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Theatre

Review: Hard Times

Mill is a boon to Dickens drama

June 17, 2011 09:57
Alice O’Connell and Richard Heap watched closely by audience members

By

John Jeffay

1 min read

THIS classic Dickens tale of northern industrial misery is brought to life in a grim Victorian mill.

The Library Theatre Company - currently homeless due to renovations - has taken refuge in the 200-year-old Murrays' Mills, on the edge of Manchester city centre, to stage this remarkable walkabout adaptation of Hard Times. The venue is more than a novelty. It is integral to a production built around its brick walls, steel pillars and wooden floors.

If you do not mind a decent walk following the action across a vast upper floor, then this could well be the most original and engaging thing you will see this year.

We are introduced to the squalor of Dickensian life with a pre-performance basement tableau that includes a dying child, a cholera warning, a couple sharing a humble bread and cheese meal, the rumble of machinery and a coffin maker hammering away.