Tag Archives: Lola Stakenburg

WELCOME TO PEMFORT

★★★

Soho Theatre

WELCOME TO PEMFORT

Soho Theatre

★★★

“its lovable characters and the show’s strong cast ensure a compelling watch”

Welcome to Pemfort, or more specifically, welcome to its gift shop – you’re the first customer this week! This heartfelt play will make you feel like maybe you should quit your job and work in a castle (ehm, fort), or maybe that was just me. Run by mother hen Uma (Debra Gillett), a bubbly former drug addict, set designer Alys Whitehead and Victoria Maytom bring the shop to life with their vintage carpets and quirky cabinets filled with homemade jam and wooden swords.

We get to know Uma and her ‘chickens’, laidback groundskeeper Ria (Lydia Larson) and Ali Hadji-Heshmati’s wonderfully serious, budding conservationist Glenn, as they debate how to present the site’s history at their fundraising Living History event. Glenn insists on historical accuracy and sensitivity while Uma prefers cherry picking all the gruesome bits to cook up one sensational historical soup. Their lighthearted quarrels make director Ed Madden’s show feel much like a meandering sitcom, reinforced by Max Pappenheim’s overtly cheesy music and Cheng Keng’s frequent blackouts. But the story gains momentum when Kurtis (played with conviction by Sean Delaney) enters the scene. An ex-convict guilty of an undisclosed crime, the Londoner is not as out of place in this wholesome team as he initially appears. As it turns out, Uma, Glenn, and even Pemfort itself also harbour a dark past that they deal with in very different ways.

Ultimately, this show poses the question of how we should deal with our bloody, tragic, shocking pasts and connects these to both individuals and the heritage industry. Can people really change, and how important is the past to the present? Writer Sarah Power draws these connections subtly and is never overbearing in her interpretation, nor does she necessarily link them to the much-debated topic of how to deal with the legacies of colonialism. The Living History event at the end of the play, featuring an entertaining swordfight carefully choreographed by Enric Ortuño and a gorgeous backdrop by Ellie Foreman-Peck, offers comic relief rather than formulating answers.

The play’s rather slow start leaves little time to uncover the character’s ‘secrets’ gradually. At just 95 minutes, the layers are peeled back through sometimes unprompted confessions, such as when Glenn suddenly starts sharing his childhood trauma with Kurtis, whom he openly dislikes. We hear about the ex-convict’s shocking crime as he practices how he’ll confess it to his crush Ria. Gossip and speculation sadly remain remarkably absent in Power’s script, meaning she does not raise the stakes as high as they could be. Still, the relationships between the characters feel genuine and complex, and their interactions frequently left the audience in stitches.

Despite issues in the script’s pacing, its lovable characters and the show’s strong cast ensure a compelling watch. Blending lighthearted workplace quarrels with themes of violence and reckoning, Welcome to Pemfort offers an evening that is equal parts entertaining and thought provoking.



WELCOME TO PEMFORT

Soho Theatre

Reviewed on 18th March 2026

by Lola Stakenburg

Photography by Camilla Greenwell


 

 

 

 

WELCOME TO PEMFORT

WELCOME TO PEMFORT

WELCOME TO PEMFORT

SISTER NATIVITY

★★★½

Drayton Arms

SISTER NATIVITY

Drayton Arms

★★★½

“an effective production with great potential”

Sister Nativity (Emily Millwood) squints towards the bright yellow spotlight as she sits on her knees, speaking to her newly-born and newly-wedded husband, Jesus, on Christmas Eve. Tears stream down her cheeks as she ceases to hear his voice, having alienated her fellow nuns by insisting on her special gift. It is with this well-crafted image that the curtain falls on ‘Sister Nativity’, a 1957-play by the Portuguese playwright Bernardo Santareno, beautifully translated by director Sebastião Marques Lopes. The play introduces an ailing Mother Superior (Efè Agwele) who finds herself helpless to interfere in the growing friction among the nuns in her convent, especially when she is disobeyed by Sister Nativity, who believes she is able to speak to Jesus directly.

The stage is mostly empty bar a nondescript armchair from where Agwele manages to demand the room in her role as Mother Superior, the sick and elderly nun who rules the unnamed convent. She effortlessly switches between her character’s pitiful frailty and frightful rage, her compassion and her stern condemnation, putting on an impressive and compelling performance. Mother Superior’s volatility is offset by Jasmine Holly Bullock’s clearheaded, if sometimes slightly monotonous, performance of Sister Trinity, and the refreshing and bumbling naivety with which Chrisanthi Livadiotis plays yet another Sister, Angelica. Together with Millwood, they form a convincing and perfectly discordant ensemble. While the group collectively does take some time to pick up steam, it manages to build a real sense of urgency in the latter half of the play.

The sound design greatly adds to the sense that there is a real maze of halls and cloisters just off-stage. As the drama ostensibly unfolds while Mass is held in the nearby chapel, the sound of a singing choir in the background works very well to give a sense of the wider world in which it takes place. In fact, the stage seems almost quiet without the backing track, making me think that continuous convent-like white noise would help to further strengthen the effect. The lighting could have been more ambient, though the aforementioned spotlight in the final scene is beautiful, if a little cliché. The world of the nunnery is further conveyed through costume, although less effectively than through the tech – while I appreciated the uniformity of the nuns’ garbs, I only hope this run will make enough of a profit to invest in non-synthetic ones, as the habits looked a bit like Halloween costumes under the stage lights.

Regardless, this is an effective production with great potential. Lopes argues that Santareno’s work has been highly neglected in the UK. With his poetic translation and solid cast of actors, the director has managed to make a convincing argument for the value of staging ‘Sister Nativity’ in London today.

 



SISTER NATIVITY

Drayton Arms

Reviewed on 2nd December 2025

by Lola Stakenburg

Photography by Vasco Simões


 

Previously reviewed at this venue:

MAYBE I SHOULD STOP | ★★★★ | November 2025
FELIXXX | ★★★★ | October 2025
FRESH KNICKERS (AND A GIN AND TONIC) | ★★ | October 2025
ROSENCRANTZ & GUILDENSTERN ARE DEAD | ★★★ | June 2025
DICK | ★★★ | April 2025

 

 

SISTER NATIVITY

SISTER NATIVITY

SISTER NATIVITY