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Thursday, February 21, 2013

A Soldier’s Song










A Soldier’s Song comes to the Cramphorn

Commemorating the 30th anniversary of the Falklands War and one of the hits of the 2012 Edinbrugh Festival, A Soldier's Song is a true story of conflict told by a guy who was there, bringing the battlefield to the stage in an extraordinary work of theatre. It comes to Chelmsford Civic Theatre on Friday 8 March.
The Falklands Conflict happened 30 years ago. It was dubbed "Britain's last colonial war". Maggie Thatcher, mired in political turmoil at home, sent 5000 troops 8000 miles down to the bottom of the world to reclaim a tiny pair of islands at the southern tip of South America colonised by less than 1000 British Subjects which had been 'illegally' invaded by Argentina.
The conflict lasted only two months, but encapsulated everything that war is; the failed politics, the military build up, the epic voyage, the beach landings, sinking of ships, artillery strewn battlefields, grenades and bayonets, the heroism, the horror and the tragedy. Britain's victory saved Thatcher's premiership and secured Conservative supremacy for 15 more years, but left hundreds of soldiers with the deep scars of war, the loss of comrades, and a lifetime of Post Traumatic Stress. But, the Falklands victory also epitomized the fortitude of the Great British Tommy, and remains a potent source of national pride.
Ken Lukowiak was there - a lowly infantryman in 2 Para - at the beach landings at San Carlos, the famous pitched battle at Goose Green, the death of Colonel H Jones, the sinking of the Galahad in Fitzroy, and at the liberation of Port Stanley. He saw it all. A decade, suffering from post traumatic stress, he penned his memoirs as an act of catharsis. They were snapped up and published in acclaimed article for the Guardian Weekend Magazine in 1992 from which he was commissioned to write his book - A Soldier's Song. It was a best seller and Ken then started a new career as a renowned war correspondent.
In 1998, Guy Masterson adapted the book for the stage and toured the show globally over three years to widespread acclaim. Now, 12 years on, commemorating the 30th anniversary, Lukowiak himself will now take on the role of his life and tell his own story' and say it like it was.
This is the theatre of War in its facets, invoking the horror, terror, shame, black humour, futility and tedium of a soldier's life on the front line and the lingering effects of Post Traumatic Stress. Deeply disturbing and frightening at times, it utilises a pounding, totally authentic multi-directional soundscape. It is also extremely funny, the dark "squaddie" humour offsetting the darkness. The brutal demotic language and reality of the battlefield is brought to vividly to life.
An ex-Paratrooper stands in a spotlight and transports the audience back to the Falklands War. Surrounded by pounding sound effects (using authentic ordnance) from four sources all around the theatre, the audience are in the middle of the action. Ken Lukowiak leads us from the landing, through the pitched artillery battles, surviving friendly fire, rescuing enemy soldiers, freezing to death in ice filled trenches to the raising of the Union Jack in Port Stanley.
Incredibly powerful language, often poetic and heightened, spoken by the very soldier that wrote the words. The issues of war and what it is like to be there are brought to the fore. This piece of heart-felt theatre also touches on the politics of war, death, dealing with fear and terror.
There will be a post show discussion with Ken Lukowiak after the production

Tickets are £13.00 and concessions £11.00. Tickets can be booked online at www.chelmsford.gov.uk/theatres or call the Box Office on 01245 606505.