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SPEED THE PLOW  Old Vic Theatre

Mamet's witty, caustic play – filled with his trademark rapid-fire dialogue satirises the deal making that goes on behind-the-scenes in the movie business. Hollywood producers Bobby Gould (Kevin Spacey) and Charlie Fox engage in a verbal boxing match centered around the eternal debate of art versus money. Should Gould put on another bad blockbuster that will make his fortune, or put himself on the line for an adaptation of a spiritual, apocalyptic novel offered to him by his beautiful secretary? In this tale of greed, seduction and power, everything he believes in will be put to the test.

'Of all American playwrights, Mamet remains the shrewdest observer of the evil that men do unto each other in the name of buddyhood' Time

David Mamet's other plays include Glengarry Glen Ross, Oleanna and American Buffalo. Kevin Spacey appeared in Glengarry Glen Ross on film and recently at The Old Vic in A Moon for the Misbegotten and Richard II.

 Evenings- Monday to Saturday 7.30
 Matinees- Saturday 2.30
Prices (£)
25.20 to 56.70
Speed The Plow
Old Vic Theatre
The Old Vic - The name Old Vic has long been associated with Shakespeare - it was the first theatre to produce all of the great bard's plays in the First Folio.   Its early history however, was very different.   In 1816 building of the Royal Coburg was started, but after it finally opened in 1818 it quickly became the realm of lurid melodramas. Since 1833 the theatre has been known affectionately, and then officially, as the Old Vic. Redecorated and renamed the Royal Victoria had no affect on the entertainment offered.   Renamed once again in 1871 as the New Victoria Palace, it closed in 1880.   Less than a year later it reopened as the Royal Victoria Hall and Coffee Tavern and was used for concerts, operas and extracts from Shakespeare. In 1912 the theatre was rescued by the unique management style and personality of Lilian Baylis, described by some as 'The Magnificent Tyrant', who embarked on the history-making Shakespeare season. The building was closed for the duration of the war after suffering severe bomb damage in 1941. Reopening in 1950 it became the home of the Old Vic Company, the unofficial national theatre company.  In 1963 the theatre became the temporary home (for 13 years!) of the embryonic National Theatre formed under the guidance of Laurence Olivier.   A £2 million face-lift in 1982 saw the Old Vic take on a new lease of life and play host to a number of musicals (such as HAIR) interspersed with the traditional Shakespeare and high quality dramas.
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