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Over The Bridge

by Sam Thompson

Press Info
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April - June 2013
“I sometimes compare people with a story my father used to tell me when I was a wee girl. About how they built a boat in the shipyard, how they started from her keel plate and built her up, riveting and welding her plates to a sound structure... And when she was finished, she’d sail down Belfast Lough and into the ocean to be lashed and buffeted by storms. But dad always said that he could be sure of one thing, she’d come through it all in one piece. Isn’t it a pity people couldn’t be like that?”
The first London production in over 50 years of the classic Ulster play
28 Apr - 14 May 2013
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Over The Bridge is a powerful drama set in the 1950s Belfast Shipyard that explores sectarian bigotry and the tensions between Catholic and Protestant workers amidst the backdrop of the IRA's Border Campaign.

About The Play

About The Play

The first GB production in over fifty years of the classic Ulster sectarian drama, Over The Bridge by Sam Thompson, opens at the Finborough Theatre for a limited run of nine Sunday and Monday evening and Tuesday matinee performances.

Set in the Belfast Shipyard of the 1950s and against the backdrop of the IRA’s Border Campaign, Sam Thompson’s seminal 1960 play is a powerful exposé of Ulster’s sectarian bigotry and violence before the eruption of the Troubles.

Peter O’Boyle, a Catholic shipyard worker, has become the target of a vicious whispering campaign. Veteran Trade Unionist Davy Mitchell, a Protestant who has spent his life fighting for others’ right to work, is keen that the Union does what it can to protect him. As tensions mount and the union begins to split on sectarian lines, mob rule starts to take over…

First staged in Belfast in 1960, the play was produced against a backdrop of controversy when the Ulster Group Theatre withdrew it for being a play that ‘would give rise to sectarianism of an extreme nature’. Its original production, directed by James Ellis, and starring J. G. Devlin, Joseph Tomelty and Harry Towb, played to an audience of 42,000 people during the six-week run, far greater than had attended any play in Belfast previously. It was seen on tour in Dublin, Glasgow, Edinburgh, Brighton and the West End, and was adapted for both radio and television.

Described by The Irish Times as “a brickbat hurled violently against bigotry”, this Northern Irish classic continues to provoke uncomfortable questions about unity, tolerance and the rules we live by today.

More Detail

Cast

Crew

Director

Emma Faulkner

Producer

Produced by Karen Morris Presented by Lightbox Productions in association with Neil McPherson for the Finborough Theatre.

Design

Philip Lindley

Lighting

Elliot Griggs

Costume Design

Emily Stuart

Sound

Tom Meehan