Tag Archives: Jack Staddon

MATES

★★★★

Hen and Chickens Theatre

MATES

Hen and Chickens Theatre

★★★★

“playful, delightfully bonkers yet intelligently conceived”

Mates – ‘sounds like something you’d put on at a pub’ complains one of the budding actors early on in this exuberant and often hilarious metatheatrical comedy; and indeed, it is. Or rather, a highly reputable theatre above a pub in Islington. Billed as ‘a play by four mates about four mates trying to make a play about four mates,’ Mates is an all-male four-hander which explores shifting friendship dynamics, male competitiveness and innate vulnerability; the boisterous yet fragile male ego is on full display here. So too is a zany, creative chaos engendered by the unenviable task of having to produce a play with no script, director or venue booked.

The four actor friends get together after years apart to devise a piece of theatre which has apparent funding from a mysterious backer referred to as ‘The Prince.’ Contracts have been signed with a £999,999 liability clause. This raises the stakes of the drama, and we see how the characters react under pressure and the cracks that begin to appear in their friendship. Ciaran Duce (Luke) Joseph Ollman (Max) Jack Staddon (Cosmo) and Kieran Urquhart (JJ) demonstrate great comic timing, physical stage presence and are to be commended for their boundless laddish energy and evident confidence and joy in working as an ensemble.

The director, Will Merick, and movement director, Emily Orme, are to be congratulated for creating dynamic and engaging fast-paced scenes and for the strong element of physical theatre in the piece. Contact improvisation, the ability to instantly recreate very different locations on stage through physical movement and a brilliantly conceived and hilarious dance routine raise it to the next level. Nick Coppell, the technical engineer, also helps to enhance the innate theatricality of the piece and atmosphere through timely music, and a variety of different sound and lighting cues.

The playwriting is topical, even zeitgeisty with references to toxic masculinity, radical empathy, and paedophile gangs in the upper echelons of society. It is also clever – deviating into more surreal, philosophical territory when the characters become talking heads through holes in a hastily erected piece of black fabric. Thus begins an existential angst-ridden discourse on the nature of time and human existence. And for those who delight in metatheatrical drama, Mates will not disappoint – this is not just a play within a play – but several plays within a play – each actor competing with his mates for his own outlandish idea to be chosen for the actual production.

The shift at the end of the play towards dramatising a more emotionally authentic connection between the characters is to be applauded. Yet the scene set on ‘Banana Island,’ whilst delightfully comical, doesn’t quite land emotionally. However, this play deserves a longer run. Mates is a playful, delightfully bonkers yet intelligently conceived and executed piece of theatre’ it will hold your attention throughout. Ultimately, it is a joyous celebration of straight male friendship, theatre, and the very human proclivity to imagine a life beyond the ordinary. As JJ (Kieran Urquhart) proclaims whilst directing his play within the play, ‘I say invoke the spirits of the theatre. Tell your theatre your dreams!’



MATES

Hen and Chickens Theatre

Reviewed on 30th January 2026

by Tim Graves

Photography by Sam Travis


 

 

 

 

Mates

Mates

Mates

Black Chiffon

★★★★

Park Theatre

Black Chiffon

Black Chiffon

Park Theatre

Reviewed – 19th September 2019

★★★★

 

“a hugely enjoyable watch which will have its audience gripped”

 

Mrs Alicia Christie (Abigail Cruttenden) has the perfect upstanding family life. Or so she would like you to believe. Below the surface of formality, there bubbles intense resentment and one-sided jealousy between father Robert (Ian Kelly) and son Roy (Jack Staddon), the latter of which is due to be wed in four days to the beautiful Louise (Jemima Watling). Daughter Thea (Eva Feiler) offers some respite to the family’s persistent quarrelling, but tensions are consistently high and the stressful burden of playing happy families is taken on by the dutiful Alicia.

When Alicia goes out to the local department store to buy some groceries for dinner with Louise’s parents, she makes a split-second decision that shocks both her family and herself. Enlisting the services of ‘mind specialist’ Dr. Hawkins (Nicholas Murchie), the well-to-do family attempt to understand what led their dear matriarch to commit such an act. Black Chiffon, written by Lesley Storm in 1949 and directed here by Clive Brill, is about family, social preservation and the often-unrecognised struggle of the harmonising mother.

The acting is strong from all parties and the characters highly believable. Cruttenden commands the stage with her defiant motherly strength and Kelly does well to act the detestable and distant father. Staddon and Feiler have good sibling chemistry and Watling – in the same role her late grandmother, Patricia Watling, played in the 1950 Broadway production – is the perfect simpering bride. Murchie is witty and quick and his conversations with Cruttenden comprise some of the play’s best moments. The dialogue can be a bit cliché at times such as the grand announcement that closes the first act, but in general the script is solid and intriguing.

The set (Beth Colley) is wonderfully elaborate. The play’s action takes place in the drawing room, a decorated space with dark green walls and a large window to the right. An ornate camelback sofa, armchair and round mahogany coffee table are centre stage. A well-stocked drinks cabinet sits on the back wall next to a small table with a telephone. The actors enter and exit from stage left through a pair of double doors that can be pulled to. The audience also walks through these and along a short corridor decorated as if part of the house to reach their seats which is a nice touch in immersing them in the space.

Despite this limited setting, the play gives a good sense of space beyond the drawing room. The characters comment on the hustle and bustle elsewhere in the house and we hear cars pull into the drive. A painting hanging above the fireplace is remarked to be a painting of the house’s Embankment surroundings some years ago, and the characters regularly gaze out the window.

Each act is marked by a fade to black in which the family’s maid Nannie (Yvonne Newman) bustles around the house tidying and rearranging. Beyond this, the lighting (Pip Thurlow) is only notably used to create a sense of day and night through the window. This is at its best when vibrant oranges and pinks create an early morning glow. The costumes (Neil Gordon) were good and of the era with Cruttenden treated to a fabulous array of dresses and headpieces. The music – taken from David Darling’s album ‘Cello’ – creates a strong sense of foreboding and anxiety.

Brill’s production of Black Chiffon is a hugely enjoyable watch which will have its audience gripped. The performance is slick and carries itself with the same dignity to which the Christie family aspire.

 

Reviewed by Flora Doble

Photography by Mark Douet

 


Black Chiffon

Park Theatre until 12th October

 

Last ten shows reviewed at this venue:
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
The Weatherman | ★★★ | August 2019

 

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