Posh (play)
Posh is a play by the British playwright Laura Wade. It was first staged at the Royal Court Theatre downstairs in 2010. The play concerns an Oxford student dining club called "The Riot Club", a fictionalised version of the Bullingdon Club. The first production, produced during the British General Election, received favourable reviews.
Plot
Ten members of "The Riot Club", an exclusive Oxford University dining club, have rented out a country pub's dining room for their termly dinner. Their president, James, who is about to leave university, is falling out of love with the club and promises the suspicious landlord Chris and his waitress daughter Rachel that he will keep things under control. While James avoids his presidential duties, others vie for his position. Inspired by his godfather Jeremy, a former Riot Club member and now a Tory MP, Guy tries to impress the boys with a "ten bird roast'. Others are less restrained; one has hired Charlie the prostitute. When Charlie arrives she refuses to get under the table and perform oral sex on the boys; they are surprised at her scruples.As the members get more drunk and rowdy their bullying of each other and of Chris and Rachel gets worse. They try to force Rachel to kiss them all; she runs out and they wreck the room. Chris bursts in outrage and the members assault him, knocking him out. Horrified, they panic and bar the door, despite the landlord being seriously hurt. Hugo calls an ambulance, much to everyone else's discontent. Eventually they all agree to pin the blame on Alistair, who has consistently riled them throughout the night. They agree that, as they will all end up being successful, they will look after Alistair after university and make sure they 'see him right'. They open the door to the distraught Rachel and the ambulance approaches.
Weeks later Alistair meets with Jeremy, who has managed to weaken the charge against Alistair and effectively get him off the hook. Intrigued by Alistair's politics, Jeremy promises Alistair that he will be keeping a close eye on him in future and that he has high hopes for him.
Cast
Character | Original Cast, 2010 | West End Cast, 2012 | Regional Premiere Cast, 2015 | Original All-Female Cast, 2017 | Vancouver, 2017 | UK tour, 2019 |
Director | Lyndsey Turner | Lyndsey Turner | Susannah Tresilian | Cressida Carré | Allyson Fournier | Lucy Hughes |
Jeremy | Simon Shepherd | Simon Shepherd | Laurence Kennedy | Sarah Thom | Michael Shewchuk | Simon Rhodes |
Chris | Daniel Ryan | Steffan Rhodri | Neil Caple | Sarah Thom | Michael Shewchuk | Peter McNeil O'Connor |
Rachel | Fiona Button | Jessica Ransom | Charlotte Brimble | Toni Peach | Mariela Shuley | Isobel Laidler |
Charlie | Charlotte Lucas | Charlotte Lucas | Joanne Evans | Toni Peach | Caroline Doyle | Ellie Nunn |
Alistair Ryle | Leo Bill | Leo Bill | Jordan Metcalfe | Serena Jennings | Riaan Smit | Tyger Drew-Honey |
Toby Maitland | Jolyon Coy | Jolyon Coy | Tom Clegg | Molly Hanson | Cole Howard | Matthew Entwistle |
Hugo Fraser-Tyrwhitt | David Dawson | Pip Carter | Tom Hanson | Lucy Aarden | Kevin Hatch | Ollie Appleby |
Guy Bellingfield | Joshua McGuire | Joshua McGuire | Philip Labey | Amani Zardoe | Jake Sheardown | Adam Mirsky |
George Balfour | Richard Goulding | Richard Goulding | Jamie Satterthwaite | Macy Nyman | Thomas Van Kalken | Joseph Tyler Todd |
Harry Villiers | Harry Hadden-Paton | Max Bennett | Robbie Jarvis | Alice Brittain | Kelly McCabe | Jack Whittle |
Ed Montgomery | Kit Harington | Harry Lister Smith | Kaffe Keating | Verity Kirk | Dylan Leonard | Taylor Mee |
Dimitri Mitropoulos | Henry Lloyd-Hughes | Henry Lloyd-Hughes | Simon Haines | Cassie Bradley | David Z. Cohen | Jamie Littlewood |
James Leighton-Masters | Tom Mison | Tom Mison | Tom Palmer | Gabby Wong | Tim Howe | Chris Born |
Miles Richards | James Norton | Edward Killingback | Dario Coates | Jessica Siân | Tristan Smith | George Prentice |
Premiere
The Royal Court production opened during the 2010 UK general election and garnered much attention for its timely portrayal of an Oxford University dining club which might be seen as a parody of the real life Bullingdon Club. A number of prominent Conservative politicians have been members of The Bullingdon, including Prime Minister David Cameron, Chancellor George Osborne and the Mayor of London Boris Johnson.The production's scene changes were marked by the Riot Club's a cappella renditions of current popular music such as Wearing My Rolex by the grime rapper Wiley; the music was arranged by James Fortune.
West End production
In 2012 the Royal Court production of the show was revived in the West End at the Duke of York's Theatre with several cast changes. The script was updated, including references to the coalition government which had since come to power and a slight recharacterisation of James Leighton-Masters in line with current events. The a cappella renditions of songs were also updated, this time including LMFAO's Sexy and I Know It.Female-led productions
In March 2016, female-led theatre company Anonymous Is A Woman Theatre Company staged a rehearsed reading of the play, directed by Lucy Jane Atkinson, in which the genders were cast in reverse: women played the 12 male roles; men played the 2 female roles. The following week, at AIAWTC’s Women in the West End festival at the Arts Theatre, London, a gender-reversed scene from the play was performed, complemented by a non-gender reversed performance of the same scene.The following year, an all-female production of the play was staged at London’s Pleasance Theatre, directed by Cressida Carré and starring Cassie Bradley. All 14 roles, male and female, were played by women. The play was performed as it was initially written by Wade, using the male names and the “he” pronoun. The playwright, Laura Wade, said: “It’s always interesting to see a new cast take on Posh, but it’ll be fascinating to see what light an all-female company can throw on the play’s world of power and privilege. I’m often asked what Posh would have been like if there were women in the Riot Club instead of men. Perhaps now I get to find out.”