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Cuckoo Teapot

by Kate Griffin
Eastern Angles spring tour

I usually see Eastern Angles productions at their home, Sir John Mills Theatre in Ipswich, so it was rather special to arrive at the penultimate performance of Cuckoo Teapot at Kirton Church Hall, driving past the villagers walking from their homes to see a professional company perform on their doorstep.

The Eastern Angles tour van had arrived with a raised stage of steps, levels, screens with concealed cupboard doors, a lighting rig, sound effects and a talented cast of five actor/singers who would play the various roles.

Tim Bell - photo by Mike KwasniakCuckoo Teapot tells the story of the “Norkies” who each year left Norfolk and Suffolk to work temporarily in the 27 brewery maltings in Burton on Trent, returning home with a new suit, stories and a teapot for their mothers. One year a boy returns with a baby too and the play begins as the baby, Joseph, now a teenager, unknowingly returns to his birthplace, setting in motion a plot that twists and turns, keeping the audience guessing right until the final scene. Will he learn the truth of his ancestry? Who was the mother? The grandmother? Brother or sister? 

The versatility of the cast and ingenuity of the stage team at Eastern Angles mean that the 2008 Sunday school posters on the walls of the church hall are forgotten as the audience is transported into 1913, and indeed 1898, as the play unfolds. 

Tim Bell and Bryony Harding play the young lovers and the warring grandmothers are Helen Grady and Jackie Redgewell. Graham Howes, the actor with most of the funny lines, does a great job appearing in scene after scene, swopping Norfolk and  Trent accents at will!

helen grady - photo by Mike KwasniakCuckoo Teapot tells of a part of East Anglia’s history I had not heard about …. and I now know where the expression “Gone for a Burton” comes from too.

After all the worries over the threatened Arts Council funding grants, it was great to see such a riveting performance in a village setting – the unique selling point of Eastern Angles that was the argument all along that justified their funding.

Cuckoo Teapot may have ended its run but watch out for We Didn’t Mean to Go to Sea, based on Arthur Ransone’s famous book set at Pin Mill, that begins it’s summer tour on the Ipswich Waterfront on 3rd July.

Rachel Sloane
9th April 2008

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