THE TAILOR OF INVERNESS
written and performed by MATTHEW ZAJAC
with Gavin Marwick/Johnny Hardie on violin
directed by Ben Harrison / video design by Tim Reid
SCOTSMAN Fringe First Award 2008
Best Actor / Critics´ Awards for Theatre in Scotland 2009
A story of journeys, of how a boy who grew up on a farm in Galicia (Eastern Poland, now Western Ukraine) came to be a tailor in Inverness. His life spanned most of the 20th century. His story is not straightforward. He was taken prisoner by the Soviets in 1939 and forced to work east of the Urals, then freed in an amnesty after the German invasion of the Soviet Union in 1941. He then joined the thousands of Poles who travelled to Tehran, then Egypt, to be integrated into the British Army, fighting in North Africa and Italy. He was then resettled in Britain in 1948, joining his brother in Glasgow. This is the story he told.
Crossing the borders from Poland to Russia to Iran to Egypt to Italy to Germany to Scotland, the fable reflects on the Second World War but is personal, intimate and rooted in two cultures: Galicia and the Scottish Highlands. The play uses the central metaphor of the tailor and his fabric. Layers of ghostly clothes are projected on to with a series of still and moving images from the tailor's past and present-day Ukraine. The performance combines storytelling, songs, poetry and physicality with a rich soundscape of live fiddle music and effects.The Tailor of Inverness previewed at the Arches Theatre, Glasgow on July 29th & 30th 2008 and opened at the Assembly Rooms, Edinburgh on July 31st, running to August 24th. The production toured Scotland from late January 2009, going on to the Adelaide Fringe Festival, Australia for four weeks. A visit to the Skelleftea Storytelling Festival, Northern Sweden, and to Umea University took place in April 2009. This was followed by a second Scottish tour. Most of the production's 86 performances to date have been sold out.











