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The Great Britain Guide

Theatres · East of England

The Seagull

Also known as: Gwylan (drama)

♿ Wheelchair accessible

The Seagull is a theatre in the United Kingdom.

Bench mark on The Lodge, London Road South - geograph.org.uk - 2075247

Adrian S Pye — CC BY-SA 2.0 via Wikimedia Commons licence

Plan your visit

Typical visit
2 h–3 h
Nearest railway station
Lowestoft · 2.2 km
  • Wheelchair accessible

About

The Seagull is a working theatre in the United Kingdom, listed in OpenStreetMap as a public performance venue. Address: Morton Road, Lowestoft, NR33 0JH. Coordinates: 52.4567°, 1.7357°.

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From the Wikipedia article

The Seagull (Russian: Ча́йка, romanized: Cháyka) is a play by Russian dramatist Anton Chekhov, written in 1895 and first produced in 1896. The Seagull is generally considered to be the first of his four major plays. It dramatizes the romantic and artistic conflicts among four characters: the famous middlebrow story writer Boris Trigorin, the ingenue Nina, the fading actress Irina Arkadina, and her son the symbolist playwright Konstantin Treplev. Like Chekhov's other full-length plays, The Seagull relies upon an ensemble cast of diverse, fully-developed characters. In contrast to the melodrama of mainstream 19th-century theater, lurid actions (such as Konstantin's suicide attempts) are not shown onstage. Characters tend to speak in subtext rather than directly. The character Trigorin is considered one of Chekhov's greatest male roles. The opening night of the first production was a famous failure. Vera Komissarzhevskaya, playing Nina, was so intimidated by the hostility of the audience that she lost her voice. Chekhov left the audience and spent the last two acts behind the scenes. When supporters wrote to him that the production later became a success, he assumed that they were merely trying to be kind. When Konstantin Stanislavski, the seminal Russian theatre practitioner of the time, directed it in 1898 for his Moscow Art Theatre, the play was a triumph. Stanislavski's production became "one of the greatest events in the history of Russian theatre and one of the greatest new developments in the history of world drama". Stanislavski's direction caused The Seagull to be perceived as a tragedy through overzealousness with the concept of subtext, whereas Chekhov intended it to be a comedy.

Excerpt from Wikipedia under CC BY-SA 4.0. See the source article linked in Sources below.

Background

Description

The American playwright Tennessee Williams adapted the play as The Notebook of Trigorin, which premiered in 1981. That year, Thomas Kilroy's adaptation, The Seagull also premiered at the Royal Court Theatre in London. The Canadian playwright Daniel MacIvor wrote an adaptation called His Greatness. In 2004, American playwright Regina Taylor's African-American adaptation, Drowning Crow, was performed on Broadway. Emily Mann wrote and directed an adaptation called A Seagull in the Hamptons. The play premiered at the McCarter Theatre May 2008. Libby Appel did a new version that premiered in 2011 at the Marin Theatre in Mill Valley using newly discovered material from Chekhov's original…

Sourced from Wikipedia under CC BY-SA 4.0.

Coordinates
52.4567, 1.7357
County
Suffolk
District
East Suffolk
Parish
Lowestoft
Postcode
NR33 0JH
Parliamentary constituency
Lowestoft
Phone
+44 1502 589726
Nearest railway station
Lowestoft2.2 km
Official site
theseagull.co.uk

Sources

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Frequently asked questions

Where is The Seagull?
The Seagull is in East of England, in the United Kingdom — coordinates 52.4567°, 1.7357°. The nearest railway station is Lowestoft, around 2.2 km away.
Is The Seagull wheelchair accessible?
Yes — The Seagull is tagged in OpenStreetMap as wheelchair-accessible.