Tag Archives: Aoife Boyle

NOOK

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Union Theatre

NOOK at the Union Theatre

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“Nook is best in its moments of tenderness”

A tense family drama revolving around a shared history of trauma, Off Main Stage’s new production Nook shines a light on the lasting effects of wounds from childhood: how they shape entire lives and cause permanent fissures between siblings.

Writer Cameron Corcoran, who also plays Tom, the younger of two brothers, creates a simple but effective narrative device: following their mother’s funeral, two brothers and a sister return to the home where they grew up, in order to read the will. The brothers are accompanied by their wives, and their uncle Phillip (Tim Molyneux) an alcoholic in recovery who lived with their mother and credits her with turning his life around. He is also the only one to hold any tenderness for the mother, and he tries to convince the siblings that she was more than the monster they remember her as. The tensions simmering just below the surface erupt when the will is read and everything is left to the eldest brother Kenny, played by Shannon Smith.

The play addresses the insidious consequences of physical and sexual abuse, with the mother’s β€˜hands on’ parenting and an obscure past incident between sister Beth (Velvet Brown) and Phillip never far from the minds of the characters. The tensions emerging from class dynamics within relationships are also central: both brothers have married aspirational middle-class women – as evidenced by their choice of children’s names: Hugo and Arabella – who are appalled by their husbands’ behaviour upon returning to the house, where they revert to their old, combative selves.

Overall, the performances are good, Brown is compelling as the emotionally damaged sister trying to keep the family together. Kenny’s wife Sarah, played well by ZoΓ« Scott, is all barely contained rage and contempt, while Tom’s partner Maya (Aoife Boyle) is by turns supportive and exasperated. The stage set is simple and evocative, a basic living room set up of sofa, armchair and coffee table is a fitting backdrop for the confrontations, uneasy alliances, and emotional outbursts that drive the play. Hector Smith’s direction enables the actors to make the best of this space, and the physical performances are striking; Corcoran’s adoption of childlike mannerisms in the presence of his overbearing older brother is particularly commendable.

Nevertheless, the narrative lacunae and the things left unsaid, while perhaps an accurate depiction of the difficulties sharing traumatic experiences, leave the audience too uncertain about events – there is little for us to grasp onto in terms of plot, leading to a sense of waiting for a revelation that never truly emerges. Nook is best in its moments of tenderness, as Sarah and Maya try to comfort and guide their husbands, but these are too fleeting. The play opens with Sarah’s bitterness and irritability, and this sets the tone for the action to come, creating a piece that is possibly too tonally consistent, and lacking in the elements of comedy that make the malevolent family-oriented work of playwrights like Harold Pinter so compelling.


NOOK at the Union Theatre

Reviewed on 19th August 2024

by Rob Tomlinson

 

 

 

 

Previously reviewed at this venue:

WET FEET | β˜…β˜…β˜…β˜… | June 2024
THE ESSENCE OF AUDREY | β˜…β˜…β˜…β˜… | February 2024
GHOST ON A WIRE | β˜…β˜…β˜… | September 2022

NOOK

NOOK

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Strike!

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Southwark Playhouse

STRIKE! at the Southwark Playhouse

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Strike!

“There are more laughs than might be expected balanced with a poignancy that brought some of this audience close to tears”

 

Ardent Theatre Company presents the story, written by Tracy Ryan, of nine Irish shopgirls and one shop boy who after refusing to handle South African goods embark on nearly three years of strike action which culminates in a landmark ruling from the Irish parliament.

The set is effectively simple (Designer Libby Watson): a set of double doors in front of which a picket line will be formed for much of the action. The name of the Dublin store Dunnes is spelt out in coloured lights. A monochrome outline of what will become South Africa’s national flag is painted out on the floor.

The story starts within the store itself and a group of high-spirited shop girls are preparing to start work, changing their clothes into the regulation shop uniform. One of them, Mary Manning (Chloe O’Reilly) is about to change their lives forever when following an edict from their Union, she refuses to handle a South African grapefruit. She is duly suspended by the shop management and a walk out in solidarity from all the shopgirls ensues.

From time to time, a narrator tells us where we are. Karen (Jessica Regan) ably takes the brunt of this task but the role is nicely shared around other characters. There are two stories being told here. Firstly, that of the camaraderie and resilience of the striking shop-workers and then that of the bigger picture, the struggle against apartheid in South Africa. Amidst much light-heartedness, a dignity is provided with the arrival of Nimrod Sejake (Mensah Bediako), a South African exile of twenty years and former prison mate of Nelson Mandela. From him the shop-workers (and the audience) learn of the horrors of the apartheid regime and why the strike really matters.

As the story progresses, we learn small bits about each of the strikers in turn. Much amusing repartee forms around the effervescent Liz (Anne O’Riordan); Vonnie (Doireann May White) is in danger of losing her house; Tommy (Adam Isla O’Brien) is beaten up by the Garda in a brilliantly danced solo scene with effective blood red spotlighting (Lighting Designer Jamie Platt). Versatile Paul Carroll takes up the double roles of sleazy tie-fiddling shop manager Paul and Union Leader Brendan with just the change of a sweater and a restyling of his hair.

But this is predominantly an ensemble piece and the slick movement of the group, directed by Kirsty Patrick Ward, is excellent and the sharing of dialogue fluent. Small set pieces within the narrative provide dramatic variety. The ensemble don headscarves to become a group of angry mothers, sport plastic bags and umbrellas for a scene in the rain, sing a beautifully performed rendition of trade union folk classic Which Side Are You On?

There is much to be enjoyed here in a non-stop ninety minutes. There are more laughs than might be expected balanced with a poignancy that brought some of this audience close to tears. The tale is well-presented, brilliantly performed, and, at the same time, both genuinely moving and entertaining.

 

 

Reviewed on 17th April 2023

by Phillip Money

Photography by Mark Douet

 

 

Previously reviewed at Southwark Playhouse:

 

The Tragedy Of Macbeth | β˜…β˜…β˜…β˜… | March 2023
Smoke | β˜…β˜… | February 2023
The Walworth Farce | β˜…β˜…β˜… | February 2023
Hamlet | β˜…β˜…β˜… | January 2023
Who’s Holiday! | β˜…β˜…β˜… | December 2022
Doctor Faustus | β˜…β˜…β˜…β˜…β˜… | September 2022
The Prince | β˜…β˜…β˜… | September 2022
Tasting Notes | β˜…β˜… | July 2022
Evelyn | β˜…β˜…β˜… | June 2022
The Lion | β˜…β˜…β˜… | May 2022

 

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