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Greg only met Ginny a month ago but has already made up his mind that she's the girl for him. When she tells him that she's going to visit her parents, he decides this is the moment to ask her father for his daughter's hand. Discovering a scribbled address, he follows her to Buckinghamshire where he finds Philip and Sheila enjoying a peaceful Sunday morning breakfast in the garden, but the only thing is - they're not Ginny's parents.
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Theatre Royal Bath Productions presents:

FELICITY KENDALL, JONATHAN COY, KARA TOINTON & MAX BENNETT IN

RELATIVELY SPEAKING

by Alan Ayckbourn

Directed by Lindsay Posner

Designed by Peter McKintosh

Previews 14 - 18 May 2013

Booking Period Until 31 August 2013

Running Time 2 hours including interval

"As funny as anything Ayckbourn has ever written"
The Times

"The most brilliant comedy of misunderstandings to have been written in the past 40 years"
Daily Telegraph

Greg only met Ginny a month ago but has already made up his mind that she's the girl for him. When she tells him that she's going to visit her parents, he decides this is the moment to ask her father for his daughter's hand. Discovering a scribbled address, he follows her to Buckinghamshire where he finds Philip and Sheila enjoying a peaceful Sunday morning breakfast in the garden, but the only thing is - they're not Ginny's parents.

Beautifully crafted, wonderfully funny and charmingly English, Relatively Speaking was Alan Ayckbourn's first great West End success and turned him into a household name. When the show opened at the Duke of York's Theatre in 1967, the critics hailed the arrival of a great new comic talent.

Felicity Kendal is one of the UK's most popular actresses who shot to fame with her role in BBC television's The Good Life. This will be the first time she has starred in a play by Alan Ayckbourn since the West End premiere of The Norman Conquests in 1973.

Jonathan Coy's many television credits include Rumpole, Hornblower, Brideshead Revisited, Downton Abbey and Foyle's War. On stage he has starred in Nicholas Nickleby, Donkey's Years and in the 2011 West End production of Much Ado About Nothing, with David Tennant.

Kara Tointon was recently on the West End stage in Pygmalion (alongside Rupert Everett) and Absent Friends. Her television credits include Dinotopia, Jonathan Creek, Bedlam, The Bill, EastEnders (multiple episodes), Dream Team and Harry and Cosh (multiple episodes), while her films include The Last Passenger, The Sweeney, The Football Factory and Never Play With The Dead.

Max Bennett's theatre credits include Posh (Royal Court at Duke of York's), In Basildon (Royal Court), Luise Miller (Donmar Warehouse), A Midsummer Night's Dream (Headlong), Fabrication [Affabulazione] (The Print Room), Danton's Death (National Theatre), Mrs Warren's Profession (Comedy Theatre), Waste (Almeida), Romeo and Juliet (Theatre of Memory at Middle Temple Hall), Thyestes (BAC) and Finisterre (Theatre503). Films include Anna Karenina, The Sweeney, The Numbers Station, The Duchess and 99 Francs.

Lindsay Posner is an award-winning director, known for his work in the West End and at the Royal Court Theatre, the Royal Shakespeare Company and the National Theatre. His recent productions include Noises Off at the Old Vic and Abigail's Party which played Bath prior to a West End run.

Designer Peter McKintosh is the winner of an Olivier Award for Crazy For You in the West End and was Olivier nominated for Hello Dolly. His productions of Death And The Maiden, Butley and The 39 Steps all received Tony nominations on Broadway.

"Two hours of continuous laughter"
Guardian

"Ingenious.the funniest trick of the season"
Evening Standard

"Light as a soufflé"
Punch

"Clicks and fizzes to the very end"
Daily Mail

"A single-minded contribution to the theatre of pleasure... Brilliant"
The Times