Tag Archives: Ethan Doyle

Lights Out

Lights Out

★★★★

Pleasance Theatre

Lights Out

Lights Out

Pleasance Theatre

Reviewed – 24th October 2021

★★★★

 

“Lights Out is thrillingly unconventional, sits in a sweet spot of tension and comedy”

 

It’s that time of the year again: London Horror Festival is in full swing, providing all manner of uneasiness to get you feeling spooky for Halloween. The festival often does a great job of making space for quirkier, off-beat shows, and Lights Out proves that this year is no different, with this fantastic role-playing stage seance from Merely Roleplayers and Blackshaw Theatre Company.

Moving from their regular podcast format to the Pleasance Theatre, the Merely Roleplayers ensemble (consisting of Natalie Winter, Alexander Pankhurst, Helen Stratton, and Richard Stratton, with Matt Boothman hosting) take on the characters of the Blackout Four – a group of Londoners who (apparently) went mysteriously missing on the Northern Line in 2017. Under eerie candlelight, they try to recreate the events of that night to discern what happened, improvising their way through a story whose outcomes are dictated by tarot cards.

If you’ve ever played Dungeons and Dragons or any similar sort of role-playing game, the rules will feel familiar. The actors describe what their characters do and perform any dialogue they might have, while the host keeps things running smoothly and dictates what’s happening in the world. When an actor chooses to do something that will irrevocably affect the story, the suit of the tarot card they draw decides whether the outcome will be hopeful or sinister. There’s a bit more nuance to it than that, but the rules are easy to follow during the show. It’s a great device for keeping the proceedings spontaneous and engaging, with the actors having to make some very difficult spur-of-the-moment decisions.

Thankfully, the cast are all very much up to the task – Winters in particular does an excellent job as the emotional core of the group, encouraging characters who start off very comedic, such as Richard Stratton’s narcissistic journalist, to open up and reveal more complex shades of their personality. Boothman is also stellar as the host, ensuring the pace of the story never drops, and painting some striking images with his narration.

Considering the whole show is consisted of five people speaking from behind a table, it carries a lot of flair – the use of candles provides a suitably spooky atmosphere, and the team’s dynamic and confidence enraptures you in their narrative. Lights Out is thrillingly unconventional, sits in a sweet spot of tension and comedy, and is absolutely worth your time this Halloween.

 

Reviewed by Ethan Doyle

 


Lights Out

Pleasance Theatre as part of London Horror Festival 2021

 

Previously reviewed at this venue this year:
Express G&S | ★★★★ | June 2021
Ginger Johnson & Pals | ★★★★ | June 2021
Godot is a Woman | ★★★½ | June 2021
Catching Comets | ★★★★ | September 2021

 

Click here to see our most recent reviews

 

Dumbledore is so Gay

Dumbledore is so Gay

★★½

Online

Dumbledore is so Gay

Dumbledore is so Gay

Online – Filmed at the Pleasance Theatre

Reviewed – 6th October 2021

★★½

 

“the play struggles to engage, too often feeling more like a public service announcement than a piece of theatre”

 

Remember when JK Rowling shook the world in 2007 by announcing that Dumbledore was gay? It was arguably an entirely tokenistic move, with the author failing to meaningfully mention the character’s sexuality in the seven book series she’d just completed. Nonetheless, it still displayed a small shuffle forward in representation, introducing a LGBTQ+ character into a major franchise and sparking the kinds of discussions that Dumbledore is So Gay delves into.

The play follows Jack (Alex Britt), a Harry Potter fanatic growing up gay in a culture that uses the word as an insult. He has to suffer through societally entrenched homophobia from his friends, classmates, and parents (all played by the multiroling Max Percy and Charlotte Dowding), as many young people have had to do. However, the difference is that Jack is armed with a time turner, the time-travelling necklace that Hermione uses in The Prisoner of Azkaban. In this play, Jack uses it to try to alter the timeline so that his fantasies are manifested, but has to reckon with some harsh realities.

The script, written by Robert Holtom, doesn’t feel like it ever really embraces the concept, however – the differences between the timelines feel quite unadventurous and tame. A lot of the dialogue is also very on the nose, as if Holtom doesn’t trust that the audience for this show is most likely going to be comprised of people who already subscribe to the idea that homophobia is bad. As a result, the play struggles to engage, too often feeling more like a public service announcement than a piece of theatre.

The performances, too, are a mixed bag. Britt inhabits the role of Jack excellently, but has the same intonation on a lot of his lines that makes the dialogue feel wearisome. Percy over-caricaturises most of his characters, which works initially but ultimately exacerbates the script issues. And Dowding thankfully strikes a great balance of comedy and pathos across her characters that’s fantastically engaging. Overall, it feels like a tonal misstep from director Tom Wright.

There are positives to the show: the lighting design (Rory Beaton) and sound design (Peter Wilson) are both stellar, and Darius Shu’s filming for the stream is highly professional and beautifully executed. However, these elements are building on flawed foundations – Dumbledore is So Gay feels like it entered the conversation about ten years too late for the messages it wants to share.

 

 

Reviewed by Ethan Doyle

Photography by Alex Brenner

 


Dumbledore is so Gay

Online until 18th October from dumbledoreissogay.ticketco.events

 

Other shows reviewed this year by Ethan:
Shook | ★★★★★ | Online | February 2021
In Pieces | ★★½ | Online | April 2021
Monday Night at the Apollo | ★★★½ | Apollo Theatre | May 2021
Catching Comets | ★★★★★ | Pleasance Theatre | September 2021

 

Click here to see our most recent reviews