Drawing: James Dreyfus in Candide at the Menier Chocolate Factory

James Dreyfus

French-born English actor James Dreyfus won the Best Supporting Performance in a Musical Olivier Award for his role in the National’s The Lady in the Dark in 1998. He’s best known to TV audiences for his British comedy characters, Constable Kevin Goody Ben Elton’s The Thin Blue Line, and as Kathy Burke’s gay flatmate Tom in Gimme Gimme Gimme. James has just finished a sell out run of Leonard Bernstein’s operetta Candide at the Menier Chocolate Factory, playing three crazy stereotypes Dr Pangloss, Cacambo and Martin.

Drawing: Eve Muirhead “A Stone’s Throw”

Eve Muirhead

Charismatic 24 year old Eve Muirhead is skip of the British Women’s Curling Team, comprising of fellow Scots Anna Sloan, Vicki Adams and Claire Hamilton. They won the bronze medal at this year’s Winter Olympics in Sochi.

Prior to that event, I, like many, hadn’t watched a lot of curling, in fact, my time ‘on the ice’ was zilch. It looked like bowls on ice, although it’s often referred to by the sports disciples as ‘chess on ice’. But, due to the success of both the Great British men’s and women’s teams they enjoyed extensive TV coverage. Captivated by the competition, we all became armchair experts, during work-place commentaries the next day, using curling lingo “stones, brooms, sweepers, the house… did you see Eve’s double takeout in the ninth that restricted the Swiss to a single when they had the last stone advantage?”

Following a family tradition Eve continues a long line of elite Scottish curlers. A four time World Junior champion, she became the youngest skip in the history of the sport, with Team Muirhead, playing for Scotland, winning the World Championships title in Riga last year. She’s also a great exponent of two other Scottish rituals, playing bagpipes and golf, turning down a chance to become a professional in the latter after two scholarship offers from American universities to concentrate on throwing stones.

Drawing: Silvia Gallerano in La Merda at the Soho Theatre

silvia gallerano

Award winning Italian actress Silvia Gallerano is currently appearing in the uncompromising one woman play La Merda at the Soho Theatre in London. It’s about our modern consumer society and how we pull ourselves out of the mud.

Inspired by Pier Paolo Pasolini’s ideas on cultural genocide, Cristian Ceresoli’s play features a young, ‘ugly’ and naked Silvia Gallerano revealing her bulimic and revolting secrets to all. The Guardian said “a startling monologue on body language, fame and politics with mesmerising bravery by a naked Silvia Gallerano.

Winner of six major awards including the coveted Scotsman Fringe First Award and The Stage Award for Best Actress. It shocked and awed the 2012 Edinburgh Fringe audience followed by a sell out Fringe run and European Tour.

Reviews included:
“Hard to watch. hard to ignore”
“One of the most wonderfully full on performances, ever seen at the Edinburgh Festival”
“Raw, touching, intelligent and unforgettable”

Silvia signed this sketch at the Soho Theatre after Thursday evening’s performance. La Merda finishes Sunday 4 May 2014.

Drawing: Katherine Ryan in Glam Role Model at the Soho Theatre

katherine ryan

London based Canadian comic, writer and actress katherine Ryan was the 2008 winner of the Nivea Funny Women Awards.

She is fast becoming a recognisable face on British TV with appearances on Live at the Apollo, Mock The Week, QI and Never Mind the Buzzcocks.

The Scotsman wrote of Katherine: “Warped wit… striking presence… killer lines.”

Today (Saturday 3 May 2014) is her final performance of Katherine Ryan: Glam Role Model, after a sold out run at London’s Soho Theatre. It’s part of Katherine’s second UK stand up tour, and tackles everything from celebrity obsession to sex and single motherhood. Her 60 minute repertoire includes gems such as:
“We keep better track of celebrities than aircraft” and “twerking… is not a dance, it’s a cry for help” and a booty-shaking Beyonce tribute.

Katherine signed this sketch after Thursday’s evening performance. Her first reaction was “oh you’ve included my dog… wow”. I’m pleased I did…

Drawing: Paul Chahidi as Maria in Twelfth Night

paul-chahidi

Twelfth Night is one of Shakespeare’s most beloved comedies. It was performed by an all-male cast in ‘original practice’, with the set, costumes, music and dances all inspired by the original staging of Shakespeare’s plays in the Elizabethan era at the Globe. In repertory with Richard III, both productions transferred to the Apollo Theatre in November 2012 in November 2012 until February the following year, and then transferred again to Broadway.

Paul Chahidi plays the scene stealing, witty, imperious maid Maria in Twlefth Night, in tandem with the brilliant Mark Rylance as his “mistress” Olivia.

He has to don six layers of women’s clothing, porcelain makeup and a ‘helmet’ hair piece, for the gender bending performance.

In his Broadway debut Paul secured his first Tony nomination this week for the role. He was also nominated for the Olivier in 2013.

He is currently in James Graham’s new play Privacy at the Donmar until the end of May 2014, where I met the charming actor after Thursday’s matinee and he loved the sketch. Which he happily signed. Good luck for the Tony’s!

Drawing: Amy Williams “Ice Queen of Speed”

amy williamsAmy Williams won the women’s skeleton bobsleigh gold medal at the 2010 Vancouver Winter Olympics, becoming the first British gold medalist in an individual event at the Winter Olympics for 30 years, since Robin Cousins’ won the figure skating at Lake Placid in 1980. Amy was originally a track athlete, before switching to the skeleton in 2002.

She won the silver  medal in her first major event, the 2009 World Championships in Lake Placid. In her Olympic gold-medal winning performance, Amy broke the track record twice and won by more than half a second.

 

Drawing: Angela Lansbury in Blithe Spirit at the Gielgud Theatre

Angela Lansbury

 

Theatre legend, Oscar winner and five time Tony Award winner Dame Angela Lansbury returned to the West End this spring for the first time in nearly 40 years in a revival of Noel Coward’s 1941 glacial comedy Blithe Spirit at the Gielgud Theatre.

She reunites with director Michael Blackmore to reprise the role of one of stage’s most loveable gargoyles, the dotty mystical fraud, Madame Arcati. “It’s a  character Dame Angela adores. She’s completely off the wall but utterly secure in her own convictions.” She won her 5th Tony playing the part in 2009.

A sprightly (maybe spiritly) 88, she’s the oldest performer appearing on the West End stage, seven years Robert Vaughn‘s senior (who appears in Twelve Angry Men at the Garrick.) It’s a remarkable performance. She’s on stage for most of the two and a half hours with a huge amount of lines and some energetic dance routines.

Blithe Spirit runs until June 7.

Drawing: Emma Thompson as Mrs Lovett in Sweeney Todd

emma thompson sweeney

Emma Thompson returned to musical theatre after a 30 year break to make her New York stage debut in Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber of Fleet Street to critical acclaim alongside Bryn Terfel as the serial-killing shaver. She last appeared on the boards in London in 1989 in Look Back in Anger. With her then husband Kenneth Branagh and in the musical Me and My Girl with Robert Lindsay in 1985.

For five performances she played Mrs Lovett, London’s worst pie maker in the concert production of the Sondheim’s classic, seminal musical at the Avery Fisher Hall at the Lincoln Centre for the Performing Arts in the Big Apple. Backed by the New York Philharmonic Emma wowed the critics last month, one saying she, “not only held her own against more experienced vocalists, but wound up running off with the show”.

I quickly drew this minimal line drawing when I found out she would be attending the Empire Awards at the end of March, where she was nominated for Saving Mr Banks. Like the trooper she is, Emma signed for everyone, including my sketch, “Oh Sweeney,” she smiled, “I hope you win,” I said. “So do I,” she replied – and she did.

Drawing: Bryn Terfel in Sweeney Todd

Sweeney Todd NY

Legendary Welsh bass-baritone Bryn Terfel was born Bryn Terfel Jones, but there was already another Welsh baritone named Bryn Jones, so chose Bryn Terfel as his professional moniker. Well, that’s sorted and he signed that name on my sketch of him as the title character in the concert performance of Sweeney Todd, The Demon Barber of Fleet Street. Sonheim’s musical thriller was staged at the Avery Fisher Theater, Lincoln Centre in New York last month (March 2014) with Emma Thompson returning to musical theatre as Mrs Lovett.

Bryn signed the drawing at the Royal Opera House stage door before his final performance as Mephistopheles in David McVicar’s Faust.

Drawing: Dominic West in Butley at the Duchess Theatre

Dominic West

In December last year British actor Dominic West and Prince Harry were part of three teams competing to reach the South Pole first on the trek to raise money for the charity Walking with the Wounded. The competition part of the race was cancelled due to hazardous weather conditions, so the teams combined forces to successfully reach the pole.

He is nominated for a TV BAFTA for his role as Richard Burton in Burton & Taylor. Helena Bonham Carter, who played Elizabeth Taylor, is also nominated.

In June 2011 Dominic took the title role in Simon Gray’s classic comedy Butley at the Duchess Theatre in London. Dominic is always great with ‘graphers and was more than happy to sign this rapid 4b pencil sketch at the stage door on the way in for a July Saturday matinee performance which I saw.