Tag Archives: YEP

The Highly Acclaimed YEP Team Bring A Timely Production Of Animal Farm To The Everyman Theatre This February.

Young Everyman Playhouse (YEP) will perform a Laurence Wilson adaptation of George Orwell’s controversial novella Animal Farm from 12th-15th February at the Everyman.

Featuring YEP actors with direction from Everyman & Playhouse staff in collaboration with set design and stage management students from LIPA, the playcontinues the company’s run of politically aware productions.

In a world where news headlines are dominated by Brexit, austerity and corruption, YEP are presenting the Orwellian classic, based on events in Stalinist Russia, for 2020 audiences.

2018 Applications Now Open For Award-Winning Young Everyman Playhouse Programme.

As U.K. Theatre celebrated #InspiringFutureTheatreDay on Wednesday 11th July, young theatre-makers can now apply to be part of the Liverpool Everyman & Playhouse’s Young Everyman Playhouse (YEP) Programme for 2018.

The six-strand programme is designed to develop and nurture young theatre makers of the future, through a hands-on course giving YEP members real-life experience of working in regional theatre.

With the guidance of experienced theatre staff aspiring actors, directors, technicians, producers, writers and marketers are given the opportunity to learn new skills, working on real-time productions throughout the course.

The Chair, Theatre Review. Everyman Theatre, Liverpool.

Liverpool Sound and Vision Rating * * * *

Cast: Lyndsay Fielding, Lewis Marsh, Mair Terry, Sean Croke, Geraldine Moloney-Judge.

Dystopia is a place often visited in the arts, perhaps never more so than in the theatre. The natural surroundings of the enclosed space, the door to the outside world close at hand but out of reach due to the way that your neighbour next to you will look at you with suspicion and hate filled eyes should you interrupt their train of thought, all combine to make Dystopia more real, more authentic than any other way of getting the flesh to crawl at what just could be if apathy and lethargy allow it take control.

Until They Kick Us Out, (YEP), Theatre Review. Everyman Theatre, Liverpool.

Liverpool Sound and Vision Rating * * * *

Cast: Nadia Anim Mohammed Noor, Aaron Barker, Rachel Berry, Natalie Bedowska, Jacob Lee, James Bibby, Tiegan Byrne, William Catterall, Isobel Catterall, John Collins, Nick Crosbie, Daniel Fitzgerald, Lucy Harris, Heidi Henders, Poppy Hughes, Sean Hyland, Aaron Kehoe, Charlotte Larkin, Nina Levy, Scott Lewis, George Lomax-Ford, Niamh McCarthy, Hannah McGowan, Kathryn McGurk, Keeley Ray, Elliot Reeves-Giblin, Kaila Sharples, Janes O’Neil, Mark Powell, Jamie Pye, Nathan Russell, Harry Sargent, Curtis Wilson.

Young Everyman Playhouse Return With The Grid.

Young Everyman Playhouse (YEP) take to the Everyman main stage for the first time in the new building with The Grid, a new play devised around the internet and technology.  An ensemble cast of 54 young people present a futuristic exploration about how technology is becoming all encompassing, and pose the question of what it really means to be human in the 21st Century. The production runs from Tuesday 22nd to Saturday 26th April.