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Journeys End: The Dugout Experience

JOURNEY'S END Film and Live Production

With the JOURNEY'S END film released this year, there now comes a rare chance to see it live on the very battlefields which inspired it a century ago.

MESH Theatre's 5-Star Production

MESH Theatre's 5-star production opened at Ypres Gunpowder Store (Het Kruitmagazijn) in Belgium last autumn to universal acclaim. It returns to Ypres to bring Armistice events to a close, from 10 October to 12 November. Writer R.C. Sherriff fought on the Western Front and was wounded at Passchendaele in 1917. He sets the play in March 1918 over three days leading up to the German launch of the battle of St Quentin (Operation Michael) on the Somme. Men he fought with in the trenches are clearly recognizable in his colorful cast of characters holed up in a dugout on the front line, anticipating the attack.

Lead character Captain Stanhope, first played by a young Laurence Olivier in 1928, is troubled by the arrival of his boyhood pal 2nd Lieutenant Raleigh. The resulting story is, as the Telegraph said, "ever enthralling, good-humoured and finally heart-rending." Audience after audience in Ypres gave it standing ovations.

The play's director, Sally Woodcock, discusses why it had such impact:

"It's a combination of factors. They say good directing is 90 percent casting: we had superb actors who brought a passion for the subject which took it to a new level. It's a much-loved play, we received 1300 submissions for just 10 parts, so favored those who wrote to us personally and this paid off. I felt the magic happening in the rehearsal room from day one. These guys knew exactly where to hang their packs, what was in them, when to take off their helmets, so we had time to dig around in the text for every ounce of meaning.

Secondly, the play is a classic for a reason: it's a brilliantly crafted story with characters who strike real chords for people, especially soldiers, because it was written by a soldier and that authenticity is unmistakable. One ex-serviceman who's been Battlefield-guiding for 25 years said, 'I'll never walk past a 2nd Lieutenant's headstone again without seeing what I've just seen in there.'

Add to that a momentous point in time—the Great War Centenary—and an iconic place—the 200-year-old munitions store a ten-minute walk from the Menin Gate—and you have something unforgettable. But that's what live theatre does: it gives you a direct line to lived experience—the 'whiff of cordite'—which has a potency like nothing else."

Woodcock's favorite tributes are what she calls "the sublime and the ridiculous":

  • The "sublime" in a handwritten letter from General Sir James Everard KCB CBE, Deputy Supreme Allied Commander Europe: "We saw Journey's End last Saturday. It captured the atmosphere, tensions, humour, and tragedies of trench life brilliantly. We teach all young officers that war is a trial of moral and physical strength, shaped by human nature and subject to the complexities, inconsistencies, and peculiarities which characterize human behavior. We also tell them—and they learn—that any view of the nature of war is incomplete without the consideration of the effects of danger, fear, exhaustion, and privation on the men and women who do the fighting. For me, this is what Journey's End captures so well."

  • The "ridiculous" (and delightful) was from a schoolgirl: "Thank you for the amazing play. And sorry for crying so much at the end."

But our favorite was, of course, from Dominic Cavendish in The Telegraph: "It might sound like the height of extravagance to recommend crossing the Channel for a few hours of theatre, but it honestly feels like paying the bare minimum tribute… See it, then, and weep."

THIS PRODUCTION IS WORTH A TRIP TO BELGIUM

The Daily Telegraph

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