Tag Archives: Kathryn McQueen

ARLINGTON

★★★

Tron Theatre

ARLINGTON

Tron Theatre

★★★

“well worth seeing for its well executed design and engaging performances”

In the latest addition to the dystopian, Big Brother-esque theatre scene, Arlington – a new production from Glasgow-based dance-theatre company, Shotput – is a visual spectacle of a show with incredible performances and a stellar design team. Written by Enda Walsh, the show sets up an intriguing premise which it disappointingly fails to follow through on.

Lights up on a stark raised stage, outfitted only with a waiting room bench, a lone ticket dispensing machine and a pile of clothes. Around the perimeter of the stage we see multiple monitors and pieces of run down looking tech – someone is definitely watching. Above the stage a large sign with the number ‘3097’ is hanging ominously. The story begins by following Isla (Aisha Goodman) as she waits endlessly for her number to be called so she may escape her room in this mystery tower. We are given very little in the way of information as to how she came to be here and what is going on with the rest of the world outside these towers. A new, unnamed man (Alex Austin) enters Isla’s sphere to monitor her from the screens outside. Eventually, the scene shifts away from Isla and her comical body-pillow dance duet and we meet another unnamed character. Played by Jack Anderson, we are entranced by a twenty minute solo dance piece, presumably depicting this character’s journey inside their own room. Finally, our third and final captive brings the story full circle as we discover he is the guard from Isla’s tale, now trapped himself.

The story that we attempt to follow throughout this show is convoluted and unsatisfying in the few answers we are given to the many questions that arise. While this is likely a conscious choice in the storytelling, it weakens the show considerably as the scrappy structure offers little in the way of closure. That said, what this show lacks in plot it makes up for in volumes with its direction, Lucy Ireland and Jim Manganello, and design elements. The set design, Anna Yates, offers a beautiful contrast between the harsh clinical environment of the room and the soft, deeply damaged nature of the control centre outside in the real world. The lighting design, Emma Jones, and sound, Garry Boyle, work together in perfect harmony to create a chilling all-encompassing atmosphere that creates a sense of perfect unease, never allowing us to relax or know what is coming next. Rob Willoughby’s video design transports us to a disturbing reality of constant observation as we are invited at all times to see at least four versions of the live actor via the aforementioned monitors, while the mysterious man behind the control desk remains with his back turned and swathed in shadow.

The performances across the board are superb. Each performer incorporates elements of dance into their character, with Jack Anderson providing a solo routine so vivid it’s hard to look away. Aisha Goodman brings humour and grit to her performance as Isla, allowing us to perfectly appreciate the frustrations and quirks of living in this strange world. Alex Austin skillfully allows us to connect with his character’s vulnerabilities and awkwardness even while sitting in the dark and turned away from view.

Overall this is a production well worth seeing for its well executed design and engaging performances. If you’re looking for a satisfying story that will leave you either sated with knowledge or content with the well managed unknown: look somewhere else.



ARLINGTON

Tron Theatre then Scottish Tour continues

Reviewed on 23rd October 2025

by Kathryn McQueen

Photography by Brian Hartley


 

Previously reviewed at this venue:

BLACK HOLE SIGN | ★★★★ | September 2025

 

 

ARLINGTON

ARLINGTON

ARLINGTON

BLACK HOLE SIGN

★★★★

Tron Theatre

BLACK HOLE SIGN

Tron Theatre

★★★★

“entertaining and thought provoking”

Tron Theatre’s latest offering Black Hole Sign, a co-production with Traverse Theatre Company and in association with National Theatre of Scotland, is a gripping and necessary reflection of the current state of our National Health Service. Written by Uma Nada-Rajah, a practicing nurse in critical care with NHS Scotland, and directed by Gareth Nicholls, the show offers a powerful show of Scottish humour which offers levity from its bleak message.

The show is split along two timelines, at once following the events of a night on an NHS nursing ward while also giving us glimpses to a tribunal happening in the future. The titular Black Hole Sign, a radiological marker seen on a CT scan of the brain, rears its head as a diagnosis early in the show while at the same time, in a stunning parallel, we see a literal hole in the ceiling which will prove a challenge to the workers throughout the night. Alongside an array of colourful characters, the show details the journey of the two main nurses on call that evening in the understaffed ward and we watch on with a sense of foreboding as things begin to inevitably go wrong for the pair and their patients.

The set design (Anna Orton) offers a naturalistic representation of an NHS nursing ward which serves the piece beautifully. It is adaptable though, and during a delightful hallucinatory sequence in which the charmingly grumpy Mr Turnbull (Martin Docherty) is accidentally given nebulised ketamine, the set allows for the striking fantasies to take hold. The lighting (Lizzie Powell) is suitably stark for the setting with excellent clarity for the moments in which we are transported to the future tribunal. The sound design for the piece (Michael John McCarthy) was effective in providing an uncomfortable and tense underscore for what was to come, but the sung compositions seemed out of place.

The acting was superb across the board, with heart and humour shining through in equal measures. Helen Logan delivered a supreme performance as the powerful but flawed senior charge nurse Crea, a woman whose professional ethos ‘service delivered to people based on medical need, and no other criteria’ runs deep in everything she does. Betty Valencia as student nurse Lina was a lovely contrast to the rest of the ensemble and managed to both endear and frustrate the audience with her charm and ineptitude. The cast excelled in their multi-roling, making the stage feel twice as full with rounded and nuanced characters.

For all this show excels in its design and performances, it misses the punch slightly on the lasting impact for the audience. With grand lines such as ‘from the ashes of war they dreamt up a new Jerusalem: the National Health Service’, one expects the show to rouse the troops a little more in its final moments. Additionally, the show sets up very early a sense that something bad is going to happen. This makes the audience wait on tenterhooks throughout the performance as we try and get ahead of the script to guess the final big twist. I personally quite liked this element, it made the whole show feel like a murder mystery game with me, the sleuth detective, sitting in my seat thinking I’d be able to work the thing out before the actors. But those games are fun because of how far removed they are from reality. I wonder if this element of playful suspense downplayed the heartbreak in the not-so-far-from-real-life ending we were presented with.

Overall Black Hole Sign offers an entertaining and thought provoking night out, with top class performances and a strong message. It might not revolutionize the country and the health service on its own, but it certainly leaves audiences mulling what might be done to protect such a vital organ of our country.



BLACK HOLE SIGN

Tron Theatre

Reviewed on 23rd September 2025

by Kathryn McQueen

Photography by Mihaela Bodlovic


 

Previously reviewed by Kathryn:

EVITA | ★★★★ | LONDON PALLADIUM | July 2025
THE BOY WITH WINGS | ★★★ | POLKA THEATRE | June 2025

 

 

BLACK HOLE SIGN

BLACK HOLE SIGN

BLACK HOLE SIGN