The Citizens Theatre in Glasgow
The Citizens Theatre in Glasgow

Brian Cox inspired new play at Scots theatre

The life of an actor is the subject of a new play which is set to premiere in Glasgow next week.

The Citizens Theatre has announced details of McLuckie’s Line – a new play about the pitfalls of the acting trade written by playwright Martin Travers and actor Martin Docherty – which runs from 25-28 April – in the Citizens Theatre’s Circle Studio.

McLuckie’s Line is a brutally honest monologue packed with humour which delves into the wounded soul of unemployed actor Lawrence McLuckie, played by Martin Docherty.

McLuckie is a compulsive gambler, who we find waiting nervously in a claustrophobic corridor of a Glasgow hospital for the phone call he’s been waiting for his whole life. Recently diagnosed with cancer and unable to take the oppressive silence of waiting with other people dreading treatment:

McLuckie reflects on his life, on death, and on what it feels to be working class and talented in a business that is more than ever the domain of the privileged few.

The play explores important subjects including men’s health, loneliness, grief, coming to terms with loss and the will to survive.

However, it is also packed with humour: crazy actresses, nosy neighbours, reprobate mates, a wee wren in a housing scheme, a Spanish speaking horse, a gun toting Elvis impersonating bookmaker and a greyhound called Flight Delay.

Martin Docherty has previously appeared in Still Game, Rab C Nesbitt, Dear Green Place, River City, Gary: Tank Commander, Father Brown and Cloud Atlas with Tom Hanks. Marty Goes To Hollywood, a documentary featuring Martin as himself, won a BAFTA Scotland New Talent Award in 2015

The Citizens Theatre in Glasgow

The writing of the play was inspired by a Brian Cox interview in The Stage where the Dundee born actor said of the class barrier in accessing a career in theatre: ‘For someone like me, starting now would have been virtually impossible.’

Martin Travers explained the salience of McLuckie’s Line for an industry in which many struggle to make ends meet.

He said: ‘Actors are lucky if they work six months of the year. The play opens up the world of an actor as he struggles with himself and coping with not working. This will ring true to every actor who has ever acted. I’m not sure how much audiences realise the mental strength and grind that goes into giving a brilliant performance night after night.

‘Most theatre actors can only make about £15,000 in a good year, most playwrights and directors scrape by on the breadline. But it’s our cultural responsibility to allow them to make more work, and to learn to get better at what they do, to entertain better and connect with people on a deeper level. The fear is that theatre becomes a middle class plaything like it was before the 1960s.

‘McLuckie’s Line is something of a love letter to Scottish theatre and it’s been so rewarding to feel that we’ve given every working class actor a voice on stage, in order to let the world know that if we don’t start looking after them, we’ll lose them.’

For every ticket sold, £1 will be donated to MacMillan Cancer Support. On Wednesday, 25 April, £5 tickets will be offered for Equity, BECTU, Scottish Society of Playwrights, Musicians’ Union members.

Tickets are available from the Citizens Theatre HERE.  They are priced £14.50-£16.50, with a recommended audience of 14+ due to strong language.
The performances start at 7.30pm each evening, with a 2.30pm matinee on Saturday, 28 April.

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