Funny Peculiar
Starring Liz Carr, Mandy Colleran, Bea Webster and Vici Wreford-Sinnott
****
"Acted with verve, wittily scripted, both funny and hardhitting" The Stage
Watch for free - different accessible versions
Please read content awareness information which you will find below right.
"There’s no doubt that disabled people, particularly those who have been forced to shield for the majority of 2020 with no end in sight, have been muted during the pandemic. So thank goodness for Little Cog and Wreford-Sinnott, rolling up their sleeves and turning the volume up to eleven, so that disabled people, and women in particular, cannot be ignored."
Kate Lovell, Disability Arts Online
Kate Lovell, Disability Arts Online
Funny Peculiar with Captions
Funny Peculiar with BSL Interpretation (also captions)
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Film Details & Links
Age Recommendation 18+ Content Awareness The film includes strong language, sexual references, examples of disability discrimination, eating disorder, isolation, references to mental health and self harm NB: There is a very short section where a mobile phone access feature for Deaf people flashes a light. We can provide you with the exact timing to avoid it if this may affect you. Accessibility There are three versions of the piece - standard with captions, BSL interpreted and audio-described. Please note that although directed using the zoom platform, it was not filmed on zoom and therefore views just like a film on your TV. Donations Watching is free of charge but please consider making a donation to Little Cog. You can do that here. |
Funny Peculiar with Audio Description (also captions)
After a hugely successful online live launch party, Funny Peculiar is now available to watch, without booking, right here on our website. Please help us celebrate and elevate disabled women and non-binary people by watching and sharing and talking about the piece.
Funny Peculiar is a lockdown production from Little Cog as part of their Staging Our Futures programme. The piece stars Liz Carr of BBC Silent Witness fame, Mandy Colleran, a comedian and activist, and Bea Webster who is currently an associate of both the Royal Shakespeare Company and The Playwright's Studio of Scotland.
Zsa Zsa, Raquelle, Blanche and Cuba are in quarantine – three disabled women and one non-binary person locked down, locked in, shut up and shouted down.
While the rest of the nation is in meltdown, it takes a lot to phase this quartet.
The new terrain is worrying and frustrating but these people are prepared - perhaps they have waited for a moment like this their whole lives.
In a sequence of four original, cross-cutting, witty and wise monologues, broadcasting from their own homes during quarantine, these characters are myth-busters giving their all to expose the lie of vulnerability.
Performed by an incredible cast of actors: Liz Carr (from Silent Witness fame), Mandy Colleran (a comedian and activist), Bea Webster (Royal Shakespeare Company and The Playwright’s Studio of Scotland) and Little Cog’s very own Vici Wreford-Sinnott.
Vici has said of the piece, "We are absolutely thrilled to be working with such an amazing cast to tell the stories of disabled people. It feels more important now than ever that we ensure we are visible, given that recent figures have been released showing that disabled women are 11.9 times more likely to die in the current pandemic than other people. Vici continued, "Terms like 'vulnerable' and 'underlying health conditions' have led to thinking that the deaths of certain groups of people are inevitable. Expected and accepted".
Little Cog decided to challenge that belief and develop work that celebrated disabled women and non-binary people in their rich and complex glory. "We are so excited to be working with Liz, Mandy and Bea. Vici has spent time discussing disabled peoples' experiences with all cast members and is writing bespoke work for the actors."
Liz Carr is known to millions for playing Clarissa Mullery in the BBC's Silent Witness for 8 years but Liz is many things. She is an actor, comedian and disability rights activist. Others will know her from the Disabled/Deaf women’s comedy group, Nasty Girls or the BBC Ouch! podcast with Mat Fraser or her stand up with Abnormally Funny People, her Criptease routines or her passionate opposition to legalising assisted suicide through both campaigning and her creation of the show, Assisted Suicide - The Musical.
Liz said, “I’m thrilled to have this chance to give voice to and highlight the fears, dark humour and incredible resilience of Disabled women as together we fight for our very existence not just during this pandemic - but always."
"Writing and rehearsals are under way - this piece is particularly of this moment and we don't expect to see any of our broadcasters making work like this, although we'd love their support, so we just thought, okay then, let's make it ourselves and the response and interest has been phenomenal", says Vici. "There is a danger with a period of potentially prolonged isolation that we could disappear from view, and we were in unanimous agreement that none of us is prepared to let that happen. So here we are making glorious work together."
Mandy Colleran has been involved in Disability Arts since the 1980s. She was a founder member of the comedy trio No Excuses which produced the legendary piece Know My Place, still available to view on youtube. Mandy was also a founder of North West Disability Arts Forum, later becoming it's director. She won a Lifetime Achievement Award from Dadafest in 2007. She was involved in Kaite O'Reilly's In Water I'm Weightless for National Theatre of Wales and has had a long career as a speaker, feminist and campaigner for disability rights.
Bea Webster is a Deaf non-binary actor who trained at the Royal Conservatoire of Scotland. They are an actor, drag artist, writer and speaker on Deaf equality. They are currently in rehearsals with the Royal Shakespeare Company for The Winter's Tale, and starred in Red Ladder's Mother Courage and Her Children, and Kaite O'Reilly's Peeling which toured in the UK last year. Bea is passionate about classical and contemporary texts in English and BSL, has contributed to BBC Social, has hosted several events, and has published a poem in both BSL and English titled Long Lost Lover, about their birthplace of Thailand.
Vici is Artistic Director of Little Cog, writing and touring nationally a number of pieces of work including, Butterfly which was named Best One Person Play by the British Theatre Guide, Another England, Lighthouse and her recent commissions The Wrong Woman Discussions and Siege for ARC Stockton and Home Manchester can still be seen online as part of the Homemaker's commissions. She is a lifelong feminist and activist, regularly speaking and campaigning on disability rights matters and the role of culture and the arts in equality. She is a founding member of both Disconsortia and We Shall Not Be Removed.
ACCESSIBILITY
There are three versions of the piece - standard with captions, BSL interpreted and audio-described. Please note that although directed using the zoom platform, it was not filmed on zoom and therefore views just like a film on your TV.
Written, directed and edited by Vici Wreford-Sinnott
BSL Interpretation by Sue Lee and Natasha Trantom
Camera Operators - Joey Lee, Black Robin, Jo Church, Emma Mockett
Funny Peculiar is a Staging Our Futures Commission supported by Arts Council England, and co-commissioned by ARC Stockton and Northern Stage.