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Questions raised over timing of Grenfell theatre production

Questions have been raised over the timing of a new theatre production based on the Grenfell Tower tragedy.

Grenfell: Value Engineering will run from 13th October to 13th November at the Tabernacle in Notting Hill and subsequently at Birmingham Rep from 16th to 20th November.

The play, a not-for-profit production, is edited by Richard Norton-Taylor and directed by Nicolas Kent, with casting by Amy Ball at CDG.

It is set to run despite some of the affected households still living in temporary accommodation nearly four years after the tragedy.

An article published this weekend also suggests the towers could be demolished, much to the dismay of survivors.

“Limited legislation”

Grenfell United, a group for survivors and bereaved families, said: “It is with shock that we read the Sunday Times article today, given the promise by the Government that no decision would be made on the future of the tower without full consultation with the bereaved and survivors.

“The Government has engaged with fewer than 10 of the bereaved and survivors on this matter, to date, and with such a wide range of viewpoints across all affected families, we struggle to understand why this would be pushed through so quickly.

“Given what we went through, safety has always been paramount and we have had previous assurances that the tower can be kept safe for as long as it needs to be, and that it poses no risk to the community around it.

“Given the limited legislation passed since the Grenfell fire to keep people safe in their homes, the glacial process of removing flammable cladding and the daily reports of the links between the Government and the construction industry, it seems to us that removing Grenfell from the skyline while the inquiry and police investigation still continues to only serve those accused or those that haven’t acted.”

Grenfell: Value Engineering

Ron Cook is set to play Richard Millett QC in Grenfell: Value Engineering, leading a cast including Daniel Betts, Sam Buchanan, Sally Giles, Polly Kemp, Phill Langhorne, Tim Lewis, David Michaels, David Robb, Howard Ward, Thomas Wheatley and Rosie Wyatt.

He said: “I’m so pleased and proud to be part of Grenfell: Value Engineering. An incisive, insightful and important play.

“I can only hope it will help to clarify our understanding of the causes of this terrible and unnecessary fire, and make some contribution towards avoiding a similar tragedy in the future.”

But the reaction to the production has been mixed.

Here’s what people had to say:

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Jack Peat

Jack is a business and economics journalist and the founder of The London Economic (TLE). He has contributed articles to VICE, Huffington Post and Independent and is a published author. Jack read History at the University of Wales, Bangor and has a Masters in Journalism from the University of Newcastle-upon-Tyne.

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