Tag Archives: Jack Robertson

GERRY & SEWELL

★★★

Aldwych Theatre

GERRY & SEWELL

Aldwych Theatre

★★★

“The show begins with a surge of energy, the stage heaving and bouncing”

The story of Gerry & Sewell captures the story of the production itself.

A plucky little thing from the North East is fired by a dream of going places.

Writer-director Jamie Eastlake set out with a three-strong cast in the dusty attic of a former social club in Whitley Bay in 2022. The production captured a moment, a feeling, and was carried on the shoulders of the community to the Newcastle Theatre Royal.

Now, pinching himself, Eastlake brings his untidy show – complete with a bulging cast, impressive staging and glittery oomph – to the West End, where it remains at heart just as scrappy, just as raucous and chaotic as that opening night at Laurels.

This is the upward trajectory that Gerry (Dean Logan) and Sewell (Jack Robertson) want to pursue. Drifting through graffiti-strewn Gateshead, the feckless, hopeless duo have nothing, but they’re willing to risk it all to buy season tickets to the Gallowgate End of St James’ Park to worship Newcastle. Toon. The Magpies. (“One for sorrow, two for joy” is their bond and mantra).

They want, as Gerry says, “a bit of something, a bit of respect, our own space”. The season ticket is their escape route, and they embark on “one last mission” for a better life fired by that most precious ingredient of all – hope.

The third member of the original cast is Becky Clayburn, filling in for the wild elements and chaos of Tyneside: part street rapper, part thug, part force of nature. But now she has her own entourage, a band of hoodie-wearing hooligans and flash mobbers who add stomp and urgency to the proceedings.

The cast is fleshed out by Gerry’s family, with Emmerdale veteran Katherine Dow Blyton particularly good as faded matriarch Mrs McCarten, and Erin Mullen affecting as sullen and dislocated daughter Bridget.

From three originals, then, to a cast of 32, all managed well by director Eastlake’s kinetic and swift production.

We’re in for a good night.

Or are we?

The show begins with a surge of energy, the stage heaving and bouncing, the audience – many dressed in the black and white of Toon – waving flags and cheering. And everyone’s thinking: this is going to be a blast.

It doesn’t quite work out like that. The production betrays its roots for good and ill, its expansion providing brio but also serving to amplify the weaknesses.

Crucially, Gerry and Sewell’s story is not the joyous and rascally caper the publicity shots depict. Yes, there are laughs – mostly thanks to Robertson’s depiction of hangdog and ever-hungry Sewell. There are good lines and strong visual gags. And yes, the bond between the two is affirming.

But this is, for vast spans of time, an exploration of misery and cruelty, with every type of evil concocted, often needlessly and to the point of indulgence. Too frequently the production drifts into synthetic misery porn, counterbalanced by a misjudged working-class sentimentality, where the dumped mattress is elevated to the status of Keats’s Grecian Urn.

The partisan audience – up for a good time – becomes fidgety and disorientated. On press night, one audience member cried out, “Oh no!” Not, perhaps, at the horror of the confected act of violence we were witnessing, but shock that the production would go to such a ridiculous extreme to elicit a reaction.

However, for all its flaws, there is an unstructured, throw-it-all-in-and-see-what-sticks vibe, including puppetry and fantasy music numbers. This creates sufficient goodwill to prompt a standing ovation from a previously twitchy but ultimately forgiving crowd. A fitting conclusion for a production aiming to emulate the Gallowgate.

Final score from the Magpies:

Sorrow: 1
Joy: 2



GERRY & SEWELL

Aldwych Theatre

Reviewed on 15th January 2026

by Giles Broadbent

Photography by Von Fox Promotions


 

 

 

 

GERRY

GERRY

GERRY

Butterfly Powder: A Very Modern Play
★★★★★

Rosemary Branch Theatre

Butterfly Powder: A Very Modern Play

Butterfly Powder: A Very Modern Play

Rosemary Branch Theatre

Reviewed – 10th April 2019

★★★★

 

“a triumph of silliness”

 

Subtitled ‘A Very Modern Play’, Jack Robertson’s farcical whodunnit is a drawing room comedy with stock characters and familiar devices. A snobbish married couple, a maid with an accent, a posh neighbour with a multi-barrelled name, a murder, a detective, a plot where dramatic chords and power cuts announce repetitive slayings…in theory this is a tired idea for a sketch turned into two hours of torture. In practice, it is a triumph of silliness, starting with casting of the central characters.

Alice Marshall is magnificent as the maliciously haughty Mrs Fox and Jack J Fairley plays the subservient husband with fawning finesse. Together they bicker unhurriedly through surreal arguments such as whether goldfish have teeth and whether ‘letter box’ is an apt description for a rectangular gap in a door. As Rhoda, Grace Hussey-Burd is bright and bird-like as she wrangles feather duster and endless trays of tea. But just as the cliché of the Foxes is elevated by good jokes and timing, the character of Rhoda is elevated by her parodic version of ‘foreigner’ English, with modified words and chaotic grammar delivered deftly as if from a food-blender, effortless and on the edge of recognisability. Hannah Fretwell has limited possibilities as Mrs Pleasingdale-Boshington-Worrell but brought the best out of a neurotic widow who exists only to suffer Mrs Fox’s put downs and Mr Fox’s proper nouns. Eventually, a semblance of plot arrives with Billy Coward (Ken Thomson), a young man purporting to be a reporter, believing Mr Fox to be his father and falling for the maid. These tender storylines are casually swept aside as a murder is announced. The spotlight shifts to Detective Spectrum, who tries to persuade each character in turn that he or she is the killer, only to be wracked by doubts when they either reply in the negative or are themselves dispatched. Ben Lydon’s confidently comic performance as Spectrum is a microcosm of the show in that it is both delightful and inconsequential.

In the main, Butterfly Powder is an unoriginal idea executed supremely well. Director Jacob Lovick has a well-chosen, talented ensemble working smoothly, supported by stylistically spot-on design and sound from Jason Salsbury and Patrick Neil Doyle. However, one scene suggests greater things to come from Jack Robertson, ‘a writer you’ve never heard of’, according to the blurb. In the scene, Clampton, a morbid cameo brilliantly played by Chazz Redhead, has been summoned to the upcoming murder scene, and unloads his misgivings to a silent, soup-eating soul, who turns out to be played by the author himself. Staged in a darkened, purgatorial ante-room with the sound of a lapping shoreline in background it’s a poignant, funny, Stoppard-like theatrical idea, that would be good to see more of.

 

Reviewed by Dominic Gettins

 

Rosemary Branch Theatre

Butterfly Powder: A Very Modern Play

Rosemary Branch Theatre until 13th April

 

Previously reviewed at this venue:
Graceful | ★★★ | August 2018

 

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