Skip to navigation
Navigation
- Home
- Theatre News
- London Shows A-Z
- Buy Tickets
- Kids & Family Theatre
- Olivier Awards
- tkts
- Theatreland at 100
- Access
27 Oct 2008
Mary Elizabeth Mastrantonio will join Ken Stott in Arthur Miller’s A View From The Bridge, which plays at the Duke of York’s from 24 January. Read more
Age: General
Genre: Play
Sub Genre: Drama
One of Arthur Miller’s most famous plays, A View From The Bridge is the tale of a man in a spiral of self-destruction.
Eddie Carbone is a headstrong longshoreman raising his wife’s orphaned niece, Catherine. When Eddie’s feelings for Catherine develop from paternal protectiveness to sexual desire, his struggle to contain his emotions leads him on a path of self-destruction, transforming him from a respected, honourable man to a virtual stranger shamed and broken by his own actions. Intense and raw, A View From The Bridge explores jealousy, betrayal, suspicion and loss of control.
Eddie Carbone is played by Ken Stott, the acclaimed Scottish actor who has appeared in the London productions of God Of Carnage (Gielgud theatre) and Heroes (Wyndham’s theatre) in recent years. On television he is recognisable from the crime series Rebus and Messiah, while his films include Charlie Wilson’s War and Girl In A Café.
Mary Elizabeth Mastrantonio, who plays Eddie’s wife Beatrice, is best known in the UK for her film work, which includes The Perfect Storm, The Abyss and Robin Hood: Prince Of Thieves. Previous to her appearance in A View From The Bridge, she was seen in the Donmar Warehouse’s Laurence Olivier Award-winning production of Grand Hotel.
Rising performer Hayley Atwell, who plays the Carbone’s niece Catherine in A View From The Bridge, was recently seen at the National Theatre playing the title role in Major Barbara. Her film credits include the 2008 releases The Duchess and Brideshead Revisited.
A View From The Bridge is directed by Lindsay Posner, who previously directed Stott in 1996’s The Misanthrope at the Young Vic. Posner is also the director of recent musicals Fiddler On The Roof and Carousel, and the West End productions of A Life In The Theatre, Oleanna and Fool For Love.
Miller, who also wrote The Crucible, Death Of A Salesman and All My Sons, premiered A View From The Bridge in 1955. It made its West End debut the following year but, due to censorship by the Lord Chamberlain because of references to incest, had to be staged under private theatre club conditions.
show times: Mon-Sat 19:30, Mats Wed & Sat 14:30
ticket prices: £33.50-£50.50
audio described performance: By Denise Rocard on Wed 18 Mar at 19:30 T: 0871 297 5477 E: ticketcentre@theambassadors.com
sign language interpreted performance: By Music And The Deaf on Wed 18 Mar at 19:30 T: 0871 297 5477 E: ticketcentre@theambassadors.com
cast: Ken Stott, Mary Elizabeth Mastrantonio, Hayley Atwell
director: Lindsay Posner
lighting designer: Peter Mumford
designer: Christopher Oram
producer: Kim Poster for Stanhope Productions and Sonia Friedman Productions
map: View Map
address: St Martin's Lane, London, United Kingdom, WC2N 4BG
nearest tube: Leicester Square (approx. 100m)/ Charing Cross/Embankment (approx. 200/400m)
nearest bus: 14, 19, 22, 24, 29, 38, 40, 176
nearest train: Charing Cross (approx. 200m)
parking: Westminter City Council car park at Trafalgar Square and Whitcomb Street. NCP at St Martin’s Lane. 3 parking meters within 50m of main entrance.
air conditioned: Yes
Access Booking: Tel: 0871 297 5477 Fax: 020 7565 6465 Minicom: 0870 060 6641 EMAIL: ticketcentre@theambassadors.com
discounts: Discounts depend on the current production - please check with the Box Office.
limited mobility: Royal circle is on street level, with 2 steps between rows.
access description: No steps from the street through 2 sets of swing doors into the foyer. Box Office is straight ahead. No steps to row D of Royal Circle, then 2 steps between each row. Staircases have handrails on both sides and all steps are highlighted. 20 steps down to Stalls and 23 up to Upper Circle (2 steps between rows in the Upper Circle).
hearing impaired: Dual channel infra-red system with 12 headsets. This covers the whole auditorium except the front boxes. Headsets available from cloakroom. Portable induction loop at Box Office.
guide dogs policy: Guide dogs are allowed inside the auditorium, or staff can dog-sit if preferred. Maximum of 4 guide dogs per performance. You will be seated in an aisle seat. Provisions vary depending on production and customer requirements – please check when booking.
wheelchairs: 2 spaces for wheelchair users in the third row of the Royal Circle at C23 and C1. Transfer seating at D18 and D1. Wheelchairs stored in the cloakroom in the foyer or in the Royal Circle if there is room. Maximum of 2 wheelchair transferees and 1 scooter per performance.
toilets: Women’s up 2 steps from the foyer. Men’s off Stalls bar and Men’s and Women’s off Circle bar.
disabled toilets: Adapted toilet at the back of the Royal Circle, on the right. The turning space is quite tight.
Bookmark with: