Little Women
Louisa May Alcott, adapted by Emma Reeves
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Louisa May Alcott, adapted by Emma Reeves
Content warning [May contain spoilers]
"I've had a lot of troubles, so I write jolly tales" - Louisa May Alcott
Is art a way for us to conjure back what has been lost? Emma Reeve's adaptation of Louisa May Alcott's story of family, growing up and survival brings this question into focus, told through the day-to-day triumphs and tribulations of the March family. It is a question that Alcott grapples with in her semi-autobiographical novel, which was written in the wake of her sister's death. In writing about a family based on her own, Alcott brings back to life the memories of her sister, their childhood, and a time when dreams would become realities – all that was now gone.
A one hundred-and-fifty-year-old story, Little Women, begins in the middle of things, centred around four sisters and their mother in New England during the American Civil War. The home becomes its own battlefield of survival as the women navigate the complexities and perennial conflicts intrinsic to families, finances, love and growing up. As time goes on, childhood gives way to adulthood as life is transformed, with much lost and gained in the process.
Hilarity, despair, rage, adoration: Little Women reminds us of the magnificence of the mundane, the wonder of the ‘little’ lives we all lead.
This production is suitable for all ages.
This amateur production of “Little Women (Reeves)” is presented by arrangement with Concord Theatricals Ltd. on behalf of Samuel French Ltd. www.concordtheatricals.co.uk
Depictions of:
death and/or dying
References to:
war
The ADC Theatre is Britain's oldest University playhouse, today administered and maintained by the University of Cambridge. Plays have been presented on the site since 1855, when the Cambridge University Amateur Dramatic Club (CUADC) was founded, and the society met and performed in the back room of the Hoop Inn, which stood almost exactly where the ADC Theatre stands today. Today, the ADC Theatre is the centre of University drama in Cambridge, run almost entirely by students with no Faculty involvement.
Access
When you arrive at the ADC Theatre, there are power assisted doors to the Box Office. In the foyer there is a lift which leads up to the bar and auditorium. The accessible toilet is located on the ground floor across the foyer. Further information can be found here.
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Complimentary tickets are available for full-time carers.
The ADC Theatre and Corpus Playroom is fitted with an infra-red audio system designed to help deaf and hard of hearing patrons. If you are using the system for the first time, please arrive early and seek advice from our Front of House team.
Assistance dogs are welcome in both of our venues. Please call the Box Office or email the above address when booking to ensure you are seated appropriately.
If you are travelling by car, you can use the Park Street car park (2 minute walk), the Grand Arcade car park (10 minute walk) or the Castle Hill car park (15 minute walk). You can find out more information here.