Tiger Lady at VAULT Festival shares untold story of the world’s most influential female animal trainer

The untold story of the world’s most influential female animal trainer comes to the stage at VAULT Festival in January.

Tiger Lady explores the life of Mabel Stark, the queen of the circus in the time of the greatest show on Earth, who was one of the first ever female tiger tamers, and the only woman to step into the ring with seven tigers.

Natisha Williams-Samuels will bring to life America’s most ferocious big cat tamer, joined by Antonio Victorio as Al G, James Parker as Louis, Chloe Waddilove as Maggie, Abayomi Oyinide as Art Rooney and Edward Breckenridge as Rajah the tiger.

From Les Enfants Terribles Award-winning theatre company Dead Rabbits (The Dragon, Love Lies Frozen in the Ice), hear the tale of a woman fierce enough not to be forgotten. The crowd loved her. The men loved her. The tigers loved her. It’s a tale of fame, danger and desire, of terrible heartache and pain – the scars on her body are not as deep as the scars on her heart.

Combining fast-paced and innovative physical theatre with an incredibly moving love story between two humans and a tiger, Tiger Lady is about being different, facing society and the tragedy that comes when a person has a displaced notion of being happy.

This tragedy is all around us so in this respect a story from the beginning of 20th century, that seems like such a distant world, comes back to haunt us and to remind us to look at our lives and our desires more closely.

Tiger Lady runs at The Vaults (Studio) as part of VAULT Festival 2022 from Tuesday, 25 to Sunday, 30 January 2022. Tickets are on sale now from vaultfestival.com/events/tiger lady

Company Director Kasia Zaremba-Byrne (Lionboy, Complicité) said: “I search for stories that are of the real people, often a bit removed from present time as to keep a little distance from ourselves, from what we take for granted. Often these stories have a hint of nostalgia, some half remembered memory that our imagination is pulled in.

“Often the stories are from the perspective of women, often forgotten, or viewed from the perspective of under-dogs, even though they showed immense courage and perseverance in difficult circumstances.

“It is a true story that is full of tiny details, and I had to navigate with the cast to find what story we wanted to tell. I always create with and through the people I work with. Starting with the designer and those who help me with the structure, I then going into the room with the actors and really find what is the heart of the story for them too.”

About the author: Josh Darvill

Josh is Stageberry's editor with over five years of experience writing about theatre in the West End and across the UK. Prior to following his passion for musicals, he worked for more than a decade as a TV journalist.