Tag Archives: Chaya Gupta

OUR PUBLIC HOUSE

★★★½

Marylebone Theatre

OUR PUBLIC HOUSE

Marylebone Theatre

★★★½

“a captivating story with a real-life conclusion”

Our Public House, finishing its national tour this week at Marylebone Theatre, is very well worth catching as an unusual and highly engaging example of community inspired themes woven into a narrative drama by a professional writer and director.

Dash Arts under the artistic direction of Josephine Burton held speech writing workshops country-wide during which 700 pieces were written by ‘ordinary’ people with something to say. Speech writing workshops are very much part of how 20-year-old Dash Arts brings communities together. Here, writer Barney Norris has taken the workshops’ output to pull together a play with music that is both heartwarming and hard-hitting.

Sanjana, convincingly played by Bharti Patel, has lost her husband. She is trying to keep his late business – a local pub – going but is facing its closure. Her daughter Anika (Chaya Gupta) is developing her own career as a teacher and offers little support but has dropped in for half term. Most of the action is set in the pub – ‘The Albion’. In the background – for now – is a recent failed parliamentary election where so many ballot papers were spoiled that a new candidate – Mary – has been put forward and a new by-election is to be run. Meanwhile the pub regulars drop in for Sanjana’s warmth and support: Scott (Fergus O’Donnell) and Jo (Lauren Moakes). Soon they are joined by the new Labour candidate (played by Gabriella Leon) and her party worker Tom (Kit Esuruoso). They are keen to sit with their potential constituents and find out what matters to this community.

It’s all there and this is a cleverly woven piece – a coat of many colours. Mary is deaf (all dialogue is captioned and sign language is used extensively). Jo is out of jail, living on her mother’s sofa, and desperate to recover her child now in foster care despite her drink problem. Tom is suitably realistic about the value of listening to people’s concerns without the power to act. There are revelations, despair, fun and lots of love.

Surprisingly missing, as has been pointed out during the tour, are the influences created by the rise of the far right in these communities. But this could easily have been too much to assimilate. The second act brings onstage members of the non-professional community, presumably invited in from the workshops, to fill out the cast and deliver two ‘real’ speeches. Every performance celebrates different people and their different speeches. Last night one dwelt on the need to rehumanise society, the other on homelessness. There was an element of singing in these speeches with the pub visitors present joining.

What started as an evening where the creative process was potentially going to be of most interest, ended as a captivating story with a real-life conclusion. There was neither soap nor sentimentality here and the voices, if difficult to listen to, rang true.



OUR PUBLIC HOUSE

Marylebone Theatre

Reviewed on 1st July 2026

by Louise Sibley

Photography by Pamela Raith


 

 

 

 

OUR PUBLIC HOUSE

OUR PUBLIC HOUSE

OUR PUBLIC HOUSE

THE GOVERNMENT INSPECTOR

★★★★

Marylebone Theatre

THE GOVERNMENT INSPECTOR at the Marylebone Theatre

★★★★

“for a comedy of misunderstandings, it is easy to understand why the play has become a classic”

The Russian-American novelist, Vladímir Nabokov, said of Gogol’s “The Government Inspector”: “It begins with a blinding flash of lightning and ends in a thunderclap… and is wholly placed in the tense gap between the flash and the crash”. Patrick Myles’ adaptation stays perfectly true to Nabokov’s description, literally reading it as a stage direction. Except Myles has downplayed (for the better) any sense of tension, filling the gap instead with its flashes and crashes of humour. There are subtle updates in the language that bring the play closer to our own time, but the original satirising of greed, stupidity, political corruption and hypocrisy needs little tweaking to sound as relevant today as it did nearly two hundred years ago.

In a Northern English provincial town, Governor Swashprattle (Dan Skinner) wakes from a nightmare only to be plunged into more misery as the town’s corrupt officials assemble to spread the news that an incognito inspector will soon be arriving to investigate them all. In the flurry of activity to cover up their misconduct and misdemeanours, further panic erupts from the suspicion that he has already arrived. They blindly assume that the over-privileged Londoner staying at the local inn is he. Percy Fopdoodle (Kiell Smith-Bynoe) quickly cottons on to their mistake and, being the unscrupulous hustler that he is, milks it for all he can, accepting all their bribes and soaking up their wine and women.

 

 

The comedy is frequently slapstick, and always farcical. But perhaps too pronounced, exaggerated even, as the characters compete for laughs. There is a definite ‘Blackadder’ feel, with Pythonesque touches. And it is difficult not to bring to mind ‘Fawlty Towers’ – particularly, of course, ‘The Hotel Inspectors’ episode. Yet there is also a restoration feel, and the characters all have names that are a mix of P. G. Wodehouse and pantomime. It is a mash-up that is reflected in Melanie Jane Brooke’s set and costume. The Governor is a Napoleon lookalike, while his daughter (a hilarious Chaya Gupta) dresses like an overpampered poodle. Cultural references surf the centuries too, yet bizarrely it somehow works, like a Chuck Berry guitar solo layered over Beethoven’s ‘da-da-da-dum’.

The performances are suitably heightened. Skinner’s Governor Swashprattle is a distinctly unlikeable chap, but we warm to him in a boo-hiss kind of way. Smith-Bynoe’s smooth-talking grifter holds the show with a commanding performance. We (almost) sympathise with the irresistible urge of this con-man to out-con the con-artists. The narrative is fantastically preposterous, until the fourth wall is broken and there is a sinister realisation that the farce is quite close to the bone. The famous last lines that the Governor throws to the audience “What are you laughing about? You are laughing about yourselves!” are famous, yet overshadowed in topicality by others in Myles’ revised text; at one moment poignantly stealing from, and paraphrasing, Stalin: ‘It’s not who votes that counts – it’s who counts the votes’.

Social commentary or fantasy? “The Government Inspector” is both. Its targets are obvious and the depiction of them clear cut but caricature. Opening and closing with a bang, it is loud and funny in between. Some subtlety wouldn’t have gone amiss, but for a comedy of misunderstandings, it is easy to understand why the play has become a classic.

 

THE GOVERNMENT INSPECTOR at the Marylebone Theatre

Reviewed on 8th May 2024

by Jonathan Evans

Photography by Oliver King

 


 

 

Previously reviewed at this venue:

THE DREAM OF A RIDICULOUS MAN | ★★★★ | March 2024
A SHERLOCK CAROL | ★★★★ | November 2023
THE DRY HOUSE | ★★½ | April 2023

THE GOVERNMENT INSPECTOR

THE GOVERNMENT INSPECTOR

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