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A ‘FAB FOUR’ WEEKS UNTIL EPSTEIN OFFICIAL OPENING IN LONDON

Starring Andrew Lancel as Brian Epstein, with Will Finlason as ‘This Boy’

Written by Andrew Sherlock | Directed by Jen Heyes

Leicester Square Theatre, London

Previews - 30 Jul–2 Aug | Run - 4 Aug-6 Sep 2014

 

Epstein: The Man Who Made The Beatles - the long-awaited play about the legendary music manager Brian Epstein – officially opens at London’s Leicester Square Theatre in a ‘Fab Four’ weeks on Mon 4th August (previews from Wed 30 July) and will continue throughout the summer until Sat 6 September.

The show opens hot off the heels of The Beatles 50th Anniversary celebrations happening around the world, Brian Epstein posthumously inducted into the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame after a campaign from fans and also the unveiling of a commemorative blue plaque at the London offices of Epstein’s company NEMS on 29th June. Brian would have celebrated his 80th birthday this September.

Epstein: The Man Who Made The Beatles is the untold story and window into the private world of the gay, Jewish, music entrepreneur whose stellar career as Beatles Manager made him a household name yet whose controversial personal life remained very much in the closet. Brian died in 1967 of a concluded accidental overdose at the age of 32.

Acclaimed stage and TV star Andrew Lancel (Coronation Street, The Bill) and actor Will Finlason will return to the roles of Brian Epstein and the fictional character ‘This Boy’ respectively, for which they each received rave reviews during the initial run in Liverpool, where the show premiered in November 2012 as part of the city’s official Beatles 50th Anniversary celebrations at the Epstein Theatre.

Andrew Lancel said: “This is a window into the life of one of the most important men in pop history, a gay man who had a hand in changing the world, he was unique. Opening in the West End is a thrill in this year full of fitting, timely and wonderful honours to Brian, the man who made the Beatles.

“Andrew Lancel as Epstein is terrific...

As the boy, Will Finlason gracefully mingles brashness and compassion.”

The Times

“A show of thought-provoking insight and raw emotion…

The Beatles Manager superbly portrayed by Andrew Lancel.

An experience not to be missed!”

The Stage

 

This two-hander play imagines this brilliant but troubled man’s drug-fuelled final days whilst looking back upon his illustrious adult life and meteoric career from his drama school days to managing the world’s biggest pop group - a must-see opportunity to discover a previously unexplored story and celebrate a true icon of 1960’s popular culture – a man who shaped music and style across the world.

Jen Heyes, Director and Co-Producer of the play said “Rehearsals have now begun and I am so looking forward to bringing the play to London, since running in Liverpool, we have had time to revisit the story, the multi-media pieces and create an even more powerful piece of theatre which I think audiences, whether seen the show before or not, are going to love.”

Martin Witts, Artistic Director at the Leicester Square Theatre said: “We are very much looking forward to having this exciting new play in residence at the Leicester Square Theatre throughout the Summer period, it is a perfect fit for our diverse audience and a great attraction for international visitors. It’s very fitting that the show is coming to London during what is going to be a Rock and Roll year celebration of Brian Epstein’s life and the instrumental impact he had on popular music, we hope it will run and run."

Running from 30 July – 6 September 2014 at London’s Leicester Square Theatre, Epstein: The Man Who Made The Beatles is brought to you by Bill Elms & Jen Heyes Productions Ltd, written by Andrew Sherlock and directed by Jen Heyes.

“At times comic, at times intensely moving... Epstein is not merely an exercise in nostalgia, it also finds the real man lurking inside an enigma.”

The Arts Desk

 

“An evocative and moving history lesson, enlivened with wit - enthralling for those who were there (and still remember it) and for a new generation discovering their musical roots.”

Whatsonstage.com

 

More information on Epstein: The Man Who Made The Beatles can be found at www.epsteintheplay.com.

 

LISTING INFORMATION:

 

Epstein: The Man Who Made The Beatles

Leicester Square Theatre

6 Leicester Place, London, Greater London WC2H 7BX

30 July – 6 September 2014

Preview Performances: 30 July – 2 August

Mon – Sat Evenings: 7.30pm I Thurs mats 3.00pm I Sat early shows 4.00pm

Ticket Prices: £30-£42.50

HOW TO BOOK:

Book in person at the venue, online at www.leicestersquaretheatre.com or via telephone on 08448 733433. Booking fees may apply

 

Writing co-commissioned by Homotopia. 

Supported by Arts Council England, Orange Amplification, Liverpool Vision and Liverpool Echo.

Production partners: The Beatles Story (Liverpool), Hard Day’s Night Hotel (Liverpool), Hard Rock Cafe (London), The Beatles Coffee Shop/Beatles Walks (London).

The official hotel partner is Radisson Blu Edwardian, London.

The official production charity partner is CALM www.thecalmzone.net.

Running Time 2hrs approx

Suitable for age 14+

 

 

 

 

EPSTEIN ACTOR ANDREW LANCEL ‘HONOURED’ TO UNVEIL BLUE PLAQUE TO CELEBRATE LIFE OF BEATLES’ MANAGER

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TV and stage actor Andrew Lancel joined special guests in London yesterday (Sunday, 29 June), to unveil a prestigious Heritage Foundation Blue Plaque to celebrate the life of Beatles’ Manager, Brian Epstein.

The invite was particular poignant for the Southport actor who resumes the role of Brian in the play Epstein: The Man Who Made the Beatles, when the production opens in London’s West End at the end of July.

The Blue Plaque was unveiled at Sutherland House, 5/6 Argyll Street, next door to the London Palladium.  This was the base of Epstein's company NEMS Enterprises, which occupied offices on the fifth floor of the building from the height of Beatlemania in 1964 until shortly after Brian’s tragic death in August 1967, when he was aged just 32.

Andrew Lancel (Coronation Street and The Bill) joined actress Vicki Michelle, President of the Heritage Foundation; Geoffrey Ellis, Liverpool friend of Epstein who became Chief Executive Administrator of NEMS Enterprises Ltd and was based in the building from 1964 to 1967; Tony Bramwell, who worked at NEMS with Epstein and was later head of Apple Records; and 80s pop star Adam Ant, whose mother was Paul McCartney’s cleaner in the 1960s.

Large crowds greeted the official unveiling party, keen to witness the unveiling of the plaque in Brian’s memory first hand. The sight of the Blue Plaque was greeted with a round of applause in celebration of Brian and his achievements in the music industry during the Merseybeat era.

Sir Paul McCartney sent a personal message of goodwill: "I know Brian would have been very proud to think that he had earned a Blue Plaque in the West End of London. He played a very important role in guiding the career of us Beatles and more than that he was a lovely man whose friendship we all valued and who I will always remember with great fondness. Congratulations Brian. Love from Paul McCartney."

Brian will be portrayed in Epstein: The Man Who Made The Beatles by actor Andrew Lancel, when the play opens for a six-week run at London’s Leicester Square Theatre from 30 July - 6 September 2014. The two man play also features up-and-coming actor Will Finlason.

Written by Andrew Sherlock and directed by Jen Heyes, the play is a fascinating window into the much speculated private world of the music entrepreneur. The play was premiered in Liverpool in November 2012 at the newly opened Epstein Theatre, as part of The Beatles’ 50th anniversary programme.

Actor Andrew Lancel said “I am truly honoured to have been part of the official party to unveil a prestigious Blue Plaque in Brian’s honour. Brian was a pioneer who worked tirelessly for his artists, and what he achieved was remarkable. It is very fitting there is now a permanent reminder to recognise his contribution to the world music scene – he shaped history and his artists still very much influence today’s music scene. I am very much looking forward to playing Brian in London, and telling his fascinating story to West End audiences.”

The plaque for the former Beatles manager comes in a year which would have seen him celebrate his 80th birthday this September, and was posthumously inducted into the Rock & Roll Hall of fame following a campaign from fans.

The Blue Plaque reads:

THE HERITAGE FOUNDATION, BRIAN EPSTEIN, 1934-1967, Managed the Beatles and other artists from offices here 1964-67, SongLink International

David Stark, SongLink International (sponsors of the plaque) and on behalf of The Heritage Foundation said: “As a lifelong Beatles fan I'm delighted to be involved with this official commemoration of Britain’s most famous music manager. Epstein’s signing of the Fab Four in early 1962 developed into the greatest story in music and showbiz history, thanks to his belief and vision that the group could conquer the world, but even he couldn’t have foreseen to what extent that would become true. Sadly Brian only lived to enjoy five years of their phenomenal success from 1963-67, but it’s important that we recognise his outstanding contribution to the music industry and popular culture in his short but highly influential life.

It’s totally fitting that Brian Epstein should be honoured in his 80th birthday year, and at one of the most prestigious show business locations in the world – right next door to the London Palladium where his clients The Beatles, Cilla Black, Gerry & The Pacemakers and Billy J. Kramer all performed. I’m delighted that the owners of Sutherland House have given permission and their blessing for the plaque to be erected, and am sure it will give pleasure and be of enormous interest to the hundreds of tourists and music aficionados who pass by the site each day, not realising that this was the place where so much of the Fab Four’s busy day-to-day schedule was meticulously planned by Brian and his staff. The Heritage Foundation and I are proud to honour the man who paved the way for so many others in the music business, and who is still recognised as being one of the most visionary, hard-working and totally honest managers of all time, without whom The Beatles phenomenon might never have happened.”

A special celebratory lunch followed the plaque unveiling, and guests enjoyed a reading from Epstein: The Man Who Made The Beatles by actors Andrew Lancel and Will Finlason, who also performed the song Baby It’s You.

Special guests also included Bill Harry, author and Mersey Beat editor who arranged for Epstein to see the Beatles at The Cavern for the first time in November 1961; Joe Flannery, Epstein’s former personal and business partner in Liverpool; Martin Lewis, humorist and producer who runs the Brian Epstein website and who secured Epstein’s induction into the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame; and Rod Davis of The Quarrymen, John Lennon's skiffle band that became The Beatles.

Brian’s work and legacy is still very much alive today nearly 50 years after his untimely death and this plaque marks the contribution of a true icon of 1960’s popular culture – a man who shaped music and style across the world.

 

Will Finlason (left) and Andrew Lancel (right) at the Argyll St plaque

 

 

 

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