ASUNDER a major commemorative WW1 centenary arts event
72 minute poetic documentary film that weaves the largely untold stories of individuals from the North East:
Norman Gaudie – a conscientious objector and devout Quaker
Robert Hepple – a19 year old soldier shot at dawn for desertion
Lizzie Holmes – the first woman in Horden to wear trousers
Margaret Holmes – a tram conductress who survived a zeppelin raid
Arthur Linfoot – a soldier in the non-combatant Royal Army Medical Corps
Bella Reay – a young female munitions worker and ACE footballer
Lisbeth Simm – campaigner for women’s rights
George Thompson – a sergeant transport driver who loved his horses
and
Garnet Wolsey Fyfe – a piper killed on the first day of the Somme whilst playing the pipes going ‘over the top’
Synopsis
Using archive and contemporary footage and audio, Asunder tells the story of what happened to a British town during the First World War.
The film reveals the stories of people from Tyneside and Wearside to uncover what life was like on the home front and Western front.
The project has a focus on 1916 and commemorates 100 years since the Battle of the Somme.
Directed by artist and filmmaker Esther Johnson, the film has a score composed by Sunderland’s Mercury-nominated Field Music and Newcastle’s Warm Digits,
performed with the Royal Northern Sinfonia and The Cornshed Sisters. The conductor is Hugh Brunt from the London Contemporary Orchestra.
The text for the film draws upon existing oral histories and diaries researched by Esther Johnson in archives across the UK.
The narration, written by Bob Stanley (Saint Etienne), is voiced by journalist Kate Adie, with the actor Alun Armstrong as the voice of the Sunderland Daily Echo and Shipping Gazette.
Asunder is co-commissioned by Sunderland Cultural Partnership and 14–18 NOW: WW1 Centenary Art Commissions,
supported by The National Lottery through Arts Council England and the Heritage Lottery Fund, the Department for Culture, Media and Sport,
Sunderland Business Improvement District, Culture Bridge North East and Sir James Knott Trust.
Funders audience feedback at the premiere was overwhelmingly positive. Here are some of the reviews with photographs:
http://www.chroniclelive.co.uk/whats-on/theatre-news/life-sunderland-during-1914-18-11596334
http://www.livingnorth.com/northeast/arts-whats/review-asunder-sunderland-empire?platform=hootsuite
07 May 2017
Phoenix Theatre Blyth, 19:30
26 April 2017
Holmeside Coffee Sunderland, 18:00
19 April 2017
Arts Centre Washington Sunderland, 13:30 and 19:00
17 March 2017
Whitburn Methodist Church South Tyneside, 19:00
15 February 2017
Pop Recs LTD Sunderland, 18:30
18 January 2017
Back on the Map Community Centre Hendon, Sunderland, 14:00