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Email OwnerDogstar Theatre
Inverness, Highland
European Touring Theatre, created in Scotland, touring Scotland, the UK and internationally.
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About
Originally known as The Collectors, the company was founded by Hamish MacDonald in 1998. Matthew Zajac became Joint Artistic Director with Hamish in 2004. Hamish and Matthew first worked together in 1986 as part of the team which created and produced the Faultline Festival, one of the Highlands’ first multimedia arts festivals, which took place in Inverness. Faultline ran for 6 years each summer with Hamish and Matthew writing and performing with colleagues in the satirical revue The Kilt Is Our Demise! Hamish became a full-time writer ... Read More
About
Originally known as The Collectors, the company was founded by Hamish MacDonald in 1998. Matthew Zajac became Joint Artistic Director with Hamish in 2004. Hamish and Matthew first worked together in 1986 as part of the team which created and produced the Faultline Festival, one of the Highlands’ first multimedia arts festivals, which took place in Inverness. Faultline ran for 6 years each summer with Hamish and Matthew writing and performing with colleagues in the satirical revue The Kilt Is Our Demise! Hamish became a full-time writer in 1999. In the previous year, he wrote and performed the company’s first show as part of the Highland Festival, Redcoats, Turncoats & Petticoats, from an idea by producer Alan Mackinnon. Redcoats was a one-man comedy performed in the boozy confines of the Old Market Inn, in the heart of Inverness. The company went on to produce The Captain’s Collection in 1999, again for the Highland Festival, from an idea by Bruce MacGregor. This was a biographical play with live music about Captain Simon Fraser of Stratherrick, an officer in the 19th century British army, inveterate social climber, and, most importantly, the collector of hundreds of Gaelic tunes which might otherwise have been lost to posterity, Gaelic language and culture having been proscribed for over fifty years after the 1745 Jacobite Rebellion. The production, directed by Alison Peebles, opened in Stratherrick Hall then embarked on a short tour of the Highlands and Islands. The music from the play was produced by Jonny Hardie into a highly acclaimed CD for the Greentrax label. At the instigation of Bruce, then a BBC radio producer, the play was adapted in four parts for BBC Radio Scotland. This production won the Golden Torc Award for Best Radio Production at the 2000 Celtic Film & TV Festival. The Captain’s Collection then undertook a more extensive tour of the Highlands and Islands in 2000 with support from the National Lottery Awards For All, and donations from the Gaelic Broadcasting Committee and the Inverness Gaelic Society. Hamish went on to write Seven Ages, a play on the cycle of life in seven acts which had its first short production period as a development project at the 2001 Highland Festival. Each act was a self-contained short play, Highland-set stories on Birth, Discovery, Love, War, Wisdom, Dotage and Death. Acclaimed as “ the most glittering jewel in the Highland Festival crown” (Highland News), an ensemble of five of Scotland’s best traditional musicians – Mary Ann Kennedy, Ingrid Henderson, Maggie MacDonald, Bruce MacGregor and Iain MacFarlane – punctuated and underscored the play which was again performed by Hamish and Alyth with direction by Matthew Zajac. Another idea was presented to Hamish by Bruce: the life of James Scott Skinner, aka The Strathspey King, arguably the most mercurial, prolific and revered composer of Scottish fiddle music, who led a peripatetic life of fame, fortune and penury. Hamish originally wrote the play, The Strathspey King, as a three-part radio series, produced by Bruce and performed by Billy Riddoch. This series again won a Golden Torc Award, this time at the 2001 Celtic Film & TV Festival. The stage production, supported by the Highland Producers Fund and the Esmee Fairbairn Foundation, featured Bruce MacGregor on fiddle and Christine Hanson on Cello, beautifully realising Skinner’s music. Scott Skinner was powerfully and poignantly brought to life by Billy Riddoch, taking the audience on a seventy four year journey from the Strathspey King’s childhood to his final tune. The play toured in spring 2003 throughout North and North East Scotland to packed houses and to universal acclaim. The company then undertook a full-scale tour of Seven Ages early in 2004, visiting numerous venues in the Highlands, Glasgow and Edinburgh, with support from the Highland Producers Fund. This time, Alyth and Matthew performed the show, powerfully and eloquently accompanied by fiddler Jonny Hardie and clarsach player Mary MacMaster. With continuing project support from the Scottish Arts Council, Highlands & Islands Enterprise and a growing number of promoters and audiences, Dogstar began to tour more extensively throughout Scotland. The company has also began to produce the work of other playwrights. Ali Smith’s riotous post-modern comedy The Seer was a popular hit for the company in 2006. This was the first professional production of a full-length play by Ali, one of the UK’s most prominent novelists, twice a Booker Prize nominee and winner of numerous other awards for her novels. The Seer also signalled an expansion of the company’s creative scope, moving away from its proven form of music theatre into the realms of contemporary farce. Matthew directed a vibrant ensemble – Viviene Grahame, Douglas Russell, Sarah Haworth, Irene Allan and Mairi Morrison – who embraced the energetic demands of Ali’s “near-perfect example of postmodernism in all its playful glory” (The Scotsman) with relish. 2006 also saw a short tour with another of Hamish’s plays, The Heretic’s Tale, which told the extraordinary story of Elspeth Buchan, leader of the 18th century apocalyptic cult, the Buchanites. Annie Grace played Elspeth with Matthew as her devoted follower Andrew Innes. Live music accompaniment was provided by fiddle wizard Amy Geddes with direction by Stephen Docherty. In 2007, Dogstar toured Henry Adam’s ‘e Polish Quine, a poetic and moving play set in Aberdeenshire at the end of the Second World War. ‘e Polish Quine’s themes of war trauma, migration and love struck a contemporary chord with our audiences. Our excellent ensemble included Fraser C. Sivewright, Sarah Haworth, Douglas Russell, Anne Kidd, Hamish Wilson and Polish actress Magdalena Kaleta. Matthew directed the production. 2008 saw the company’s most successful production to date, Matthew Zajac’s The Tailor of Inverness. A moving and theatrical play for one actor and a violinist, the play tells the story of Matthew’s father, who was born in Eastern Poland (now Western Ukraine) in 1919, taking a perilous journey through the tides of the Second World War to finally settle in Inverness. The production was directed by Ben Harrison, best know for his site-specific work with Grid Iron Theatre Company. Matthew performed the play himself with a wonderful violin score played by Jonny Hardie and Gavin Marwick. The production opened for a month at the Assembly Rooms, Edinburgh after previews at Glasgow’s Arches Theatre, selling out quickly and winning three awards. It ran at the Adelaide Fringe in Australia early in 2009, and has since toured Scotland 4 times and to festivals and theatres in Poland, Ukraine, Sweden, Ireland, Wales, Denmark, Germany and the USA, most recently selling out for 3 week’s at New York’s Brits Off Broadway Festival, where it clocked up its 225th performance. Matthew was named Best Actor for his performance at the 2009 Critics’ Awards for Theatre in Scotland. Jacobite Country by Henry adam was produced with an all-female cast in 2010, running at the Edinburgh Fringe and touring Scotland. This was an anarchic comedy about dispossession and mental illness, embodied in the character of Haggis McSporran, a wayward stand-up comedian who absconds from the Highland’s largest psychiatric hospital with his friend Craiturface. Sarah Haworth, Annie Grace, Mairi Morrison and Fiona Morrison made up the ensemble with Matthew directing and design by Ulla Karlsson. Jacobite Country was followed up by another dark comedy, Sweetness by Kevin MacNeil, adapted from the novel by Sweden’s Torgny Lindgren. This is a cold war allegory involving Kate, a writer who becomes snowbound at her temporary digs with an old man who is wasting away with cancer, Archie, at his remote house in the Highlands. She uncovers an epic dispute between Archie and his only neighbour, his corpulent brother Murdo. Lynne Verrall played Kate with Matthew Zajac as Archie and Sean Hay as Murdo in “a strong and brave piece of work” (Northings). The show toured across Scotland. Dogstar revived Hamish’s The Captain’s Collection in 2012, directed again by Alison Peebles and designed by Ali Maclaurin, performed by Matthew and Alyth McCormack with music from Jonny Hardie on fiddle and guitar and Ingrid Henderson on piano and clarsach. The show opened at the Tron Theatre as part of Scotland’s foremost traditional and world music festival, Celtic Connections and then toured across Scotland. The company produced its first play by a writer from outside Scotland in 2013. The Baroness by Danish writer Thor Bjorn Krebs told the story of the intense, manipulative friendship between the extraordinary 20th century Danish writer Karen Blixen (pen-name Isak Dinesen, writer of Out of Africa) and the young poet Thorkild Bjornvig. In “a fine production” (Herald), Dogstar was very fortunate to attract one of British theatres grand-dames, Roberta Taylor, to play Blixen. A leading actress with the great Citizens Theatre Company of the 1970s – ‘90s, Roberta is also well known for her TV roles and as a writer. The excellent Scottish actors Ewan Donald and Romana Abercromby joined her on stage for this powerful and challenging play.
Mathew met Bruce Norval at a football match in 2008. At the game, Bruce told Matthew his story as a haemophiliac who was administered with contaminated blood products during the 1980s. These gave him Hepatitis C. Thousands of others were even more unfortunate, also contracting HIV. Although he had some awareness of his story, the detail and passion with which Bruce told Matthew the story motivated him to try to create a play. Bruce has campaigned tirelessly on behalf of all of the victims of what has been described as “the biggest disaster in the history of the British National Health Service”, and he proved to be a tremendous source of information for what eventually became Factor 9, written by Hamish. After several failed attempts to raise money for the production, we finally succeeded and the show opened in March 2014 in Sweden at Profilteatern as part of Umea 2014 European Capital of Culture. The show had a very powerful effect on its audiences in Sweden and subsequently in Denmark and throughout Scotland. The production and tour was supported by Umea 2014 and Creative Scotland. Dogstar, Bruce and his friend John Martin were determined to present the show at the 2014 Edinburgh Fringe. John provided the initial impetus to create a Kickstarter crowdfunding campaign and, with donations from 180 individuals, many of whom were associated with this worldwide tragedy, and from several support organisations, including Haemophilia Scotland and Haemophilia Wales, money was raised to enable a further 24 performances to take place in Edinburgh. Several leading politicians attended and an extract from the play was presented at the Scottish Parliament in December 2014. The play told a horrific story of Scottish victims Bruce Norval and Robert Mackie, played by Matthew and Stewart Porter, and the wider story of the development of blood products, which has a number of sinister aspects associated with personal ambition, corporate greed and exploitation. “no one who sees it is ever likely to forget” (Scotsman). All of Dogstar’s new productions since 2006 have been supported by project grants from the government-funded Scottish Arts Council/Creative Scotland. While this support has been essential to the company’s growth, project funding is unreliable: we don’t always succeed with our applications for this funding and the company has often had to rely on the good will and sometimes unpaid labour of its artistic directors. Dogstar has made three attempts to gain 2- and 3-year core-funding commitments from the funding body since 2007. None of these has been successful, even though there is no project-funded company in the history of Scottish theatre which has taken so much of its work abroad. We currently have two co-productions in the pipeline with excellent companies from Denmark and Sweden. In October 2014, we received our latest rejection for core funding. This led to a substantial protest from our board, our supporters and even some members of the Scottish Parliament, but to no avail. Sadly, this led to the resignation of founder Hamish MacDonald. Matthew Zajac continues as the sole artistic director and he has been joined by the dynamic producer Donna Macrae of Firefly Productions. But the future of the company remains in the balance. During 2015, we have taken The Tailor of Inverness to New York and a new UK tour for this production will take place in spring 2016. Creative Scotland has given us a small grant to enable us to develop a couple of new projects and we await the outcome of our third attempt to raise money from the funding body for a co-production with Mungo Park Arts Centre of Denmark.