The 'English Upskirt Theatre Company' was founded in 2002 and is located in Awnstonely Crumbling, a village in the heart of rural Northamptonshire. The primary aim of the theatre is to extend the boundaries of the 'theatre in the round'. Where previously the proscenium arch had been literally swept away to allow the audience to sit around the actors and theatrical productions, the 'English Upskirt Theatre Company' allows the audience access to the 'underside' of the performance.
A further dimension is therefore available for theatre audiences who literally crave a different angle.
The relatively small, experimental, three hundred seater theatre was designed by Lutyenson Hutchard Associates, a well known and respected architectural design practice based in Guernsey. They have been responsible for various 'upskirt' installations and staircases including the infamous open glass staircase and glass ramp outside Fromington Registry Office in central London which often features in 'lads-mags' and 'photo-share' web sites and blogs.
Merced Hutchard, the inventor of both 'steel-glass' and 'reflecto-glass' was commissioned by The British Theatre Society to build an experimental glass stage which could be underlit via a complex fibre optical control system. With David Lutyenson, as auditorium designer, their first mock-up was eventually built in an abandoned television studio in Hammersmith in the mid 1990s.
The result was impressive. The tiny audience of selected distinguished theatre goers were allowed to experience a theatrical adaptation of a Dickensian novel in three dimensions. The success was immediate. Theatre critics congratulated the company on the accuracy of the period costumes, particularly the actresses' petticoats, stockings and underdrawers.
At Awnstonely Crumbling the audience is allocated two tickets, one for the understage auditorium which seats 60 and one for the main auditorium which seats 200. Because of the nature of the productions put on, audiences may opt to transfer between seats only during scene changes and intervals which are often fairly predictable and frequent.
The English Upskirt Theatre Company's productions of 'Oklahoma' and 'Seven Brides for Seven Brothers' normally require careful choreography to allow the understage audience as many opportunities of seeing up the actresses' skirts and petticoats as possible.
More recent adaptations allow the understage audience to wander at will, in other words, the normal reclining seats with binoculars are removed completely.
The 'English Upskirt Theatre Company's' versions of 'Hairspray' and 'Grease' have often been abridged to only include the more energetic dance sequences, and more recent adaptations have ditched the male cast completely.
Jane Austen's and the Bronte Sisters' novels have been rewritten to exclude male characters. 'English Upskirt Theatre Company's' 'Sense and Sensibility' is a far more rewarding experience now that the audience is allowed access to the underside of 'Empire' style dresses. One may, for example, wander about beneath an actresses feet, at will, and enjoy as many glimpses of her lace trimmed petticoats or frilly bloomers as is physically possible.
I took my girlfriend to see a production of Bizet's Carmen last June at the EUTC. It took us a while to find the theatre as it was badly signposted. After several wrong turns we eventually entered the pretty Northamptonshire village and parked my silver Mercedes in the large central car park.