Overview
What happens when a former RUC officer and his wife discover that the man working in their kitchen is an IRA ex-prisoner who killed a policeman? That’s the scenario in Dubbeljoint Theatre Company’s latest play, A Cold House, which opens on Tuesday 3 June in Amharclann na Carraige on the Whiterock Road in West Belfast.
Written by former IRA prisoners Laurence McKeown and Brian Campbell, this is a play which challenges both republicans and unionists alike and which goes to the heart of the current difficulties in the peace process.
It is a play which asks the hard questions and confronts its characters with the uncomfortable truths that must be faced if people are to go forward in a society riven with conflict. It is a deeply human drama which tears apart any cosy notions of what conflict resolution and reconciliation might mean.
Lead creatives
Laurence McKeown playwright
Brian Campbell playwright
Pam Brighton Artistic Director
Participating or Target Group(s)
Cross Community, Protestant, Unionist and Loyalist, Catholic, Nationalist and Republican, Victims and Survivors, Ex-Combatants, Wider Society, Prisoners & Ex-Prisoners.
Funders
Arts Council of Northern Ireland (ACNI)
Key aims and rationale
To explore the issues that arise when engaging wtih the legacy of our conflict
Key peace-related issues
Conflicted Histories
Linked and legacy projects
Since their release from prison, Laurence McKeown and Brian Campbell have, separately and together, produced two books, two acclaimed stage plays, two radio dramas and an award-winning feature film (H3). A Cold House is their latest collaboration and it promises to be in the finest tradition of political drama which forces a society to hold a mirror up to itself.
In recent years they have engaged in dialogue with the unionist community and in their research for A Cold House, they interviewed a number of former RUC officers.
Director Pam Brighton has produced some of the most challenging plays to come out of the North of Ireland in recent years, such as A Night in November, Binlids, Forced Upon Us, Des and Laughter of Our Children. She describes A Cold House as “a very important play, possibly the most important DubbelJoint has done. It is a play that is intensely relevant to the current situation here, it is also a play that could be appreciated by an audience that knows nothing nor cares nothing about the situation in the North of Ireland, dealing as it does with how people begin to offload the loyalties and commitments that have enhanced their whole lives.”
The Official Version – play written by Laurence McKeown, directed by Pam Brighton, and produced by Dubbeljoint Theatre
Two Roads West (Belfast) – play written by Laurence McKeown, directed by Paula McFetridge, and produced by Kabosh Theatre
Two Roads West (Derry) – play written by Laurence McKeown, directed by Paula McFetridge, and produced by Kabosh Theatre
Those You Pass On The Street – play written by Laurence McKeown, directed by Paula McFetridge, and produced by Kabosh Theatre
Green and Blue – play written by Laurence McKeown, directed by Paula McFetridge, and produced by Kabosh Theatre
Life as an Interface – documentary film written and directed by Laurence McKeown
The Aftermath Project – using film, photography, creative writing, and music to engage participants. Created and delivered by Laurence McKeown
From Oriel to Brexit – using creative writing, music, and theatre to engage participants. Created and delivered by Laurence McKeown
In The Shadow of Gullion – multi-media performance written and directed by Laurence McKeown
You Were Never Big On Luxuries – documentary film looking at the use of the arts to deal with the legacy of conflict
Key Information
Lead OrganisationDubbeljoint Theatre
21/05/2003
21/05/2004
Locations
Amharclann na Carraige/The Rock Theatre, Belfast and touring across Northern Ireland