New Drama

Mary’s Babies

BY MAUD DROMGOOLE.

DIRECTED BY TATTY HENNESSY.

20 March -
13 April 2019

Overview

“I’m drawing a line and from now on we’re going to have to be completely honest about everything with each other. I think.”

Mary Barton, a pioneer of fertility treatment, thought her husband was perfect. And doesn’t every child deserve the perfect father? So Mary used her husband’s sperm to impregnate up to a thousand women, and then burnt all the records. A thousand resulting children, the ‘Barton Brood’, with no idea about their shared father. Meeting each other. Making friends. Having babies.

Maud Dromgoole’s play is based on a true story researched through surveys and interviews. Provocative, funny, and fascinating, it imagines a series of encounters between these unknowing half-siblings.

Maud Dromgoole is a writer whose plays have appeared at the Bunker, the Courtyard Theatre, the Arcola, Southwark Playhouse, and Tristan Bates Theatres.

Tatty Hennessy is an award-winning playwright, dramaturg and director.


People

Katy Stephens
Actor
Katy has performed at Shakespeare's Globe and with the RSC.
Emma Fielding
Actor
Emma has appeared in numerous stage productions for the RSC and the NT, and has worked extensively for film and television.

Maud Dromgoole
Playwright
Tatty Hennessy
Director
Anna Reid
Set and costume design
Jai Morjaria
Lighting design
Yvonne Gilbert
Sound design
Matilda James
Casting director


Media

“Written by the astonishingly gifted Maud Dromgoole and directed with sensitivity and wit by Tatty Hennesey.”
British Theatre
rating starrating starrating starrating starrating star
 
“An absorbing look at the complicated questions raised by technology.”
London Living Large
rating starrating starrating starrating starrating star
 
“A gripping premise.”
A Younger Theatre
rating starrating starrating starrating star
 
“A fascinating story…skilfully portrayed by Katy Stephens and Emma Fielding.”
The Stage

 
“Legacy of fertility clinic’s dark truth is wittily probed.”
Evening Standard

 
“An entertaining and very sensitive handling of a topic that goes straight to the core of our identity.”
The Reviews Hub