The Cherry Orchard

by Anton Chekhov

Cherry Orchard photo: actors sitting on a sofa

Tuesday March 16 - Saturday March 20, 2010
Time: 8pm

Tickets: £12 (£10 concessions)

Attendance for this production is by invitation only - please join our mailing list for details

Venue: The House (South Cambridge; details of the location and directions are supplied on booking)

A performance by in situ:, based on, in and around the text of The Cherry Orchard, by Anton Chekhov. First performed in March 2006, this revival marks the beginning of in situ:'s Tenth Birthday celebrations.

One of the most famous and acclaimed plays of all time, The Cherry Orchard was Anton Chekhov's last play, first performed shortly before his death in 1904.

It describes the collapse of an aristocratic family, whose way of life is destroyed by forces they don't understand and are powerless to resist – forces of social and political change that would soon sweep away the old order in its entirety.

The combination of Chekhov, the playwright, and Stanislavski, the pioneering director and creator of the first truly modern school of acting, who directed the original production, make it a play of unique importance in the history of theatre. It was his encounter with Chekhov's plays that gave Stanislavski the conviction that a new type of actor was called for and this eventually gave birth to the famous "System".

in situ: applies its unique approach to Chekhov 's masterpiece. The Cherry Orchard takes place in The House, the action happening simultaneously in different rooms, corridors, landings and other spaces. The idea is that the audience moves around The House following whatever parts of the action they wish and piecing together their own unique experience of the work out of these encounters. The different acts take place in different spaces: on an impossibly cramped sofa, on a bed, on the stairs. Meanwhile, elsewhere, the characters are chatting, playing cards, drinking, singing, re-enacting the turning points in their lives and weeping over lost happiness.