The Atheist play
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The Atheist is written by, Irish born playwright, Ronan Noone. His previous plays include The Lepers of Baile Baiste (Critics Pick, Boston Globe) and The Blowin of Baile Gall which had its Off-Broadway debut, produced by Gabriel Byrne, at the Irish Arts Center in New York in 2005. The Blowin of Baile Gall was nominated by the American Theatre Critics Association for the Steinberg New Play Award and won the Elliot Norton Award for Outstanding New Script. In 2003, Noone was chosen by Boston Magazine as the Best Young Playwright of the Year. The subject of the play is not God, but the religion of tabloid journalism. [1]
Central character Augustine Early drinks Bourbon and recounts his story like a ‘how to get famous quick’ help book. He is both revolting and charismatic - a cartoon take on the tabloid journalist. Augustine Early self-divulges his story of how he perverted the justice system and preyed on a vulnerable politician in his amoral quest for fame.
As theatre critic Natasha Tripney explains:
Early is an antihero par excellence, an amusing guide through Ronan Noone's skilfully written world of American tabloid-hackery, sex scandals and trailer parks. His dark-hearted monologue is an occasionally filthy, but more importantly, in places it's laugh-out-loud funny; the writing is sharp and novelistic, the characters skilfully sketched.
Early's quest for journalistic gold (and perhaps, just perhaps, a sliver of redemption) sees him encounter a wannabe actress whose tastes in the bedroom tend towards the energetic, a church-going society wife, a rapist and an English newspaper editor.[2]
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[edit] In Performance
[edit] Center Stage, New York
The Atheist was first performed in December at Center Stage, New York. The protagonist Augustine Early was played by Chris Pine (who starred opposite Lindsay Lohan in the 2006 romantic comedy "Just My Luck").[3]
[edit] Theatre 503, London
The Atheist's European premiere was at Theatre 503 on the 16th January 2007. The show was performed by Ben Porter and directed by Ari Edelson. [4]
Ari Edelson founded and is currently Artistic Director of the Old Vic Theatre's Old Vic New Voices US/UK Program, developing new plays in London and New York. His most recent directing credits include Blood Wedding, Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf? and Sexual Perversity in Chicago (Theatre Project Tokyo), True West and Tape (Tokyo Globe), Rape of Lucretia (English National Opera, London and Luxembourg). In 2005 he founded the Orchard Project, an international incubator and theatre development centre located in New York. In 2007, Ari will be taking over the role of Producing Artistic Director of the Jean Cocteau Rep, one of NY's oldest Off–Broadway companies.[5]
Ben Porter (pictured below) trained at RADA and has worked extensively in theatre both here and abroad. For the National Theatre he has played Billing in Ibsen’s An Enemy of the People, and Morris Townsend in The Heiress. His West End credits include What The Butler Saw, Becket and the National’s production of The Invention of Love by Tom Stoppard, in which he played the poet AE Housman as a young man. He has also appeared in new plays by Howard Barker, Hugh Whitemore, and Peter Flannery. Most recently he played Louis in the national tour of Losing Louis.[6]
[edit] References
- "Ronan Noone". Retrieved on February 7, 2007.
- "The Atheist". Retrieved on February 7, 2007.
- "The Atheist Official Website". Retrieved on February 7, 2007.
- "The Atheist, Review", The Stage. Retrieved on January 23, 2007.
- "The Atheist, Review", New York Times. Retrieved on February 6, 2007.
- "The Atheist, reviewed Lyn Gardner", The Guardian. Retrieved on January 23, 2007.
- "Theatre 503", Theatre 503. Retrieved on February 6, 2007.
- "Confessions of Augustine", The Village Voice. Retrieved on December 19, 2006.
- Tripney, Natasha. "The Atheist", MusicOMH, 2007-01-27. Retrieved on February 7, 2007.