Tag Archives: Jamie Eastlake

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

N16

 
After over 178 productions and over 28,000 audience members through the door since moving to the Bedford in 2015, Theatre N16 is looking for a new home from December 2017.

Theatre N16 was set up in 2015 to be a stomping ground for new companies and a place to try out new work, offering affordable deals on rehearsal and performance space. It has offered a ground-breaking, risk-free deal to all companies, which 95% of our guests have taken, guaranteeing that creatives do not leave our space owing the venue money. This is all under the auspices of an Equity Fringe Agreement, with Theatre N16 one of the few London venues to have signed up to the deal to guarantee pay to all creatives working for the venue.

Within this structure, Theatre N16 has offered performance space to 110 new writers, with over 200 first credits for new and young performers, and 42 productions transferring into other venues all over the world. In reaction to industry issues, they have started encouraging and promoting more successfully for female directors and writers, and worked hard to find productions and casting processes that favour BAME performers.

N16

Executive director Jamie Eastlake says:

“I was sick to death of watching theatre companies get ripped off under business models that relied on funding the theatre first. Instead, we kept finding new innovative ideas to keep a space open. The fringe is the lifeblood of theatre. Having good solid fringe theatre models is what creates new work and new artists and feeds the West End.”

Now, the new owners of The Bedford, Theatre N16’s home for the last two years, have decided to redevelop the pub. The theatre is looking for a new home, to continue their model of offering affordable space to give creatives a first rung on the ladder. Jamie Eastlake says:

“This is a call to arms. We have to find somewhere – and we need help.”

Anybody who knows of a suitable space or is interested in becoming a patron of the theatre to help us find a new venue, please email

jamie@theatren16.co.uk

 

 

Shows reviewed by thespyinthestalls.com at Theatre N16 this year include:

 

Loop
AI Love You
Dead Souls
The God of Hell
Olympilads
Deadline Day
Lucy Light