
A farmyard sing song from ‘Gentle Harry’s Farm’
The Rudes are back with Macbyrd
The Rude Mechanical Theatre Company will soon be back in Markwick Gardens in St Leonards along with their new production, Macbyrd. Picnics are encouraged, blankets to be spread on the grass and then sit back and enjoy the unique, high quality entertainment this theatre company provides.
The Rudes are a contemporary commedia dell’arte company working with communities right across the South of England in a carnivalesque tradition that goes back thousands of years, visiting annually with brand new stories, making people laugh, moving them and being provocative – and have a fanatical following of over seven thousand people who keep coming back.
‘Macbyrd’ is a comedy thriller – and sixteen of the characters are birds! Don’t miss Inspector Seed, a pigeon, as the detective! It is set in 1940 and is about the changes to a small village in rural Sussex, Jevington, brought about by the threat of invasion, it’s impact on the local WI, the cricket club, the village play, on relationships, and on how – with the war – people must take on new roles.
There are two stories which link together. Up above there is a power struggle among the birds – and the swan, symbol of a certain kind of traditional Englishness and social structure, is murdered by the upstart raven, Macbyrd, who resents the swan’s snobbish disregard for the poor, the sparrows. (Please scroll down for more details.)

Rude Mechanicals
Pete Talbot, the writer and director, says, “There are, it has to be admitted, a few echoes of a certain Shakespeare play. Macbyrd is told by the ‘gypsy magpies’ that his time has come, that ‘sleek birds, black against the sky’ will rule. In fact, change to the village is because a momentous event is going to happen – and I’m not going to tell you what!”
Prejudice amongst the ‘oomans puts the death of the swan down to gypsies and among the birds to a foreigner, a rare Indian bushlark which has been swept in by storms.
Here’s the serious bit. In the same way that Hitler represented a threat to our values, so too in people’s perceptions do other things today. How do we deal with those ‘threats’ and what indeed do our values really consist of and how should we adapt in the face of change? Inevitably base instincts like prejudice surface. In this cauldron of change, the play explores the values of ordinariness (the heroism of living an ‘ordinary’ life as part of a community), leadership, love and adaptivity that remain constants in difficult times. The comedy is partly in the absurdity of the birds’ world, but also – and it is a comedy of manners – in the ways of ‘country folk’. So there’s a bit of Foyle’s War about it and a bit of ‘The Archers’ – plus quite a bit of The Rudes, too
Performances start at 7.30pm. Picnics are from 6.00pm. Bring your own low backed chairs and warm clothing.
Eastern East Sussex shows:
St Thomas’ Primary School field, Winchelsea – Sun 19th June
Crowhurst Recreation Ground – Fri 22nd July
Markwick Gardens, St Leonards – Sat 30th July
Swan Meadow, Burwash – Fri 5th Aug
Wadhurst Primary School field – Weds 10th Aug
Tickets are £15 plus concessions and are available by ringing 01323 501260 or online at the website (see below).
Email – therudes@btinternet.com
Website – The Rude Mechanical Theatre Company
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