Category Archives: Reviews

DOWN THE ROAD

★★★★★

Playhouse East

DOWN THE ROAD

Playhouse East

★★★★★

“The intensity of the play is remarkably maintained throughout the entire 90 minutes”

The UK’s first revival of ‘Down the Road’ since 2003 was certainly worth the wait. Today, the play sits against the backdrop of an infinitude of true crime documentaries, podcasts and media. The vastness of the landscape has almost desensitised us. However, this epic production brings the horrific brutality and mercilessness of murder to life in front of us in a way very few performances could.

Down the Road is a three-hander consisting of Dan and Iris Henniman (played by Aaron Vodovoz and Annelise Bianchini), an aspirational couple of journalists who have been hired to interview Bill Reach (played by Joshua Collins), a young, sadistic serial killer, who has recently lost the appeal against his sentence. He is ready to tell his story. They think they are ready to listen to it. And so do we. Bill knows this when he says to his interviewers in their first meeting: “I hope you’re not nervous.” But it is impossible not to be. Joshua Collins is as captivating as he is terrifying in an eerily convincing performance. It is like we are watching the Ted Bundy tapes.

Initially, it seems that the play is about Reach, as he revels in his new-found infamy and indulges himself in recounting his killings (which he refuses to call ‘murders’). However, the real narrative is the effect that these meetings have on the young married couple. To begin with, he needs them. Eventually, they need him. The irony of Reach in handcuffs is palpable, when really he is control and they are the ones restrained. The performances of Aaron Vodovoz and Annelise Bianchini are exceptionally strong. The exhaustion and frailty of Dan is stark. The helplessness of Iris’ desperation is moving.

The intensity of the play is remarkably maintained throughout the entire 90 minutes. The masterful writing (Lee Blessing) and the pinpoint direction (Tracey Mathewson) mean that in every scene we are left wanting more. The seamless transitions from the prison to the motel room assist with the fast pace of the plot. Subtle changes are made to the scenes as the show progresses to further raise the tension, such as the motel room become more disorderly and the central light in the prison getting brighter and sharper. Credit should go to Katren Wood (set design) and James Oldham (sound design) for these clever touches.

A fault in many shows similar to this, is that a well-crafted story arc is undermined by a rushed or unfitting ending given the context of what has preceded it. Down the Road is different. It threatens a cliffhanger before the final revelation. The story ends exactly as it should. And yet we want a sequel.

 



DOWN THE ROAD

Playhouse East

Reviewed on 14th March 2025

by Luke Goscomb

 


 

Also reviewed by Luke:

DELUGE | ★★★★ | SOHO THEATRE | February 2025

 

DOWN THE ROAD

DOWN THE ROAD

DOWN THE ROAD

HAVISHAM

★★★

Jack Studio Theatre

HAVISHAM

Jack Studio Theatre

★★★

“The script is rich and lyrical although the elaborate metaphors occasionally lose their way”

We know Miss Havisham as the heartless manipulator of Charles Dickens’ Great Expectations. She is indelibly printed on our minds – dressed in cobwebs and a faded wedding gown, time frozen on the day she was jilted.

But how did she arrive at such an horrendous fate?

In her earnest solo production, writer and performer Heather Alexander aims to put paper-thin flesh on brittle bones, creating an origin story for the striking monster. She takes Miss Havisham from the misery of her childhood to the edge of love and fulfilment. The story that emerges is one of bitterness that accumulates over time like a hardening residue.

Under Dominique Gerrard’s formal direction, the busy set foretells of an eerie fate. It is dressed with bridal gowns and white veils, a clock ticking obtrusively but forever fixed at 20 minutes to nine.

Centre stage, there is a bed – or is it a coffin? Ghostly Miss Havisham rises from her slumber to tell a tale of a motherless girl, confused, unloved and fearful of God, death and her brutish father.

There is something of Norma “Sunset Boulevard” Desmond in Alexander’s feline physicality and phrasing: wide eyes, angular posing and an epic grandeur forever tumbling towards tantrum.

Her tragic isolation is underscored by her differences: rich amid the poor, girl among boys, a child with everything but nothing that matters. In a pivotal school room blunder she confuses Medusa for an angel and becomes in her own mind, a bad girl, a cursed girl, destined only to wound and harden hearts.

After a poor start in life, matters get worse, and the first act is a testing run of merciless catastrophes. The script is rich and lyrical although the elaborate metaphors occasionally lose their way. (Is “jumping into the box of life” really an image of freedom and exploration?)

After the rigours of the first act – where the tone is relentlessly morbid – Miss Havisham finally blossoms. She emerges in London a young woman capable of catching the eye of James, a dashing actor who appears loving and attentive if, er, unreliable.

Dotted about the story are reminders of the culmination – Satis House, a tragic girl named Stella, the ominous marshes hiding secrets in their billowing fog. We wonder if this Miss Havisham will grow sufficiently to match Dickens’ capacious version. We sit like engineers planning a trans-continental railway hoping the tracks from east and west will meet precisely.

The answer is: not quite, but only out by an inch or two.

Dickens’ Havisham is necessarily a gothic horror, a fully-formed, self-starting force of vengeance and malevolence. Alexander’s is a more modern interpretation: a woman as a reaction to her environment and trauma, a pitiful victim of men and their predations.

In an accomplished display, Heather Alexander fully embodies this icon of literature. It is a well-organised portrayal; perhaps not the baroque portrait it aspires to be but, instead, a chilling mosaic compiled from fragments and shards.



HAVISHAM

Jack Studio Theatre

Reviewed on 13th March 2025

by Giles Broadbent

Photography by Peter Mould

 

 


 

 

Previously reviewed at this venue:

IN THE SHADOW OF HER MAJESTY | ★★★★★ | November 2024
CAN’T WAIT TO LEAVE | ★★★½ | November 2024
MARCELLA’S MINUTE TO MIDNIGHT | ★★ | September 2024
DEPTFORD BABY | ★★★ | July 2024
MUCH ADO ABOUT NOTHING | ★★★ | August 2022
RICHARD II | ★★★★★ | February 2022
HOLST: THE MUSIC IN THE SPHERES | ★★★★★ | January 2022
PAYNE: THE STARS ARE FIRE | ★★★ | January 2022

HAVISHAM

HAVISHAM

HAVISHAM