A play about a Moray fishing family is homeward bound – heading for Eden Court, Inverness as part of its world premiere tour.

Lost at Sea is an epic tale by Burghead writer Morna Young, which she describes as “a personal tribute to Northeast Scotland’s fishing communities”. Inspired by the loss of her fisherman father when she was five years old, the play shines a new and unique light on what is still the UK’s most dangerous profession

Morna, who comes from a long-line of fishing folk, began work on Lost at Seain 2011 where she conducted interviews with fishermen and their families to inform the story. A highly-praised staged reading took place in Lossiemouth in 2013. Now, six years later, the play will premiere on 27thApril at Perth Theatre before touring to large-scale venues across Scotland. 

Morna said: “I’m delighted that Lost at Sea is coming home. Everything about the story and its inspirations is rooted in the lives, the communities and the experiences of fishing folk from the Northeast. I’m a born and bred fishing quine from Moray and I have always wanted to somehow pay tribute to my father and the many men and boats lost from the area. This play means the world to me and it feels especially poignant to be performing it in Inverness where so many lives have been impacted by the fishing industry.” 

Morna has previously worked with Eden Court on a range of projects, most notably, receiving her first full playwriting commission in 2014 to write Never Land which toured the Highlands. She also represented Eden Court the same year by writing two short plays for the National Theatre of Scotland’s The Great Yes, No, Don’t Know Show and has worked with Inverness based company Play Pieces to present B-Roads (co-written with Elgin born David Rankine).Since then, Morna has worked throughout the Highlands, Moray and Aberdeenshire including touring her acclaimed play Netting.

Morna said: “Netting Is the sister play to Lost at Sea and I was overwhelmed by the positive response we received. Lost at Sea is a much bigger production – it spans forty years of the industry in a family drama where two brothers experience very different sides of the industry. There is a tragedy at the heart of the story but it is really about our relationship with the sea and how it feels to grow up in a fishing community. I also felt it was important to capture some of the humour of fishing folk and the ways we find light in the darkest times.”

Lost at Sea features a nine-strong cast of well-known Scottish actors including Tam Dean Burn (Outlaw King, River Cityand Moon Dogs). Live music takes centre stage in the production with acclaimed fiddler Thoren Ferguson, from Scottish band The Jacobites leading the company through a score combining new music and traditional fishing tunes. 

Acclaimed director Ian Brown has returned to Scotland for the first time since leaving The Traverse in Edinburgh twenty years ago to specifically to direct the play. 

He said: “Morna’s play has a fierce authenticity. It deals with the sea’s power, its unpredictability and the lifelong draw it has on those who depend on it for their livelihoods. It’s also a deeply personal play, with characters trying, as best they can, to make sense of their lives as well as coming to terms with the deaths of the fishermen that surround them.Returning to direct an ambitious new play by Morna with a wonderful company of Scottish actors is very exciting.”

Morna said: “Lost at Seais a play that has existed in my mind for my whole life. My fisherman father was lost when I was a child; his body never recovered. This story is echoed throughout fishing villages around the coast, the impact of loss scarring communities for decades. I wanted to pay tribute to these men and their families. I wanted to write these voices that I’d never seen on stage.” 

The play will also be going to His Majesty’s Theatre, Aberdeen; Dundee Rep; Beacon Arts Centre, Greenock; King’s Theatre Edinburgh and will be shown during the Dumfries & Galloway Arts Festival at Easterbrook Hall Dumfries.

Notes to editors

Inverness

  • Venue: Eden Court, Inverness
  • Dates: 16 to 18 May
  • Start times: 7.30pm, Saturday matinee 2pm
  • Prices: £12 to £23
  • Ages: 12+
  • Further information and bookings: https://eden-court.co.uk

Aberdeen

  • Venue: His Majesty’s Theatre, Aberdeen
  • Dates: Thursday 9 to Saturday 11 May
  • Start times: 2.30pm and 7.30pm
  • Prices: £20.50 to £30.50
  • Ages: 12+
  • Further information and bookings: aberdeenperformingarts.com

Twitter: @LostAtSeaPlay. Facebook: Lost at Sea

Media contacts: Pam Dochard, Media Relations, [email protected], tel 01738 477728, mob 07884 017199 or Matthew Shelley 07786 704299 or [email protected]

Morna Young biography

Morna Young is a playwright, actress and musician from Burghead. She was recipient of the 2017 Dr Gavin Wallace Fellowship (hosted by Creative Learning, Aberdeen City Council), the New Playwrights Award 2014 (Playwrights’ Studio, Scotland), the ‘Tomorrow at Noon’ award for female playwrights 2018 (Jermyn Street Theatre) and she was the 2018 playwright-in-residence for BATS Theatre and Toi Põneke Arts Centre in Wellington, New Zealand. 

Lost at Sea, her debut play, will premiere at Perth Theatre in April 2019 before touring Scotland. The play was initially developed in 2013 with award-winning Stellar Quines Theatre Company resulting in a sold-out rehearsed reading in Lossiemouth and a secondary rehearsed reading took place in London as part of the Finborough Theatre’s ‘Vibrant Festival of New Writing’ in 2015. 

Other plays include: Aye, Elvis(‘A Play, A Pie and A Pint’ and Gilded Balloon, Edinburgh Fringe), The Buke of the Howlat (Findhorn Bay Arts), Smite (Jermyn Street Theatre),Netting ‘A Play, A Pie and A Pint’ and Scotland-wide tour with Woodend Barn), She of the Sea (Paines Plough ‘Come to Where I’m From’), B-Roads(Play Pieces), Never Land(Eden Court) and two short plays for the National Theatre of Scotland’s Great Yes, No, Don’t Know Show.

Morna has performed extracts of her writing at the Scottish Parliament, The European Author’s Festival (Czech Republic, Slovakia, Poland), National Poetry Month (France) and Edinburgh International Book Festival.

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