Haunting Julia
Queen’s Theatre Hornchurch
Reviewed – 3rd November 2018
β β
“a disappointing production, that neither scares nor moves, though Spencerβs performance is the saving grace”
The papers called her βLittle Miss Mozartβ but twelve years after her death, where she was found having overdosed on sleeping pills at the age of nineteen, Juliaβs father Joe, is still looking for answers. He has invited Juliaβs last boyfriend, Andy, to the music centre that he has built around Juliaβs bedroom, an unaltered shrine to her genius. Joining them is Ken Chase, a local psychic, so he says, though his connection to Juliaβs life goes far deeper. It is both a ghost story and a psychological narrative of grief and loss. The weight of creative genius on a person, particularly from such a young age, is interestingly explored and commented upon.
However Haunting Julia isnβt one of Alan Ayckbournβs best plays and, in this case, it isnβt helped by the overall production. Originally intended by its writer as a ninety minute piece, in longer form it is now a slow journey, repetitive and unengaging. It plods along, pedestrian-like, until the melodramatic ending which elicits more laughter than fear from the audience tonight.
Matthew Spencer delivers a strong and nuanced performance as Andy Rollinson, Juliaβs boyfriend at the time, beginning the play as a sceptical non-believer, and ending the play shaken and moved. However he is flanked by two disappointing performances from Sam Cox and Clive Llewellyn. Cox is unconvincing, acting out towards the audience rather than towards his fellow actors, and the emotional complexity of this stifling, grieving father figure is not accessed by his performance. Both Cox and Llewellyn also struggle to deliver the notes of humour that pepper the script and are characteristic of Ayckbournβs writing, causing the play to drag and stagnate over and over.
The set, designed by Jess Curtis, is functional and competently done, but it isnβt anything awe-inspiring, and the spacing of it contributes to the frequently bizarre staging of the actors by director Lucy Pitman-Wallace, which often makes the interactions between the characters feel unnatural and performative.
This is a disappointing production, that neither scares nor moves, though Spencerβs performance is the saving grace.
Reviewed by Amelia Brown
Photography by Mark Sepple
Haunting Julia
Queen’s Theatre Hornchurch until 17th November
Previously reviewed at this venue:
Rope | β β β β | February 2018
The Game of Love and Chai | β β β | April 2018
Priscilla, Queen of the Desert | β β β | May 2018
Abi | β β β β | September 2018
Abigail’s Party | β β β Β½ | September 2018
Once | β β β β β | October 2018
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