There's No Place Like a Home
There's No Place Like A Home is a comedy play by Paul Elliott which tells the story of the residents of Stollberg Hall Retirement Home for Theatrical Performers. When the home is threatened with closure, they do what any self-respecting bunch of former entertainers would do; they devise a cunning plan to save the home from closure, which is so theatrical and entertaining only they could pull it off.
These older retired residents decide to kidnap a celebrity and hold them to ransom, using the money from this to save the grand house (and its even grander residents) and they choose Jeffrey Archer as their victim, only for things to go very wrong.[1]
The play toured in autumn 2006 and autumn 2007, with Gordon Kaye, Ken Morley, Don Maclean, Christopher Beeny, Peter Byrne, Brian Cant, Sue Hodge, Jan Hunt, Jody Crosier, Mike Edmonds, Brian Godfrey, and Emily Trebicki.
Reviews appear to have been mostly unenthusiastic to lukewarm;[2][3][4] but the Daily Telegraph was positive.[5]
References
- ↑ It's Behind You - There's No Place Like Home
- ↑ Ian Barge, There’s No Place Like a Home, The Stage, 10 October 2006.
- ↑ Peter Aitken, No place for this home!, BBC Three Counties, 23 October 2006
- ↑ Sheila Connor, There's No Place Like a Home, British Theatre Guide website, September 2006
- ↑ Charles Spencer, Such sweet insanity, Daily Telegraph, 27 September 2006.