Beth Underdown’s debut novel The Witchfinder’s Sister, now adapted for the stage by Vickie Donoghue, gives a voice to a possible sister of Witchfinder General Matthew Hopkins and interrogates the practice of witch-hunts in the 1640s.
‘Wholly engaging’: PETRICHOR – ThickSkin (Online review) ★★★★
At a time when human connection feels more vital than ever, Petrichor offers an immersive, accessible and unique way to experience theatre.
’A top quality production’: NIGEL SLATER’S TOAST (Online review) ★★★★
Nigel Slater’s Toast is a top quality production full of heartwarming moments and alimentary temptations – grab yourself a Walnut Whip and make yourself comfy.
‘A satisfying & hearty concoction’: NIGEL SLATER’S TOAST – The Other Palace
Smartly adapted by Henry Filloux-Bennett, Nigel Slater’s Toast will warm you through without disguising its darker flavours, a satisfying and hearty concoction that sees the world through the eyes of a child.
‘The emotions are universally relatable’: THE UNRETURNING – Theatre Royal Stratford East ★★★★
“Four years since we lost Darren. But a vet doesn’t have to die at war for us to lose them, do you get what I mean?” – The Unreturning
All photos © Tristram Kenton
The Ancient Greeks knew their stuff. While their epic poems dealt with battles such as the fall of Troy, they were equally attentive to war’s aftermath, suffered by women and soldiers alike. For the heroes like Odysseus and Agamemnon, the journey home was where they faced their greatest crises… Similarly, Anna Jordan’s The Unreturning – which is directed by Neil Bettles – focuses on three men who return to their home town of Scarborough and continue to wrestle with their demons.
Taking place over the span of a century, the wars in the play are as idiosyncratic as the men and Britain at that time. There’s George (Jared Garfield) who has served in France during the First World War. There’s also Frankie (Joe Layton) who’s stationed in Afghanistan. Received wisdom says conflicts such as the Second World War, the Falklands or The Troubles would also be contenders. Instead, Jordan has opted for the near future where the division in today’s Britain (possibly as a result of the Brexit referendum) has escalated into civil war. Mirroring Spain from almost a century ago, there’s fighting has between ‘government forces’ and ‘the rebels’. In this scenario, Nat (Jonnie Riordan) makes the hazardous trip to the North East from Norway, where he has spent the past couple of years as a refugee who claimed political asylum. He’ll do anything to track down his younger brother Finn (Kieton Saunders-Browne) – his only remaining family.
The three storylines run concurrently and take place on a revolving cargo container that doubles as a boat, rooms and an assortment of other locales. Bettles – whose background and experience is with the physically innovative Frantic Assembly – deftly choreographs the three narratives into a cohesive whole, contrasting and reiterating the play’s themes.
The play’s prologue succinctly captures the longing for home after years abroad, where belonging and memories are intertwined. But as the characters find out, reality falls short of expectation. More often than not, the experiences of principal characters have changed them and coming home forces them to redefine what makes sense.
Not being able to talk to anyone who could – or wants – to understand is the biggest obstacle for the soldiers – estranging them from their loved ones. For George, his wife’s dismissive preconceptions about shellshock hinder any genuine communication between them. Nor would she want to understand the camaraderie between the British and German soldiers during that fateful Christmas of 1914, which had alarm bells ringing amongst the British ‘top brass’.
Meanwhile for Frankie, his mother is alarmed at the video footage of him, which doesn’t convey the mental and emotional reality of the theatre of war. Nat faces a very different obstacle – his brother Finn has disowned him and joined ‘the rebels’. Counting only his brothers-in-arms as ‘kin’, Finn has no time for anyone who would ‘abandon’ England ‘during her hour of need’…
The impressive central performances are bolstered by the set and video design by Andrzej Goulding, facilitating the fluid, kinetic nature of the show. Jordan makes us care for each of the characters and while we may not have direct experience in the line of fire, the emotions of anger, estrangement, frustration and self-doubt are universally relatable.
© Michael Davis 2019
The Unreturning runs at Theatre Royal Stratford East until 2nd February
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‘Exceptionally meditative & occasionally very moving’: THE UNRETURNING – Theatre Royal Stratford East
Frantic Assembly’s latest, The Unreturning, is a moving meditation on war and masculinity, thanks to playwright Anna Jordan.
NEWS: Stage adaption of Nigel Slater’s memoirs Toast transfers to London’s The Other Palace
Following its world premiere at The Lowry, Salford, in May and a sold-out run at as part of Traverse Festival 2018 at the Edinburgh Festival Fringe, the critically-acclaimed stage adaption of Nigel Slater’s best-selling memoirs Toast is to receive a London transfer. The production opens at The Other Palace on 4 April 2019, running until 3 August.
NEWS – Samuel Newton plays Nigel Slater in the world premiere of Toast at The Lowry
The cast has been announced for the world premiere run of the stage adaptation of Nigel Slater’s memoirs Toast at The Lowry in Salford from 22 May to Saturday 2 June 2018.