Tag Archives: Joshua Gadsby

MY MOTHER’S FUNERAL

★★★★★

The Yard Theatre

MY MOTHER’S FUNERAL

The Yard Theatre

★★★★★

“fresh and funny and angry”

Abigail’s mother has died and she can’t afford the funeral. This simple fact drives a play that spirals in different directions, examining class inequality, the consequences of revealing your trauma for art commissions, the different sides of a parent that children can experience. All of this is considered through a warm and darkly comic lens.

Abigail (Nicole Sawyerr) is a writer and as the middle-class theatre commissioner keeps reminding her, she is a writer who grew up on a council estate. As her brother keeps reminding her, she is the only one from ‘around here’ who goes to this theatre. The disconnect between audience and experience is stark. Realising that the only way she can afford a funeral is to get a commission (the theatre didn’t like her piece about gay bugs in space, they want something through her ‘unique lens’) Abigail finds herself writing a play about a woman who can’t afford her mother’s funeral. But as the theatre people workshop her experiences into caricature and the money seems ever elusive, Abigail must wrestle with the ethics of what she is doing, while also grieving her mother.

The themes are complicated and hard-hitting. There are so many moments in this play where you want a chance to stop and think, to consider the point that’s just been made. But that’s not allowed, the pace is careening, a whirlwind of grief and exploitation that mirrors the chaotic aftermath of a death.

Kelly Jones’ script is layered, complex and slippery. The jokes are packed in, managing to have us laughing through gritted teeth at the out of touch theatre people, and laughing with moist eyes at some of the softer, quieter moments. It’s an angry script, and rightly so. Many people won’t know how expensive funerals have become (the costs have risen 126% in the last 20 years) and might not know about what happens if you can’t afford it. This is a story that’s worth telling, but by adding the complexity of Abigail wrestling with telling it, Jones elevates this piece to a broader critique of class and the arts and the cluelessness of those in power.

Charlotte Bennett’s direction is energetic and slick. The three performers dart about the stage, their tangled emotions explored in masterful light and shade. Sawyerr as Abigail quivers with tension, trapped in an impossible situation. Samuel Armfield is maddening as the theatre commissioner, and extremely moving as Abigail’s brother Darren, whose memories of their mother are more complicated and his grief harder to grapple with. Debra Baker plays both Linda the mother and the Actor who will perform as the mother in the play Abigail is writing. This is a stroke of genius to twist the knife of Abigail’s pain. Baker slips effortlessly between the two, as well as doing a hilarious turn as a set builder, throwing mud everywhere for the ‘authentic working-class experience’.

Rhys Jarman’s set begins simply, with a small two-levelled stage at the centre. As the play within a play develops, the set design becomes more involved and a grave is revealed. There is something sickeningly powerful about an on-stage grave. It’s a brilliant choice.

This play is fresh and funny and angry. It deservedly won a Scotsman Fringe First Award for new writing at the 2024 Edinburgh Fringe. In combining the universal and the specific it’s found a powerful niche. It’s just shy of harrowing, but it’s certainly worth your time.



MY MOTHER’S FUNERAL

The Yard Theatre

Reviewed on 30th January 2025

by Auriol Reddaway

Photography by Nicola Young

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Previously reviewed at this venue:

PERKY NATIVITITTIES | ★★★★ | December 2024
THE FLEA | ★★★★★ | October 2024
THE FLEA | ★★★★ | October 2023

MY MOTHER’S FUNERAL

MY MOTHER’S FUNERAL

MY MOTHER’S FUNERAL

 

 

🎭 A TOP SHOW IN OCTOBER 2024 🎭

THE FLEA

★★★★★

Yard Theatre

THE FLEA at the Yard Theatre

★★★★★

“bold, innovative, interesting and risk-taking theatre”

James Fritz’ ‘The Flea’ is a pleasurably innovative, hilarious and touching piece of theatre. It explores themes of systemic homophobia, the marginalisation of the working classes and the issues of criminalisation of sex workers, all within the context of Victorian Britain. And even with such heavy themes, it still managers to be utterly hysterical throughout.

The play follows Emily and her son Charlie. They’re a poor family and Charlie notices his Mum going without food, so he starts bringing home extra cash to give to her. She’s suspicious about where it comes from though, but she stops asking questions after he tells her it’s his post office ‘bonus’. Unfortunately, the police were suspicious too, and we discover Charlie is involved in a high end brothel scheme. The investigation into the establishment is what we follow in the play.

The show is immediately gripping in its presentation of the narrative – using various forms of movement, multi-media and multi-roling to tell this story. Jay Miller’s direction as a result is never unexciting and I can honestly say I was gripped throughout the whole piece. There was not one moment where the energy dropped. The space was also used incredibly well in this sense. The stage (designed by Naomi Kuyck-Cohen) was divided into three separate platforms with a runway along the middle. Each platform created distinctive settings: A police station, Emily’s house, an aristocrat’s living room and various others. The majority of which was also filled with comically small furniture.

Lambdog1066 is responsible for the incredible costume design; Victorian-esque designs  mixed with punk aesthetic choices such leather jackets, patchwork pieces and various decorative zips. A special commendation also has to go to the cast at this point for many swift changes of outfit.

All the actors are extremely committed throughout the play. Breffni Holahan leads the show with an attention to emotional detail ranging from joy to anguish that is truly remarkable. Aaron Gill also shone in several roles, but I particularly enjoyed him as the police constable which provided a lot of the subtle, tongue in cheek comedy.

Fritz’ writing is simply brewing with heart and great care for all of his characters. Many of which have their flaws yet there wasn’t one person who I couldn’t understand or sympathise with. And I think that’s how you succeed in taking risks in theatre; you approach every step with care and you don’t cut corners on the details. This is the kind of bold, innovative, interesting and risk-taking theatre that the industry has been crying out for, for a long time. Definitely worth a watch.


THE FLEA at the Yard Theatre

Reviewed on 22nd October 2024

by Rachel Isobel Heritage

Photography by Marc Brenner

 

 

 

 

 

Previously reviewed at this venue:

THE FLEA | ★★★★ | October 2023

THE FLEA

THE FLEA

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