Tag Archives: Candy

CANDY

★★★★

White Bear Theatre

CANDY

White Bear Theatre

★★★★

“a truly enthralling seventy minutes of theatre about love and addiction”

Can love truly conquer all? Candy, the stage adaptation of Luke Davies’ novel about love and heroin addiction, would argue it cannot. Director and co-adaptor Kate Elliott along with star and co-adaptor Freya James, have managed to deliver something truly special with this piece on the spiral of addiction and co-dependence.

When Dan and Candy meet, it is quite a typical boy meets girl. They fall in love. They want to share everything — every moment, every experience… including Dan’s budding dependence on heroin. What follows is a slow, but steady descent into sickness, desperation, and constant heartbreak that threatens to destroy them both.

Freya James delivers a stunning performance as the titular character, Candy, as well as a host of other characters who inhabit this universe — her snap transformation between Candy and Candy’s mother is particularly impressive. Ed McVey shines as well — he brings a softness to Dan, a character who might easily slip away as cold and self-interested. Instead, we thoroughly empathise with him. We want so badly for both of them to get better, to work it out, even though ultimately, we know they can’t.

The movement direction is truly a standout in the production. Co-movement directors Laure Bachelot and Alexandria McCauley have truly crafted something that deals sensitively with the subject matter at hand. When you’re dealing with stage-craft around drug use and sex, it would be all too easy to lean into the gratuitous, to shock your audience into submission. Instead, Bachelot and McCauley ensure that Candy and Dan’s actions always tell us just enough about what’s going on. The implication is sometimes more haunting than the visceral visual, and it is clear that this creative team understand that.

Praise must also be given for the set and lighting design (Kate Elliott and Cameron Pike, respectively). Though incredibly stripped back, once again the restraint only adds to the impact of the story. Elliott’s framework of PVC pipes lined with soft blue tube lights and draped with sheer, white sheets gives the space just enough structure, while also allowing intimate asides for both of our protagonists. With some soft lighting from behind the sheer sheets, we can watch as some of the most uncomfortable moments unfold. There are no shortage of occasions where we feel like we’re watching something we shouldn’t be privy to, but these moments behind the curtain, these silhouettes are particularly affecting.

What could allow this excellent piece of theatre to soar to the heights that it is absolutely capable of reaching? A slightly deeper introduction to Candy and Dan. Their meeting feels like it passes a touch too quickly. We’re thrust into the beginning of their shared addiction, but not given enough of their initial romance to help us invest into their relationship. They do love each other, even if that love turns toxic, that much is obvious — but the narrative would benefit from showing us more of why that love endures to begin with.

Candy is a truly enthralling seventy minutes of theatre about love and addiction, which holds its subjects and its audience with sensitivity and respect. Its a gorgeous exploration of an important subject, and it should not be missed.



CANDY

White Bear Theatre

Reviewed on 5th June 2025

by Stacey Cullen

Photography by Kate Elliott

 

 


 

 

Last ten shows reviewed at this venue:

HAUNTED SHADOWS: THE GOTHIC TALES OF EDITH NESBIT | ★★★ | January 2025
UNTIL SHE SLEEPS | ★★★ | November 2024
SEVEN DAYS IN THE LIFE OF SIMON LABROSSE | ★★★½ | October 2024
THE BOX | ★★★ | July 2024
JUST STOP EXTINCTION REBELLION | ★★★ | February 2024
I FOUND MY HORN | ★★★★ | February 2023
THE MIDNIGHT SNACK | ★★★ | December 2022
THE SILENT WOMAN | ★★★★ | April 2022
US | ★★★★ | February 2022
MARLOWE’S FATE | ★★★ | November 2021

 

 

CANDY

CANDY

CANDY

Candy

Candy

★★★★

King’s Head Theatre

Candy

Candy

King’s Head Theatre

Reviewed – 19th January 2020

★★★★

 

“Waller’s technique of confiding in us, seeking affirmation from individual after individual in the audience is effortless and effective”

 

Tim Fraser’s ‘Candy’ benefits from an intriguing story idea. Will, a regular guy from a regular Northern town, falls in love with his best friend’s drag persona, Candy. The power of a good premise is evident in the work’s origin, picked out from around a thousand submissions to be staged at the Bunker Theatre in 2018, and here it is, playing to a full house at the Kings Head Theatre, in a new, full-length version.

The play’s second asset is the character of Will himself, tongue-tied in real life but possessed of a sparkling and relentless internal monologue delivered with stamina and charm by Michael Waller. As Will tells of his angst, his dreams, of his fury at the lies sown by his Aunt’s romantic comedy collection, his contemplation of anatomy in the matter of attraction and the alienation he feels amongst his heteronormative friends and colleagues, Waller’s technique of confiding in us, seeking affirmation from individual after individual in the audience is effortless and effective.

Admittedly, from its promising springboard, the tale doesn’t get far. Will doesn’t grow, his besotted state seems neither lustful, nor part of a greater transformation. There’s no sense that Bill, the quirky, indeed wilful, mate from school that went down to the Big Smoke and created Candy, is the real connection he’s striving to make. Instead, the hour’s narrative is pithily summarised by Will himself in an anticlimactic moment of revelation, when he simply confesses, ‘In short, I’m confused.’

The production, devised by the performer himself, never escapes the confines of Will’s head, but Nico Pimparé’s direction keeps things lively with strategically placed folding chairs and a microphone stand for Will to stroll and cavort between, while Stephen Waller’s original music conveys a far-from raunchy drag act as the object of Will’s confusion and elsewhere builds atmosphere unobtrusively.

If, as programme notes hint, a film adaptation may be in the works, Tim Fraser has his work cut out. The idea of a Northern English town with no understanding of drag culture is quaint, and despite Will’s candour and hilarious male logic, nothing quite happens. There’s almost a breakthrough when Will realises that his toad-like Aunt was herself a very different persona in early life…but no, no epiphany, no insight into the social construct of identity, no realisation that love is deeper than a moment of boozed up infatuation. On his mother’s advice, Will retreats to the embrace of Aunt’s sofa-indentations and resigns not to meet Candy, or Bill, again. However, if a second or third act is forthcoming, perhaps one day we might.

 

Reviewed by Dominic Gettins

Photography by Faidon Loumakis

 


Candy

King’s Head Theatre until 20th January

 

Last ten shows reviewed at this venue:
Margot, Dame, The Most Famous Ballerina In The World | ★★★ | July 2019
Mating In Captivity | ★★★★ | July 2019
Oddball | ★★★½ | July 2019
How We Begin | ★★★★ | August 2019
World’s End | ★★★★ | August 2019
Stripped | ★★★★ | September 2019
The Elixir Of Love | ★★★★★ | September 2019
Tickle | ★★★★ | October 2019
Don’t Frighten The Straights | ★★★ | November 2019
The Nativity Panto | ★★★★ | December 2019

 

Click here to see our most recent reviews