Drawing: Jonathan Pryce and Phoebe Pryce in Merchant of Venice

merchant-the pryces

“Jonathan Pryce and his daughter Phoebe excel in Jonathan Munby’s inspired production of the Merchant of Venice at Shakespeare’s Globe in London,” wrote Kate Kellaway in her five star review for The Guardian.

“Casting Jonathan Pryce as Shylock and his daughter, Phoebe, as Jessica turns out to be no frivolous gimmick but an inspiration. It’s a family affair – a double star turn,” she concluded

The production ran in repertory from mid April to 7 June. Double Olivier and Tony Award winner Jonathan was making his first appearance on the Globe stage.

Stephen Collins of BritishTheatre.com wrote, “Jonathan Pryce is a calm, righteous and driven Shylock… (who) finds the heart and soul of the man and with scalpel like precision reveals his inner strengths and weaknesses… Pryce presents a memorable, complete and completely flawed Shylock. The look on Pryce’s face when Shylock is spat upon is seared into my memory. As Jessica, Jonathan Pryces real life daughter, Phoebe is splendid. Full of pain and grief, yet wildly, passionately in love.”

Drawing: Laura Linney in Time Stands Still

laura linney

American actress Laura Linney featured in Time Stands Still by Pulitzer Prize Winner Donald Margulies at the Samuel Friedman Theater during its three month run on Broadway in early 2010.

She was nominated for a Tony Award for Best Leading Actress in a Play. The Manhattan Theatre Club production returned to Broadway at the Court Theatre in September that year until the following January.

Laura played Sarah, a photo journalist returned from covering the Iraq war after being injured by a roadside bomb, with her reporter boyfriend James who is overcome by guilt after leaving her alone in the war zone. Both are trying to return to living as civilians, yet the comforts of urban domesticity  – the simple pleasures and small compromises – can be a minefield of its own. She is limping with crutches and scars on her face. He wants to help, but Sarah resists.

The New York Times has called her “an actress of peerless emotional transparency, capable of conveying a multitude of conflicting feelings through minimal means.”

It was Laura’s third Tony nomination to go with three Oscar nominations, three Emmy and two Golden Globe wins. I met the lovely Laura last night at the premiere of her latest film Mr Holmes at the Odeon Kensington in London. “Oh, look at this,” she said, surprised by a sketch amongst all the Love, Actually posters and glossy 8x10s. Her graph used to have a bit more letter definition, but has been streamlined to accommodated demand I guess. However, she did take the time to dedicate it for me, “Mark with a K?” she asked. I nodded ok.

Drawing: Jim Dale

Jim Dale

English actor, lyricist, singer and comedian James Smith, better known as Jim Dale is currently playing to packed houses in Just Jim Dale.

Known for his appearance in eleven Carry On films, the 79 year old returned to the London stage this month for his one man (and a pianist, Mark York) show that runs until 20 June. The Guardian’s Michael Billington summarises “the unfairly talented actor recalls a career that has taken him from Olivier’s National to British film comedies and Broadway in this exuberant solo show”.

Jim has received two Grammy Awards for narrating the Harry Potter audiobook series. He was the lyricist for the film theme Georgy Girl, which was nominated for an Academy Award in 1966. The song was performed by The Seekers and reached number 2 in the US Billboard Hot 100 chart, selling over seven million records.

On the stage he has been nominated for five Tony Awards, winning one for Barnum in 1980. He has also won four Drama Desk awards. In 1970 Sir Laurence Olivier invited Jim to join the National Theatre Company, based at the Old Vic.

The very affable entertainer met fans at The Vaudeville stage door after his matinée performance, including yours truly with this simple sketch. “All your own work?” he asked, “yes, like you,” I replied, as he wrote a very nice big siggy and dedication.

Drawing: Beverley Knight and Killian Donnelly in Memphis

Beverley Knight Killian Donnelly

Leads Beverley Knight and Killian Donnelly receive standing ovations after every performance of Memphis at London’s Shaftesbury Theatre. The feel good musical about fame and forbidden love is set in the racially segregated Tennessee in the fifties, where African-American R&B music is captivating a new generation of white fans, much to the disgust of their rigid parents. Beverley plays emerging singer Felicia Farrrell and Killian is her charismatic disc jokey Huey Calhoun who is determined to bring ‘fresh’ sounds to his radio audience.

“Beverley Knight’s vocal gloriousness and the charisma of her co-star Killian Donnelly make a show that’s not exactly innovative feel fabulous,” wrote Henry Hitchings in The Evening Standard.

Memphis received the most Olivier Award nominations at this year’s ceremony, including nods for both Beverley and Killian. Killian will be leaving the production next month to play Charlie in the West End transfer of the musical Kinky Boots. It was just announced that Beverley will play Grizabella when Cats returns to the London Palladium in October this year. Beverley had previously signed a drawing for me, so I gave her this one with Killian included and both signed.

Drawing: John Higgins ‘The Wizard of Wishaw’

john higgins

Scottish snooker player John Higgins is one of the most successful players in the modern history of the sport. His four world titles rank him fifth behind Stephen Hendry, (7), Steve Davis (6), Ray Reardon (6) and Ronnie O’Sullivan (5).

Nicknamed ‘The Wizard of Wishaw’, John held the number one ranking on four separate occasions. With his superb tactical game and break-building class, many place him alongside Steve Davis as one of the best all round players of the modern era.

John signed my sketch at the famous Crucible Theatre in Sheffield during this year’s World Championships last month.

Drawing: Nina Sosanya in The Vote

nina sosanya

The Vote at London’s Donmar Warehouse dramatised the frantic last 90 minutes in a polling station in London (a hastily converted primary school gym).

It featured an all star cast of 50 – as The Guardian’s Michael Billington called it, “as many famous names as a charity gala” – and was broadcast live on Election night on More4. Nina Sosanya plays one of the two polling clerks (the other is Catherine Tate)

This is literally a ‘graph on the run and down a dark alley. After the Election Night performance, the cast left for the after party through the back door to an awaiting bus that was parked at the end of an alley way opposite. A dimly lit alley way at that.

Nina was one of the last to leave and the ‘assistants’ were hurrying everyone along.  She went to sign my sketch, but was kept kept moving. Plus she was carrying a lot of stuff. So no arms, no light, moving target… and a security person between me and Nina. This was not looking promising. I managed to giver her a pen and tried to keep the drawing at the ‘write’ distance and as still as possible moving at 100mph…. After a brief period of kinetic combining Nina handled me the pen back and said “sorry… it’s not a very good one.” But nevertheless . A true collector will try and get variations of a signature and this was certainly a variation. It allows me to collect another in less trying circumstances.

 

Drawing: Marina Rebeka in La traviata

marina rebeka

Statuesque Latvian soprano Marina Rebeka made her Royal Opera debut as Violetta Valéry in Verdi’s tragic opera La traviata in July 2010 and has returned to sing the role for this season. Richard Eyre’s production, now 21 years old returns for its twelfth revival of Verdi’s dramatically gripping and gloriously tune-laden tale of socially unacceptable love.

Since her breakthrough at the Salzburg Festival, singing Anai (Moise et Pharaon) in 2009 Marina has been a regular guest at the world’s most prestigious concert halls and opera houses.

She recently sang the role of the high society courtesan at the Metropolitan Opera in New York and was scheduled to perform later in the run at the ROH, but stepped into the opening performances for Sonya Yonchevia who has now joined the production. Her single performance in 2010 was also for a similar reason, replacing an ailing Angela Gheorghin.

The Met review said “Marina Rebeka delivers a devastating portrayal of Verdi’s tragic heroine.”

Marina signed my sketch after the opening night performance.

Sketch: Sylvie Guillem

Sylvie Guillem

The Daily Telegraph called French ballet icon Sylvie Guillem “the most charismatic performer on earth”. She has been a star from the age of 19, from the moment Rudolf Nureyev plucked her from the corps de ballet of the Paris Opera Ballet and confided on her the title of étoile (that’s the leading ballet dancer in a company).

In 1988, after performing the title role in a production of Giselle staged by the Royal Ballet to celebrate Nureyev’s 50th birthday, she left Paris for London to become a freelance performer and one of the Royal Ballet’s greatest principal guest artists.

During that time, she was nicknamed ‘Mademoiselle Non’ because of her desire to work independently.

After an unparalleled career that has spanned almost 35 years of both dancing ballet and contemporary work, Sylvie presented her final dance programme in Life In Progress last week at Sadler’s Wells.

Due to extraordinary demand, additional UK dates have been added in London, Edinburgh and Birmingham. “There are some moments that are so extraordinary they defy physical logic,” said The Guardian. She was awarded the Olivier Lifetime Achievement Award in recognition of her exceptional contribution to dance.

Sylvie kindly signed my sketch at Sadler’s Wells.

Drawing: Julie Atherton in Shock Treatment

julie atherton

Julie Atherton, one of the west end’s most versatile entertainers, is currently starring as Janet Majors in the world premiere stage production of Shock Treatment. The ‘equal sequel’ to the Rocky Horror Picture Show at the intimate King’s Head Pub Theatre in Islington.

Predicting the rise of reality TV, Shock Treatment sees the return of Brad and Janet, their marriage in crisis, as they get sucked into a world of crazed contestants, fame-hungry presenters and money-grabbing executives both in from tot and behind the cameras.

“Artherton’s Janet switches from buttoned up innocent to onanistic sex object with effortless panache” wrote Claire Allfree in her Telegraph Review. Julie also released her third album Rush of Life late last year.

I left my sketch with the very friendly pub staff one rainy afternoon, tempted to shelter from the elements and catch Julie in person, but I left it and the drawing came back ‘graphed in no time (warp).

Drawing: Matthew Kelly in Toast

matthew kelly

Written in 1999, Toast was English playwright Richard Bean’s first professionally staged play and premiered at London’s Royal Court Theatre that year. It tells the story of seven men who work in a bread factory in Hull. One Sunday night Walter Nelson (Nellie) is so worn down from a lifetime of making dough, he loses his vest in the mix.

The first London revival starring Matthew Kelly as Nellie opened at The Park Theatre in August 2014 for a two month run.

In his final review for The Telegraph, Charles Spencer gave Toast four stars and commented, “That superb actor Matthew Kelly is mesmerising as old Nellie, a broken down employee of the factory battered into submission by years of hard graft and a wife who only allows him one packet of cigarettes a week. He movingly captures the sheer weariness and almost childlike simplicity of the man… with his baker’s hat and battered face, he puts one in mind of Rembrandt’s ruthlessly honest late self-portrait. You can’t take your eyes off him”.

This brilliantly observed, moving production and funny play also received four stars from all the major London based critics, including The Times, The Guardian, Sunday Times, Time Out, The Stage, Evening Standard, and What’s On Stage.

I did this sketch of Matthew as Nellie and dropped it off at the theatre in the final week. Nothing came back, so I assumed the worst and forgot about it. Until this week, when it arrived in the mail, signed and dedicated.

Matthew wrote a very nice letter apologising for the delay due to his heavy workload and returning the “wonderful picture”. He also included a signed and dedicated black and white photo.

It’s one of the wonderful surprises in this game, so I guess the adage is never give up. Incidentally, the longest an item has take to be returned to me is three years, but that’s another story.