Tag Archives: Jack Merriman

ACCOLADE

★★★½

Theatre Royal Windsor

ACCOLADE at the Theatre Royal Windsor

★★★½

“a grand revival that entertains and chills in equal measure”

“We all have one thing we’re ashamed of. Even the judge has, who’ll be peering at you over his glasses, making you feel like dirt. His secret may be the nastiest of the lot. Only you have committed the sin of being found out…”

The Theatre Royal has taken a bold decision with this revival of Emlyn Williams’ 1950 drama about a Nobel prize winning author with an addiction to sleazy sex. A knighthood from the king is about to propel William Trenting into the very heart of the establishment. But as his acquiescent wife knows, down at the Blue Lion in Rotherhithe he’s plain Bill Trent ‘the tramp’ who has a penchant for regular orgies.

The set is an immaculately brown period re-creation by Julie Godfrey who also designed the costumes. But how relevant to today’s audience is the moral anguish of 75 years ago? The answer is that accents and social mores may change but human fallibility does not. ‘Accolade’ sharply echoes recent sexual scandals involving any number of contemporary high profile individuals.

And although the plot relates the story of a man accused of sex with an underage girl, there are LGBT undercurrents. Emlyn Williams was bisexual throughout his adult life and took the lead at the show’s first production.

 

 

Director Sean Mathias has taken some imaginative decisions in both casting and design. Ayden Callaghan (Emmerdale and Hollyoaks) opens the show encased in something like a giant test tube which seems to symbolise the punishing glare of public scrutiny to which his character is about to be exposed. In this central role, his low-key performance was uneasily at odds with the rest of the cast. His Trenting does not belong in this sophisticated middle class world. But this is a provocative play of uneasy opposites. Public and private lives. Adults and minors. The establishment and the rest of us. In a telling line, Trenting admits that he is ‘growing up in front of my own son’.

Honeysuckle Weeks sparkles as Trenting’s compliantly loving wife Rona. As Trenting’s son, Louis Holland gives an engaging performance, literally drawing a veil across the scene in what seems to be a vain attempt to hide his family’s private drama from our gaze. Holland plays a bookish and privately educated 14 year old, in a pointed parallel to the child victim of Trenting’s philandering.

The sound design by David Gregory was particularly effective. Jamie Hogarth gives an intriguing performance as Albert, Trenting’s secretary with a dodgy past the author managed to pick up in a pub. Narinder Samra is terrific as Trenting’s insinuating blackmailer. Williams’ writing is peppered with witticisms, but very much of its time. Sara Twomey and Gavin Fowler give colourful performances as the cheery proprietors of the Blue Lion pub, who slip gleefully into Trenting’s posh home life.

‘Accolade’ is a grand revival that entertains and chills in equal measure.

 


ACCOLADE at the Theatre Royal Windsor as part of UK Tour

Reviewed on 6th June 2024

by David Woodward

Photography by Jack Merriman

 

 

 

 

Previously reviewed at this venue:

OH WHAT A LOVELY WAR | ★★★★ | April 2024
CLOSURE | ★★★★ | February 2024
THE GREAT GATSBY | ★★★ | February 2024
ALONE TOGETHER | ★★★★ | August 2023
BLOOD BROTHERS | ★★★★★ | January 2022
THE CHERRY ORCHARD | ★★★★ | October 2021

ACCOLADE

ACCOLADE

Click here to see our Recommended Shows page

 

CLOSURE

★★★★

Theatre Royal Windsor

CLOSURE at the Theatre Royal Windsor

★★★★

“a witty, pacey and up-to-the-minute thriller”

Theatre Royal Windsor’s current offering is ‘Closure’ – a brand new thriller by experienced writing duo Catherine O’Reilly and Tim Churchill. They were given enthusiastic support in developing this fast-moving premier by the late Bill Kenwright, the renowned producer whose company owns and operates the theatre.

Family tensions run very high indeed in the first half of the evening as normality unravels like it is going very rapidly out of fashion. Josh and Emma Carlisle (Joseph Thompson and Roxanne McKee) are holding a dinner party at their impressive new country home (set design un-credited) to which they have invited their extended family. Their guests include Susan Penhaligon as Libby Kennedy, a rather splendidly dipsomaniac matriarch with more than a passing infatuation for several bottles of Merlot. Just what is it with all the conspicuous consumption of booze in plays like this? She is partnered by another equally experienced actor (and sometime Blue Peter presenter) Peter Duncan. He plays an ex-cop of what turn out to be rather dubious morals.

 

 

Hollyoaks’ Jemma Donovan and Christopher Jeffers make impressive entrances as the couple’s younger daughter Becca and her new boyfriend Alex – both of them rather splendid Love Island wannabes (costumes Hilary Bloomfield).

Director Charlotte Peters ably turns the theatrical spotlight on each of these flawed characters in turn. What happens when good people do bad things? When the pressure mounts, what cracks will appear? And when bad turns to worse, can we the audience guess just what these increasingly manic characters will do next? As well as all this edge-of-the-seat action, there are some daft comedic twists which mean that the dramatic tension is reliably interspersed with laughter. The cast list is competed by Marcus Adolphy who plays a senior police officer with a talent for turning up just when he is least wanted.

‘Closure’ takes a few heavy-handed pot shots at the Insta generation, with lighting effects designed by Douglas Kuhrt. A darker story about trauma and grief underpins the plot, but this is not the kind of play which holds these weighty themes up to serious examination. ‘Closure’ is not conceived as a traditional murder mystery in the style of Agatha Christie’s ‘Mousetrap’ and other such theatrical workhorses. It is most certainly a witty, pacey and up-to-the-minute thriller which at tonight’s packed performance did not fail to disappoint its enthusiastic audience.


CLOSURE at the Theatre Royal Windsor

Reviewed on 28th February 2024

by David Woodward

Photography by Jack Merriman

 

 

Previously reviewed at this venue:

THE GREAT GATSBY | ★★★ | February 2024
ALONE TOGETHER | ★★★★ | August 2023
BLOOD BROTHERS | ★★★★★ | January 2022
THE CHERRY ORCHARD | ★★★★ | October 2021

CLOSURE

CLOSURE

Click here to see our Recommended Shows page