The Courier & Advertiser (Angus and Dundee)

Rep calls for help to mark milestones.

Michael Alexander hears why Dundee Rep wants to hear people’s memories as the theatre marks its 80th anniversar­y

- malexander@thecourier.co.uk

It is the Dundee institutio­n that has hosted actors ranging from Richard Todd to Lynn Redgrave and Brian Cox to Geoffrey Hayes from Rainbow.

But as Dundee Rep celebrates three important milestones in 2019 – 10 years of its Enterprise @ The Rep work experience programme, 20 years of the Dundee Rep Ensemble, and 80 years of Dundee Rep Theatre itself – it is putting the people who visit the theatre at the heart of its triple-birthday celebratio­ns.

Today, the Rep is inviting the public to a coffee morning (10am-11.30am) to share stories of their connection to the theatre – or, more specifical­ly, ‘Tell us a story that you ken aboot Dundee Rep that we dinnae?’

Maybe the memories date from the time before 1982 when the Rep was based at Lochee Road?

Perhaps you’ve been coming to see the Christmas show since you were little?

Were you part of a youth group or community company at the theatre?

Whatever your connection, whatever your memories, the Rep would love to hear them.

One woman who is excited about the anniversar­y year and the sharing of memories is Amanda Lowson, community health and wellbeing associate at Dundee Rep.

She has been in her current job for 20 years. However, she worked for the community dance team before that and speaks passionate­ly about the role Dundee Rep plays as a “people’s theatre” in the community.

“Basically I walked through the doors in 1983 as a teenager and never left,” said the former Whitfield High School pupil who “got hooked” after her drama teacher, Sheila Alan, introduced her to a youth theatre scheme at the Rep in S2, going on to study theatre arts at Dundee College.

“There was a bit of ‘eh dinnae ken whit ye want tae dae that fir!’ from some members of my family at the time,” she laughed.

“But I just loved the buzz. For us kids that didn’t really achieve academical­ly, drama was the outlet for us, and I knew there and then that drama was what I wanted to do with my life. The opportunit­y to come out of Whitfield and go down to the Rep – that was probably the best thing.”

The history of theatre in Dundee dates back over 200 years, with the Dundee Repertory Theatre born in 1939 to fill the gap left by the early 20th Century cinema boom.

However, until visiting the Rep in its then recently opened Tay Square building in 1983, Amanda’s perception of the Rep as a girl growing up in Whitfield had been “that was where the posh people went”.

That view changed overnight thanks to her youth theatre experience, and in her Rep role since she has taken great pride in connecting the theatre with children and others from Dundee’s deprived communitie­s – recognisin­g her younger self in some of those who have taken part.

“My role has kind of evolved,” she said. “When I first started 20 years ago in this job, my job was engaging children and young people, and adults, from deprived communitie­s.

“I had a youth theatre out in Whitfield, I had a youth theatre in Kirkton, I had a youth theatre in Ardler.

“I suppose that’s a really important thing to me because I really believed in these people getting the opportunit­ies to get involved.

“Today, with community still in my title, my role has widened out. I do a lot of work now with people with learning disabiliti­es, people living with health inequaliti­es – it’s theatre for wellbeing really. But there’s no doubt the opportunit­ies today are even greater than they were 35 years ago, and it’s something we want to keep expanding further or, as I like to say, ‘dig deeper’.”

Amanda said there had been numerous success stories over the years ranging from former youth theatre stalwart Nate Lamb who now works on the technical side of Rep shows, to others who have gone on to further their studies at the Royal Conservato­ire.

She has been delighted to see the community side of the Rep grow.

In this special anniversar­y year, she still feels the Rep needs to “shout a bit more” about the work it does.

She said: “I was talking to the Pecha Kucha event in Dundee last February about the work I do.

“I was hearing people going up the road saying ‘wow, I didn’t know the Rep did all that – I thought they just put on shows’.

“A lot of people are not aware of all the things that happen in this building.

“Last week the Whitfield Camera Club did a tour round the building. They’d never even been in before.

“I took them in all the wee nooks and crannies.

It was amazing in itself seeing the reaction – ‘wow, you’ve got five floors in your building. Oh my god you’ve got your own wardrobe department, you’ve got your own studio space. Oh you make your own sets here.

“That’s another of my favourite things to do – to show off the building really.”

Amanda said the anniversar­ies were all about a celebratio­n of how long and how sustainabl­e the Rep was, and how it continues to grow.

She hoped as many people as possible would get in touch to share their memories.

“It’ll be really interestin­g to hear what we have coming from the event on Saturday,” she said.

“The wee quirky tales. Maybe it’ll be ‘Eh remember when that famous woman on Absolutely Fabulous – Joanna Lumley – when she used to be at the bar with her glass of wine.

“It’ll be really interestin­g to see the type of people that will come along.

“Will it be the old kind of regular theatre-goers, or will it be someone who just came along and saw The Mill Lavvies and they’ve been to see once and remember it?

“I hope that’s the case. I hope it’s a real mix of diverse people.”

 ?? Picture: Steve Macdougall. ?? Dramatic life and times for Amanda Lowson, who walked through the doors of Dundee Rep as a teenager in 1983 and has “never left”.
Picture: Steve Macdougall. Dramatic life and times for Amanda Lowson, who walked through the doors of Dundee Rep as a teenager in 1983 and has “never left”.

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