Andrew Dallmeyer Explained

Andrew Dallmeyer
Birth Date:1945 1, df=y
Birth Place:St Boswells, Eildon Hills, Scotland
Occupation:Actor, director, playwright
Education:Webber Douglas School of Singing and Dramatic Art, London
Notableworks:Opium Eater, Hello Dali, Wanted:Dead or Alive, Boys In The Backroom

Andrew Dallmeyer (10 January 1945 – 21 May 2017) was a Scottish playwright, theatre director and actor. He wrote over 75 plays, including the Opium Eater and directed more than 50 productions. His plays have won a number of awards, including a Scottish BAFTA, and they have been played on BBC Radio.

Some of Dallmeyer's plays have been considered controversial, for example Wanted: Dead or Alive which focused on Osama bin Laden's motives and was released on the first anniversary of the September 11 attacks. Some of his other plays celebrate the life and works of historical figures such as John Muir and Salvador Dalí. As an actor, Dallmeyer had a recurring role in Scottish cult comedy, Rab C. Nesbitt.

Early life

Dallmeyer was born on 10 January 1945 in St Boswells in Roxburghshire, Scotland. He spent most of his childhood in Aberlady, East Lothian where he was a keen Hibernian F.C. supporter (later inspiring his interest to write Playing a Blinder). Dallmeyer learnt drama at the Webber Douglas School of Singing and Dramatic Art, London. His father served in the British Army during the Second World War and was twice awarded the Distinguished Service Order.

Career

Dallmeyer, described as a veteran actor and playwright,[1] began his theatre work in the 1960s as an actor in Bristol Old Vic and Nottingham Playhouse performances. At the age of 26 he was the artistic director at Liverpool Playhouse, although he didn't enjoy it and instead wanted to focus on writing his own plays. He subsequently directed many productions at the Traverse Theatre in Edinburgh, Sheffield Crucible, Dundee Rep, Leeds Playhouse and several more.[2]

As a playwright, Dallmeyer has written over 75 plays despite admitting he is unable to type and has directed over 50 productions.[3] He was commissioned by the Baron of Prestongrange and has written a number of plays for him. He won three Fringe First awards as well as a BAFTA Scotland Award for the Best Radio Play of 1985 in Scotland.[3] [4] In 1982, The Times pointed out that he was able to put on three separate successful Fringe shows each year.[5] Much of Dallmeyer's work has not been published or put into print and therefore he holds the only copy of many plays.[6]

1980s

The Opium Eater, based on Confessions of an English Opium-Eater by Thomas De Quincey,[3] has had more than a dozen performances across the United Kingdom.[7] The play was published by Capercaillie Books,[8] [9] made into a television production (featuring Peter Mullan) and a radio version directed by Stewart Conn.[7] The radio play won a BAFTA award equivalent in 1985.[7] Dallmeyer believes The Opium Eater is somewhat autobiographical in nature as it is about a writer trying to find inspiration. He went on to state that "I don't think I'm that neurotic. I'm quite steady, really, mentally. You have to be in this job." Martin Cropper reviewed the show in The Times as one of the best he had seen at a fringe theatre. The Opium Eater won awards and was adapted for radio.[10]

The Boys in the Backroom was part of a series of plays, produced by Salamander Press, called The Traverse Plays. The plays were written in celebration of Scottish playwrights and Dallmeyer's play was fifth in the series. The play was performed in theatres across America covering 10 cities including New York, Los Angeles, San Francisco and Pittsburgh.[2] It was reviewed in The Times as a conspiracy story which "markets its paranoia through outsize performances".[11] Following a performance in Los Angeles in 1987 it reviewed by the Los Angeles Times as "sophomoric and forgettable." It has also been performed by students at the Royal Conservatoire of Scotland.

His one-man show, titled Hello Dali, based on artist Salvador Dalí won a Fringe First award and has previously starred Sylvester McCoy[12] and Neil Cunningham. It has been performed in many countries including: Scotland, England, United States, Belgium, Spain, France, and the Netherlands. The play was described as a "scatological, emotional and artistic biography".[5]

In 1986, Dallmeyer wrote The Grand Edinburgh Fire Balloon as a piece of commissioned work for the Royal Lyceum Theatre. Based on the story of the first man to fly in Britain; James Tytler was a pioneer with the development of the hot air balloon.[13] Despite the Lyceum being praised for commissioning a new play with regional importance[13] the play itself received some poor feedback. The Times reporter Sarah Hemmings viewed the play to be "rather monotonous" and "static", though she also said that the "Scenes that do take off are fascinating."[13] John Peter of the Sunday Times reported that the acting was below standard.

2000s

Dallmeyer wrote and performed in his controversial 50-minute one-man play, Wanted Dead or Alive, in which Osama bin Laden is Santa Claus in a shopping mall. It was released on the first September 11th attacks anniversary and attempts to explain possible reasons for Osama bin Laden's anger towards America.[14] The performance prompted complaints from the US consulate and Dallmeyer received death threats and abusive phone calls. There were calls from Scottish Parliament member, Brian Monteith, to boycott the performance.[15] Dallmeyer defended the play, stating "I am not trying to create a sensation; it is just that I feel the piece is strong".[15] The play featured "strongly anti-American sentiments and condemns United States foreign policy" and despite the backlash Dallmeyer has performed it over 100 times.[16]

His stage play, Playing a Blinder, which attempted to re-create the 1940 Edinburgh Derby's New Year's Day match, in which the commentator improvised what was happening on the pitch due to severe fog, was aired in 2002 on BBC Radio 4.[17] The cast included Andy Gray and Gavin Mitchell.[18] The play took Dallmeyer two years to create and due to their being no recordings of the event he had to "imagine how it might have sounded".[19]

Dallmeyer wrote the musical Burns Supper, in collaboration with composer David Todd, inspired by the bard Robert Burns. They then donated the script to schools around the country and a competition was held, in conjunction with charity 'First Scottish Film Features', to find the best school performance. Some of the work was then presented at the Fringe festival.[20]

2010s

Dallmeyer wrote the play Thank God for John Muir based on the life of John Muir[21] [22] and specifically based on the period in Muir's life when an industrial accident left him blind.[23] It was reviewed in 2011 as an "emotional and sensory journey", yet Alan Chadwick, from The Herald, described it as "too static" and the ending was "underwhelming".[24] The play was scheduled to be a part of the 2015 John Muir celebrations in East Lothian.[25]

Plays written by Dallmeyer

Title Year Broadcaster Notes References
Brainwaves 1973 [26]
A Big Treatise in Store 1979 [27]
Metaphysics and Strip 1981 [28]
Opium Eater 1984
1985
1993
BBC Radio 3
BBC Radio 3
BBC Two England
[29] [30] [31]
Boys in the Backroom 1983 Part of the Salamander Press The Traverse Plays series [32] [33]
Hello Dali 1984 [34] [35]
The Grand Edinburgh Fire Balloon 1986 [36] [37]
A Grand Scam 1989 [38]
Rudolf Hess Glasgow to Glasnost 1990 [39]
Virtual Radio 1994 BBC Radio 4 [40]
Fatwah Patois 1995 [41]
Potted History 1996 BBC Radio 4 [42]
The Chic Murray Story 1997 [43]
Into the Ether 2000 BBC Radio 4 [44]
Wanted:Dead or Alive 2002 [45] [46]
Playing a Blinder 2002 BBC Radio 4 [47]
The Ordeal of Alfred M Hale 2003 BBC Radio 4 [48] [49]
Burns Supper 2007 [50]
The Battle of Pots and Pans 2008
Colonel Gardiner: Vice and Virtue 2009
Too Clever By Half 2009 [51]
Thank God for John Muir 2011
The Mother of All Burns 2014 [52]

Acting roles

Title Year Broadcaster Notes References
The Watchers on the Shore 1971 BBC Radio 4 [54]
Old Alliances 1986 BBC Radio 4 [55]
Tartuffe 1986 [56]
Foreigners 1987 BBC Radio 4 [57]
City Lights 1988 BBC Two England [58]
A Man Flourishing 1988 BBC Radio 4 [59]
Shadow on the Earth 1988 BBC Two England [60]
The Tales of Para Handy 1994 BBC One London [61]
Bad Boys 1996 BBC One London [62]
The Secret Commonwealth 1996 BBC Radio 3 [63]
Rab C Nesbitt 1997
1998
2011
BBC Two [64] [65] [66]
Waiting for Godot 2003 [67]
Krapp's Last Tape 2005 As part of The Basement Tapes [68]
Stonehurst Asylum (Eliza Graves) 2014 [69]

Notes and References

  1. News: Ellis. Maureen. No Headline. 1 March 2015. Evening Times. 9 May 2011.
  2. News: Now a big player in a very big field. The Herald Scotland. 31 December 2001. 6 October 2014.
  3. Web site: Opium Eater by Andrew Dallmeyer. Capercaillie Books. 23 February 2015. https://archive.today/20150223180854/http://www.capercailliebooks.co.uk/shop/fairplay-press/opium-eater-by-andrew-dallmeyer/. 23 February 2015. dead. dmy-all.
  4. News: Six cannons and countless muskets promise epic 'battle' . 25 February 2015 . East Lothian Courier . 17 September 2009 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20150225122813/http://www.eastlothiancourier.com/news/roundup/articles/2009/09/17/391954-six-cannons-and-countless-muskets-promise-epic-battle/?mode=print . 25 February 2015 .
  5. News: Chaillet. Ned. Restoration exercise.. 1 March 2015. 61321. The Times. 26 August 1982. London, England. 7.
  6. News: Cooper. Neil. Making a play for the past. 1 March 2015. The Herald. 14 December 2010.
  7. News: McMillan. Joyce. The Scotsman: Pick of the day: The Opium Eater. 1 March 2015. The Scotsman. 27 September 2002.
  8. News: Andrew Dallmeyer. Doollee The Playwrights Database . 6 October 2014.
  9. News: Miss Julie Fringe Sell Out show 2012. Vagabond Productions. 6 October 2014.
  10. News: Cropper. Martin. Opium Eater. 1 March 2015. 62307. The Times. 28 November 1985. London, England. 15.
  11. News: Chaillet. Ned. ... and authentic revelations on the Fringe too.. 1 March 2015. 61324. The Times. 30 August 1982. London, England. 9.
  12. News: Hello Dalí. 28 February 2015. The Scotsman. 13 August 2002.
  13. News: Hemmings. Sarah. Arts (Theatre): Review of 'Grand Edinburgh Fire Balloon' at the Royal Lyceum, Edinburgh. 1 March 2015. The Times. 13 October 1986.
  14. News: Boulden. Jim. 'O-Santa' bin Laden causes a stir. 28 February 2015. CNN. 20 December 2002.
  15. News: Thorpe. Vanessa. Santa Osama arrives cloaked in controversy. 28 February 2015. The Guardian. 24 November 2002.
  16. News: Controversial drama makes county debut . https://archive.today/20150522001422/http://www.eastlothiancourier.com/news/prestonpans/articles/2008/12/04/31539-controversial-drama-makes-county-sdebut/ . dead . 22 May 2015 . 28 February 2015 . East Lothian Courier . 4 December 2008 .
  17. News: Cocchi. Massimiliano. The Edinburgh derby that nobody saw. 25 February 2015. ILPost. 3 January 2015. Italian.
  18. News: McGlone. Jackie. I rescued Easter Road from the mists of time.... 1 March 2015. The Scotsman. 18 December 2001.
  19. News: Philip. Robert. Talking points: Guess who's coming to dinner?. 25 February 2015. The Telegraph. 28 December 2001.
  20. News: Mollison. Hazel. No holds Bard for Burns show. 1 March 2015. Edinburgh Evening News. 20 January 2009.
  21. News: Bruce. Keith. Arts News:. 23 February 2015. The Herald. Glasgow. 16 February 2015.
  22. News: Theatre review: Thank God for John Muir. 23 February 2015. The Scotsman. 10 May 2011.
  23. News: Mcmillan. Joyce. The Scotsman: Review: Thank God for John Muir. 1 March 2015. The Scotsman. 11 May 2011.
  24. News: Chadwick. Alan. Thank God for John Muir. 1 March 2015. The Herald. 12 May 2011.
  25. Web site: John Muir 2015 . https://archive.today/20150223171253/http://www.visiteastlothian.org/johnmuir2015.asp . dead . 23 February 2015 . Visit East Lothian . 23 February 2015 .
  26. Book: Merkin. Ros. Liverpool Playhouse: A Theatre and Its City. 2011. Liverpool University Press. 9781846317477. 111.
  27. Around Town. New York. 5 November 1979. 12. 43. 18.
  28. News: Chaillet. Ned. The Times critics' guide to the week's entertainment.. 60952. The Times. 12 June 1981. 1 March 2015. London, England. 10.
  29. News: Neil. Cooper. Second helpings at last. The Herald Scotland. 14 September 2010. 25 February 2015.
  30. BBC Two England:Encounters. Radio Times. 15 July 1993. 3628. 54. 24 February 2015.
  31. Opium Eater:BBC Radio 3. Radio Times. 18 April 1985. 3205. 60. 24 February 2015.
  32. News: Shirley. Don. The Boys in the Back Room. 19 January 2015. Los Angeles Times. 13 January 1987.
  33. Book: Finkelstein. David. Mc Cleery. Alistair. The Edinburgh History of the Book in Scotland, Volume 4: Professionalism and Diversity 1880–2000. 2007. Oxford University Press. 9780748628841. 62.
  34. News: Andrew Dallmeyer's Fringe First Award-winning exploration. Broadwaybaby. 17 August 2008. 6 October 2014.
  35. Book: Meyer-Dinkgräfe. Daniel. Biographical Plays about Famous Artists. 2005. Cambridge Scholars Press. 9781904303473. 105.
  36. News: Fowler. John. The Grand Edinburgh Fire Balloon. 1 March 2015. The Glasgow Herald. 13 October 1986. 4.
  37. News: Peter. John. Arts (Theatre): The king in the country. 1 March 2015. Sunday Times. 19 October 1986.
  38. News: Morrice. Julie. Keep it brief and make it unsettling. 1 March 2015. The Herald. Glasgow. 31 August 1989.
  39. News: Events – Scotland. 1 March 2015. Sunday Times. 29 July 1990.
  40. BBC Radio 4 Listings. Radio Times. 2 August 1994. 3681. 93. 24 February 2015.
  41. News: Black. Ian. Theatre check – Stepping Out: Theatre. 1 March 2015. Sunday Times. 3 December 1995.
  42. BBC Radio 4:Potted History. Radio Times. 12 December 1996. 3803. 127. 24 February 2015.
  43. News: Shields. Bob. Why being Chic Murray isn't funny any more... – NO JOKE: DOUG HEALY, THE ACTOR WHO HAS MADE A CAREER OUT OF PLAYING HIS HERO, ON HIS CLASH WITH THE SCOTS COMIC'S FAMILY. 1 March 2015. Daily Record. Scotland. 21 January 1999.
  44. BBC Radio 4 Listings. Radio Times. 4 December 2000. 4006. 145. 24 February 2015.
  45. News: Scotsman. Anti-American show on date of atrocity sparks outrage. 28 February 2015. The Scotsman. 10 September 2002.
  46. News: Bin Laden's Wanted Dead or Alive for Etcetera Xmas . Whats on Stage . 6 December 2002 . 6 October 2014 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20150223025347/http://www.whatsonstage.com/west-end-theatre/news/12-2002/bin-ladens-wanted-dead-or-alive-for-etcetera-xmas_26946.html . 23 February 2015 .
  47. News: McBurnie. John. Classic match: Hibs v Hearts, New Year’s Day 1940. 24 February 2015. The Scotsman. 1 January 2014.
  48. Afternoon Play: The Ordeal of Alfred M Hale. Radio Times. 25 September 2003. 4150. 141. 24 February 2015.
  49. News: Daoust. Phil. The Guardian: G2: Tuesday: Radio: Pick of the day. 1 March 2015. The Guardian. 30 September 2003.
  50. Web site: Background. Burns Supper. 28 February 2015. https://web.archive.org/web/20150402162826/http://www.burns-supper.co.uk/background.html. 2 April 2015. dead. dmy-all.
  51. News: McMillan. Joyce. Theatre Reviews: Dramatic, atomic. 1 March 2015. The Scotsman. 23 April 2009.
  52. News: Burns Night events in the Capital. 24 February 2015. Edinburgh Evening News. 18 January 2014.
  53. Web site: Brown. Irene. Miss Julie Review. Edinburgh Guide. 24 February 2015. 13 August 2012. https://web.archive.org/web/20150224144602/http://www.edinburghguide.com/festival/2012/theatre/drama/missjuliereview-11173. 24 February 2015. dead.
  54. BBC Radio 4: Saturday-Night Theatre. Radio Times. 16 September 1971. 2497. 19. 24 February 2015.
  55. BBC Radio 4: The afternoon play. Radio Times. 30 January 1986. 3245. 65. 24 February 2015.
  56. News: Brennan. Mary. Tartuffe. 1 March 2015. The Glasgow Herald. 25 January 1986. 27.
  57. BBC Radio 4: The afternoon play. Radio Times. 2 July 1987. 3319. 67. 24 February 2015.
  58. BBC 2: City Lights. Radio Times. 4 February 1988. 3349. 49. 24 February 2015.
  59. BBC Radio 4: Saturday-Night Theatre. Radio Times. 6 October 1988. 3384. 35. 24 February 2015.
  60. BBC 2: Screen Two: Shadow on the Earth. Radio Times. 10 March 1988. 3354. 31. 24 February 2015.
  61. The Tales of Para Handy. Radio Times. 18 August 1994. 3684. 48. 24 February 2015.
  62. Bad Boys. Radio Times. 6 June 1996. 3776. 104. 24 February 2015.
  63. The Sunday Play: The Secret Commonwealth. Radio Times. 2 May 1996. 3771. 106. 24 February 2015.
  64. Web site: BBC Two: Rab C Nesbitt: Binge – Series 6 – Episode 6 of 6. BBC Two. 28 February 2015.
  65. Web site: BBC Two: Rab C Nesbitt: Back – Series 7 – Episode 6 of 6. BBC Two. 28 February 2015.
  66. Web site: BBC Two: Rab C Nesbitt: The Games Room – Series 10. BBC Two. 28 February 2015.
  67. News: Dawson Scott. Robert. Waiting for Godot. 1 March 2015. The Times. 17 October 2003.
  68. News: Fisher. Mark. Reviews: Theatre: Death beckons twice in Glasgow. 1 March 2015. The Guardian. 2 March 2005.
  69. News: Stonehearst Asylum (2014):Acting Credits. https://web.archive.org/web/20150224143721/http://www.nytimes.com/movies/movie/426002/Stonehearst-Asylum/cast. dead. 24 February 2015. Movies & TV Dept.. The New York Times. Baseline & All Movie Guide. 2015. 24 February 2015.