Tag Archives: David Schaal

TOP GS LIKE ME

★★★

Royal and Derngate Theatre

TOP GS LIKE ME

Royal and Derngate Theatre

★★★

“a timely, sharp eyed look at how easily vulnerable young people can be radicalised”

Masculinity is under threat… or is it? When algorithms decide what you see and hear, it’s easy to miss when you’ve slipped off the deep end. A sharp tale from Northamptonshire writer Samson Hawkins, ‘Top Gs Like Me’ delivers pointed lessons – even if it feels pitched at younger audiences.

Eighteen-year-old Aidan feels stuck – stacking shelves, sick mum, no dad. Meanwhile best friend Mia’s about to leave for uni with her rich new boyfriend. With no aspirations and little support, he retreats into the internet. And when slick, sharp talking ‘Hugo Bang’ pops up promising answers, he clicks… again and again. What follows is a stark look at how easily the internet can drag someone under, sometimes with horrifying consequences.

Northamptonshire local Samson Hawkins’ second full length play, with dramaturgy by Lauren Mooney, is a timely, sharp eyed look at how easily vulnerable young people can be radicalised. It tackles big topics – disenfranchised youth, the ‘manosphere’, consent – in a way that’s instantly relatable and shows how fast a lonely scroll can turn dark. However, it’s not exactly subtle, with some hard landing points, on the nose dialogue, and a couple of developments lacking setup. Aidan’s hopeful final choice is followed by a rather dark coda – an important if bleak warning. Overall, it feels pitched at younger viewers – though judging by the enthusiastic teens behind me, it works.

Royal & Derngate Artistic Director Jesse Jones, with associate Kitty Benford and movement director Monica Nicolaides, chart Aidan’s slide with real clarity, escalating from casual clicks to a brain full of Bang. Their climactic fused voices and mirrored movements are absolutely gripping. Though the opening drags a little, shifting from a long music sequence into an equally long TikTok montage before Aidan’s first line. The sprawling skate park set, with audiences on both sides, is stunning though the scale and frequent side-on scenes feel more observational than immersive. The twenty-five strong student chorus is an ambitious flourish: their TikToks and multiplying Hugo Bangs are striking, though the group dances add less and aren’t always cleanly delivered. Gemma Boaden’s local accents ground the piece, but Aidan’s muffled diction and the echoey acoustic mean some lines get lost.

Rebecca Brower’s design swings big, turning the auditorium into a full-size skate park with moving platforms and built in lighting – an impressive feat. It looks fantastic, though the action can feel a little distant. Benjamin Grant’s sound design shines in places, especially the opening sequence of inside to outside headphone audio that shows how cut off Aidan already is. The wider soundscape of TikTok hits, tense underscoring and sharp effects complements the action well, but the volume swamps a few lines and the dialogue often echoes. Rory Beaton’s lighting is bold: hidden LED strips flare an angry red wherever Bang lurks, spreading as Aidan sinks deeper, while bursts of colour punctuate key lines before blending into more naturalistic moments. Brower’s costumes are spot on: Hugo’s sharp red suit over a white vest nails the slick on top, sinister underneath vibe, while Aidan’s baggier, dirtier imitation is so feeble it’s almost sympathetic.

The cast is fab. Danny Hatchard’s Hugo Bang steals the show with suave charisma that slowly reveals something far more sinister, culminating in a goosebump inducing climax. Daniel Rainford’s Aidan shows real vulnerability before spiralling out – a strong performance even if a few lines get lost. Fanta Barrie’s Mia offers a grounded counterpoint, supporting Aidan with believable frustration, though her energy plateaus slightly in the final scene. Emily Coates’ Grace deftly plays someone performing a version of herself, navigating the character’s ethical knots with nuance. Finn Samuels’ Charlie balances well meaning warmth with oblivious privilege. David Schaal’s Dave brings a world weary humanity and much needed voice of reason. The Internet Ensemble adds real spark with vibrant TikToks and energetic, if slightly loose, dancing.

‘Top Gs Like Me’ is a heavy hitting but important watch, packed with crucial lessons for younger audiences. Though aimed at a younger crowd, you too may find Bang’s pull hard to resist.



TOP GS LIKE ME

Royal and Derngate Theatre

Reviewed on 28th February 2026

by Hannah Bothelton

Photography by Manuel Harlan


 

 

 

 

TOP GS LIKE ME

TOP GS LIKE ME

TOP GS LIKE ME

The Weatherman

★★★

Park Theatre

The Weatherman

The Weatherman

Park Theatre

Reviewed – 21st August 2019

★★★

 

“Niamh James, fresh out of drama school, does a terrific job in making Mara a real, living presence on stage”

 

The Park nails its colours to the mast immediately concerning the content of this play. On each seat is an A5 sheet of paper; on one side, MODERN SLAVERY AND HUMAN TRAFFICKING IN THE UK/SPOTTING THE SIGNS, and on the other, WHAT YOU CAN DO TO HELP, detailing how to report it, and the logos of eleven organisations that work to support victims and to end this horrific practice. Similarly, in the director’s note, just after the title page of the script, which all reviewers were kindly given at this performance, Alice Hamilton devotes one paragraph out of five to the statistics of global human trafficking – ‘a recent reckoning produced an estimated 40.3 million victims of human trafficking globally, of whom 10.1 million are children trapped in forced labour or sexual exploitation’.

This is what Eugene O’Hare has chosen to write a play about, and yet, in this play (running time two hours twenty minutes including interval), we see and hear four middle-aged men talk – frequently at length; O’Hare is fond of a long monologue – and talk and talk, whilst a teenage girl, introduced on page 35 of a 75 page script, remains mute throughout. We know she is Romanian, and that her name is Mara, but her thoughts, feelings and experiences do not exist. Niamh James, fresh out of drama school, does a terrific job in making Mara a real, living presence on stage, but it is unbelievable that in 2019, a male playwright can feel that the best way of exploring this subject is to present the only woman on stage as a passive, representative victim, whilst the men around her invite us to laugh with them and feel their fears and their personal pain. If the Bechdel test was conducted with a thermometer, the mercury would boil and the glass explode.

There is some stellar acting on display in this production. There isn’t a weak link in the five-strong cast, and Alec Newman, as the tortured (yes, have a think about that for a second) O’Rourke and David Schaal, as the terrifying Dollar, in particular, give bravura performances. There is a lot for the actors to get their teeth into; O’Hare relishes male language, whether it be quickfire banter, gangland menace or sentimental pissed-up musings. There’s no doubt that these have their charms. There are some good gags in this piece (alongside some more questionable ones) and Dollar’s nastiness is palpable, but added up, and in the light of the subject matter, it just all seems rather indulgent. The register of language is also uneven, both tonally, and in terms of time period. Dollar appears to have walked straight in from the 1950s East End of the Krays, whilst the other four characters are firmly rooted in the present (though does anyone now use the anachronistic ‘water closet’?)

James Perkins’ design works very well – it was a terrific creative touch for the outside of the stairs to visually echo the outside of a shipping container – and Alice Hamilton’s direction is steady and assured, but there simply is no getting past the blatant erasure of the female voice here. Bob Dylan once wrote, ‘You don’t need a weatherman to know which way the wind blows’; it’s clear that Eugene O’Hare’s Weatherman hasn’t got the faintest idea.

 

Reviewed by Rebecca Crankshaw

Photography by Piers Foley

 


The Weatherman

Park Theatre until  14th September

 

Last ten shows reviewed at this venue:
Gently Down The Stream | ★★★★★ | February 2019
My Dad’s Gap Year | ★★½ | February 2019
Cry Havoc | ★★ | March 2019
The Life I Lead | ★★★ | March 2019
We’re Staying Right Here | ★★★★ | March 2019
Hell Yes I’m Tough Enough | ★★½ | April 2019
Intra Muros | | April 2019
Napoli, Brooklyn | ★★★★ | June 2019
Summer Rolls | ★★★½ | June 2019
The Time Of Our Lies | ★★★★ | August 2019

 

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