerwood Assistant Director Programme at the Young Vic (2016); This Despised Love a devised piece based on Hamlet for the RSC Fringe Festival; Old Times by Harold Pinter at the Artheater Cologne and Footfalls by Samuel Beckett at the Severins-Burg-Theater, Cologne in collaboration with Port in Air.

www.parktheatre.co.uk



Comments

To post a comment, you must register and login.



Videos