Original Theatre's Into the Night

‘Immerses us totally in a community facing indescribable loss’: INTO THE NIGHT (Online review)

In Online shows, Opinion, Other Recent Articles, Plays, Reviews by Louise PennLeave a Comment

On-demand via company website until 30 January 2022

We are in Cornwall, forty years ago, on 19 December 1981. A lifeboat in Penlee Station answers a distress call, but never returned, with the loss of sixteen lives.

This is a moment-by-moment dramatisation and piece of storytelling to mark the anniversary, using actual recordings from the time, and an eight-strong cast who play multiple roles. It takes its inspiration from Michael Sagar-Fenton’s book Penlee: The Loss of a Lifeboat.

Frazer Flintham’s script, directed by Alastair Whatley, moves between narration and actuality, and imaginatively conjures up a storm at sea with a minimum of props and set. This is a fine piece of drama, crafted and played with imagination.

It works with ease – this version we are watching is a recording of the technical rehearsal of 18 December, which replaced the planned livestream on 19 December, the anniversary date. With two company members testing positive for Covid, no other course of action could be taken.

Immersing us totally in the action as a community faces indescribable loss (“twelve children left without a father”), musical and familiar motifs bring the people at home, on the rescue boat, and on the beleaguered ship, into sharp relief.

Many dramatic retellings use music to scene-set and shortcut emotional moments, and Into the Night does this particularly well, adding to the local colour and sense of community spirit.

Starry names – Tom Chambers and Susan Penhaligon – are present here but other cast members are just as memorable in their shapeshifting between one character and another (a trick also used on stage in another dramatisation of real events, Come From Away).

In Into the Night, the splash of water, the hum of an engine, the buzz of a pub, the yawning emptiness of a town with its heart ripped out, are all created by Michael Pavelka’s production design, Jason Taylor’s lighting, and Dominic Bilkey’s sound.

Into the Night features Hubert Burton, murder mystery expert Robert Duncan, Madeline Knight and Tim Treloar (both seen in Original Theatre prior production, Birdsong), Robert Mountford and Hazel Simmons alongside Chambers and Penhaligon.

Into the Night was streamed on 19 December, but will be available in an on-demand version from 6-30 January 2022 – book here.

Image credit: Helen Maybanks

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‘Immerses us totally in a community facing indescribable loss’: @OriginalTheatre’s #IntoTheNight tells to story of the Penlee lifeboat tragedy. @LouReviewsBlog tunes in. #OnDemand til 30 Jan. #onlinetheatre

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Louise Penn
Louise Penn is an experienced writer and editor, published in a variety of outlets. She worked as a professional librarian for 25 years before going freelance full-time in 2018 and setting up her Lou Reviews blog. She is passionate about all types of theatre and the arts.
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Louise Penn on FacebookLouise Penn on InstagramLouise Penn on RssLouise Penn on Twitter
Louise Penn
Louise Penn is an experienced writer and editor, published in a variety of outlets. She worked as a professional librarian for 25 years before going freelance full-time in 2018 and setting up her Lou Reviews blog. She is passionate about all types of theatre and the arts.

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