Pedal Pusher

This article is about Pedal Pusher, a play by Roland Smith. For other uses, see Pedal Pusher (disambiguation).
Pedal Pusher
Written by Roland Smith
Characters Lance Armstrong, Jan Ullrich, Marco Pantani
Date premiered July 2009
Place premiered Cavendish Gate
London
Original language English
Subject A Story of the Tour de France
Genre Sport, drama, biography
Setting a hotel room, road races

Pedal Pusher is a play written by the English director and playwright, Roland Smith. Pedal Pusher revolves around the Tour de France in the late 1990s and early 2000s. It was developed from dialogue gleaned from interviews, biographies and archive footage.[1] It premiered at London's Cavendish Gate Theatre in July 2009, starring Tom Daplyn, Josh Cass, Alexander Guiney and Graham O'Mara, directed by Roland Smith and produced by Theatre Delicatessen.

Plot

Pedal Pusher begins with Marco Pantani lying dead in a hotel room. The play goes on to describe a detailed account[2] of the great rivalry, and achievements, of the three cycling legends – Armstrong, Ullrich and Pantani – and each of their individual struggles – Pantani's horrific 1995 crash and struggle with drugs,[3] Ullrich's depression and subsequent drug allegations[4] and Armstrong's fight against cancer.[5]

References

  1. Tamara Gausi (23 July 2009). "Pedal Pusher". Time Out. London. p. 117. 2031. A show about three world-famous cyclists performed on a couple of plastic chairs may not sound like everyone's idea of a good time, but you needn’t be a cycling nerd to enjoy ‘Pedal Pusher’.
  2. Road.cc review of Pedal Pusher which describes the attention to detail from a cycling perspective
  3. The long, lonely road to oblivion – an article about Marco Pantani's life
  4. An article about Jan Ullrich on the BBC website
  5. An in-depth interview with Armstrong about his battle with cancer

External links

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