Director Jeremy Herrin is the Artistic Director of celebrated theatre company Headlong. His work also includes the Royal Shakespeare Company’s hugely successfully and multi award-winning world premiere of Hilary Mantel’s Wolf Hall/Bring Up the Bodies, which transferred to both the West End and Broadway. Recently at the National Theatre, Jeremy also directed The House They Grew Up In and Common, and David Hare’s The Absence of War which toured to Bath in 2015. His production of People, Places & Things tours to the Theatre Royal Bath from Tuesday 17th to Saturday 21st October 2017, the same week as the production receives its American premiere in New York.

Why did you decide to tour People, Places & Things?

I think it's important to share this story around the country. It made such an impact when we did it before that, as a national touring company, Headlong should invest in getting the show out and about.

Tell us a little bit about the play.

It's a tale of one woman's battle with addiction. She's a challenging person who happens to be an actress. Her struggle to survive involves her addressing fundamental questions about who she is, but who is that?

Why is addiction an important story to bring to audiences across the country?

If people aren't directly affected by it, they know someone who is. We can all relate to a direct or indirect degree. People, Places & Things was originally a piece of new-writing commissioned by Headlong.

What initially attracted you to Duncan Macmillan’s script?

Its humanity, its intellectual rigour, its jokes, its opportunity for great performances, its thrills, its theatricality, its soulfulness, its wisdom.

Who do you think this production will appeal to in particular?

Everyone will get something out of it: first time theatre goers as well as regular attendees. Older audiences will appreciate the conflicts and tensions in the piece and youngsters will enjoy how visceral and explosive it is. And vice versa. The characters in this production are complex.

What do you hope that the new cast will bring out of the production?

Their own insights and truths, to find their own ways of communicating the power of this piece.

What do you hope audiences will take away from this production?

A sense that theatre is the most entertaining and lively way to grapple with complex subjects. That whether we are addicts or not we all understand Emma's contradictions. Her will to survive and overcome her obstacles speaks to us all about the challenges we face in life and how we all hope to survive with dignity and self-respect.

People, Places & Things at the Theatre Royal Bath until Saturday 21st October 2017. Tickets are on sale at the Theatre Royal Bath Box Office on 01225 448844 and online at www.theatreroyal.org.uk