IT was like being in a gig, a football match or a festival,” says Ruth Wilson, recalling the audience reaction to her performance of The Second Woman at the Young Vic in May. In this experimental drama, the 41-year-old played the same short scene 100 times, with 100 different men, most of them amateurs and all of them without rehearsal, over a 24-hour period.The audience, many of whom queued for several long stints or did the full 24 hours, grew progressively more raucous as time wore on. The one-off show took theatre out of the arts pages and onto the front pages and became a bona fide London phenomenon. On Sunday it won Wilson one of two special Editor’s Awards at the 67th Evening Standard Theatre Awards; the other went to Sir Elton John for bringing his collaborative musical spirit to theatre.
“To be recognised in this way is wonderful,” says Wilson, over tea in a café near her flat in SE1. “It was a risky piece that felt outside the box of traditional theatre. I definitely thought there’d be no one there between 3am and 6am — and I was worried it might be boring. But I wanted to do it because I was missing things like that in this country, the excitement of something new and fresh and unknown. And the interest in it proved other people are hungry for that, too.”
Denne historien er fra November 23, 2023-utgaven av Evening Standard.
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Denne historien er fra November 23, 2023-utgaven av Evening Standard.
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