Joanna
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Booking details are now up on the Bolton Octagon site. It will be running between 11 March and 10 April next year, with that including a post-show 'meet the director and cast' (none of which are currently confirmed, btw) on Thursday 25 March. Only season tickets are currently on sale for the 2009/2010 season (the first overseen by the theatre's new artistic director, David Thacker), but that extends to individual productions from 1 June.
An overview of this new season of productions can be found over on the Octagon Blog. On ADTF, it says....
The Bolton Wanderers’ 1923 Cup Final triumph against West Ham United is often remembered because the match could only begin once the spectators were cleared from the new Wembley Stadium pitch by a policeman on a white horse. And Did Those Feet (11 March – 10 April 2010), by Les Smith and Martin Thomasson, which won the Manchester Evening News Award for Best New Play in 2007, is the story as told through the lives of the team’s supporters.
And from a 'Patrick Stewart introduces David Thacker' foreword in the new season brochure....
There's a revival of one of the most popular and successful productions in the Octagon's history - And Did Those Feet. The story of Bolton Wanderers' 1923 Cup Final triumph is told through the lives of half a dozen or so characters in the build-up to that famous Wembley White Horse moment. If like me, you've never seen And Did Those Feet, don't be put off if you don't like football - David tells me it is brilliantly funny and intensely moving and will appeal to everyone."
An overview of this new season of productions can be found over on the Octagon Blog. On ADTF, it says....
The Bolton Wanderers’ 1923 Cup Final triumph against West Ham United is often remembered because the match could only begin once the spectators were cleared from the new Wembley Stadium pitch by a policeman on a white horse. And Did Those Feet (11 March – 10 April 2010), by Les Smith and Martin Thomasson, which won the Manchester Evening News Award for Best New Play in 2007, is the story as told through the lives of the team’s supporters.
And from a 'Patrick Stewart introduces David Thacker' foreword in the new season brochure....
There's a revival of one of the most popular and successful productions in the Octagon's history - And Did Those Feet. The story of Bolton Wanderers' 1923 Cup Final triumph is told through the lives of half a dozen or so characters in the build-up to that famous Wembley White Horse moment. If like me, you've never seen And Did Those Feet, don't be put off if you don't like football - David tells me it is brilliantly funny and intensely moving and will appeal to everyone."