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Holliday Grainger, Olivia Hallinan, Emily Taaffe & Paul McGann to Star in Chekov's THREE SISTERS at Southwark Playhouse, Begin. 4/3

By: Mar. 03, 2014
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Holliday Grainger, Olivia Hallinan, Emily Taaffe and Paul McGann will head the cast at Southwark Playhouse from April 3, it was announced today.

Three Sisters reunites producers Jagged Fence Productions and director Russell Bolam - the team behind 2012's critically acclaimed, sell-out hit, The Seagull ("fresh, colloquial, sexy and downright perceptive", The Daily Telegraph) - and is co-produced by Danielle Tarento, the award winning producer of last year's smash hit, Titanic - winner last night of four Off West End Awards, including Best Musical.

Three Sisters will run for a five-week season in The Large at Southwark Playhouse from Thursday 3 April - Saturday 3 May. Press night is Tuesday 8 April at 8.00pm.

Holliday Grainger (Irina) starred as Bonnie in the just-aired TV mini series, Bonnie & Clyde and played the Pope's wayward daughter, Lucrezia Borgia, in three series of The Borgias on Sky Atlantic. She was Estella in the film Great Expectations and last appeared on stage in London at the Donmar Warehouse in Douglas Hodge's production of Athol Fugard's Dimetos.

Olivia Hallinan (Olga) is best known as Laura Timmins in all four series of the BBC TV series Lark Rise to Candleford and also as Kim in Julie Birchill's critically acclaimed Sugar Rush on Channel 4. In the West End she appeared in Precious Little Talent at Trafalgar Studios and Herding?Cats at Hampstead Theatre - "terrific, full of bounce and fury, so believably incensed, I could feel my blood pressure rising just by listening to her" (Evening Standard).

Emily Taaffe (Masha) was Miranda in The Tempest, Viola in Twelfth Night and Luciana in The Comedy of Errors, all for the RSC, and The Cherry Orchard, The King James Bible and The Veil all at the National Theatre.

Paul McGann (Vershinin) is one of Britain's most versatile actors and has appeared in more than 80 films and TV series, including the seminal Withnail & I, which was voted the second best British film of the last 25 years by a poll of 60 eminent British film filmmakers and film criics in The Observer. Together with Tim Roth, Gary Oldman and Colin Firth, he was part of the celebrated 'Brit Pack' in Hollywood, where he starred in major films for Steven Spielberg and David Fincher. He was the eighth reincarnation of Dr Who in the 1996 spin-off US TV movie. Last November, after months of fevered speculation, and as part of the show's 50th anniversary celebrations, he delighted millions of fans worldwide when he once again played the Doctor in the specially created mini-episode The Night of the Doctor. In recent years he has been seen on TV in Luther, A Mother's Son, Ripper Street and The Bletchley Circle. In The West End, he was "memorably good as Reg Nuttall" (The Sunday Times) when he co-starred with Dominic West in Simon Gray's Butley at the Duchess.

The rest of the cast are David Carlyle (Tusenbach) whose recent roles include Carpe Diem at the National Theatre; Emily Dobbs (Natasha) was Masha in The Seagull at Southwark Playhouse and Stas, in Pam Gems' Dusa Fish Stas and Vi at the Finborough; Michael Garner (Chebutykin) The Merry Wives of Windsor at Shakespeare's Globe; Dudley Rogers (Ferapont) Titanic at Southwark Playhouse; Tom Ross-Williams (Kulygin) received rave reviews as the central character of The Writer in Tennessee Williams' Vieux Carré (Front Row Dress Award, Best Revival) at the King's Head Theatre and West End transfer to Charing Cross Theatre; Joe Sims (Solyony) was series regular Nige Carter in Broadchurch on ITV1, and was named Best Actor in the 2012 Offies for As We Forgive Them at the Arcola; Jane Thorne (Anfisa) was in Judgement Day at the Print Room; Thom Tuck (Andrey) was a member of The Penny Dreadfuls comedy group.

Anya Reiss (Writer) wrote her first play when she was 14 and then became a member of the Royal Court Theatre's Young Writers' Programme. For the stage, she most recently adapted Chekhov's The Seagull for Southwark Playhouse and Forty-Five Minutes, which played at the National Theatre's 2013 Connections Festival. Prior to that she wrote The Acid Test, which opened at the Royal Court in May 2011 and received rave reviews. Her debut play, Spur of the Moment, (written when she was 17) opened at the Royal Court in July 2010, for which she won the Most Promising Playwright Award at the 2010 Evening Standard Awards and the 2010 Critics' Circle Awards and Best New Play at the 2010 TMA Awards.

Russell Bolam (Director) recently directed critically acclaimed productions of The Merry Wives Of Windsor at the Ivan Vasov, National Theatre of Bulgaria and Anya Reiss' version of The Seagull and the world premiere of Philip Ridley's Shivered, both at Southwark Playhouse. The Seagull was long-listed for Best Off-West End Production at the Whatsonstage Awards and for Best Actor and Best Actress at the Off West End Awards. Shivered was nominated for Best Off-West End Production at the Whatsonstage Awards and for Best Production, Best New Play, Best Actor and Best Director at the Off West End Awards.



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