Iconic sporting moment meets theatre
Media Release for Immediate Use: October
2010
Jonny Brugh Presents...
The Second
Test
Written and Performed by Jonathan Brugh
7-23
December, 7.30pm
Circa Two Theatre, 1 Taranaki St,
Wellington
Bookings: 04 801 7992 or circa@circa.co.nz
Tickets:
$30/22/20
www.circa.co.nz
Iconic sporting
moment meets theatre in The Second Test!
Back by popular demand after a sold out season at BATS Theatre in March, The Second Test by Jonathan Brugh returns to Wellington!
In 1953, the New Zealand Cricket Team embarked on its maiden tour to South Africa, including 22 year-old fast bowler Bob Blair.
On Christmas Eve, disaster struck in the form of a lahar down Mt Ruapehu, the infamous Tangiwai disaster. Amongst the 151 victims is Blair’s new fiancé, Nerissa Love.
The Second Test tells Blair’s story, one of the most famed in New Zealand sporting history. In cricketing circles the tale is legendary, full of drama, emotion and bravery.
Jonathan Brugh is an actor, playwright and amateur cricketer. Best known for his comedy work (The Jaquie Brown Diaries, Pulp Comedy), the Billy T Award Winner (1998) has combined his love of the stage and New Zealand’s summer game to create The Second Test.
“This story means a lot to the
Cricket community, but I think it will resonate with any New
Zealander who feels a sense of National pride,” Brugh
says.” It is for young people to see a slice of our
history. It is for our seniors who will remember the tragedy
of Tangiwai.”
The Second Test is a humourous, sad and wonderfully poignant true story of courage in the face of the ultimate loss. This is a portrait of a young man waking up to a terrible darkness and finding the courage to walk into the light.
“Entertaining, fascinating, and celebratory The
Second Test is not just for cricket fanatics but for anyone
who enjoys good theatre and a true, gripping story in which
the human spirit is shown to triumph without descending into
either sentimentality or brazenness.” – Laurie
Atkinson, Dominion Post
The Second Test
Background:
It’s 1953 and the New Zealand
Cricket Team embark on their maiden tour to South Africa.
They farewell their wives and girlfriends and set off on
their African adventure. For 22 year-old fast bowler Bob
Blair, traveling and playing alongside his childhood heroes
Bert Sutcliffe and John Reid is a dream come true.
After a long sea voyage the team reaches its destination and their campaign commences in earnest. Then half way around the world tragedy strikes.
Christmas Eve, a lahar thunders down the Mt Ruapehu mountainside destroying everything in its path, including the rail-bridge at Tangiwai. Moments later, the overnight express arrives and hurtles into the void, taking nearly three hundred passengers with it into the Whangaehu River.
In Johannesburg the New Zealand team wakes to the news that 151 people have perished in the tragedy, among them Bob Blair’s fiancé Nerissa Love. And as events unfold over the rest of this day - Boxing Day 1953 - it will become the most poignant day in New Zealand sporting history...
Blair is excused from playing duties, and the flags at Ellis Park fly half-mast.
But the opposition shows no mercy to the shell-shocked tourists. On a dangerous pitch, two New Zealand batsmen are hospitalised by express-pace, short-pitched bowling. Several others are felled by sickening body-blows. As the casualty list grows (and with it, the bloodstains on the pitch) champion batsman Bert Sutcliffe returns from hospital with his head heavily bandaged, and goes back in to bat to save the test for his beleaguered team. But even Sutcliffe’s courage will be surpassed.
When the players turn to leave the field at the end of the New Zealand innings they’re shocked to see the trembling figure of Blair walking out to bat. Sutcliffe asks Blair what the hell he’s doing, and Blair replies, “Thought I’d better make myself useful.”
The crowd watches in stunned silence as Sutcliffe escorts Blair slowly out to the middle, arms locked, and with tears streaming down their faces. Then, brought to their feet by this heroic and defiant act, they give the pair a tremendous and rousing ovation.
“Out of the gloomy tunnel beneath the stand, into the clean white sunlight, Blair walked slowly, fumbling with his gloves, and as a man the spectators in the huge stand stood for him, stood in complete and poignant silence. Grown men, among them the New Zealanders in the pavilion and the South Africans on the field, shed tears at this moving moment, and they were not ashamed.” R.T. Brittenden
Despite Blair’s brave gesture, New Zealand went on to lose the Second Test, and the series. But it won the admiration of cricket-lovers everywhere.
END