Tag Archives: Louise Sibley

AN INTERVENTION

★★★½

The Space

AN INTERVENTION

The Space

★★★½

“intense, but also very funny”

You would not expect a play by the writer of TV series Dr Foster to be comfortable and this one isn’t. Mike Bartlett’s short but compelling two-hander drama, ‘An Intervention’, is performing at The Space and is, if you are interested in the way relationships can turn on a flipped coin, a very worthwhile evening.

‘An Intervention’ is about friendship and conflict. There are two conflicts here. In the background is war in the Middle East (Iraq?). In the foreground are two young people whose friendship is based on forthright conversation, but who are on opposite sides when it comes to their views on political engagement. Who supports intervention, and why, and who does not? This is the divisive question underlying their tense dialogue.

Theirs is not the only relationship in focus. Offstage, there is another relationship, and another potential conflict, playing out. There are others. What is the impact of other people in your life on your core friendship? The two – very different – characters on stage (we do not know their names) are a man and a woman, but they could easily be of any gender. This is a microscope on the choices you make and your conduct in working things through.

The 90-minute play, potentially tragic, is intense, but also very funny. Life is funny, right? The dialogue wrings out the humour in everyday misunderstandings and weaknesses. The audience responded appropriately.

Dom Stephens is the director of this version. His two ‘puppets’ (there is something of the Punch and Judy here) are played ably by Neila Stephens and Tom Zachar. The Space is a community arts centre dedicated to supporting new artists and as ‘An Intervention’ is only the third play put on by the company Mop N Bucket (as far as I could find out), I am guessing this is still experimental work for all of them which makes the production usefully sparse, and very honest. It also accounts for the slight wobbliness of some of the acting. Neila’s character is a drunk for much of the play. Acting partial inebriation (a scale of 4 to 9 is mentioned) is extremely hard to handle, and Neila manages to remain coherent and convincing. Tom’s character is also a challenge. He has to be stable and stoic in the face of attack from Neila’s character, but convey vulnerability in his dilemmas. He navigates this successfully.

This is not easy stuff. But the company is skilled in keeping the play tight – the only dressing in the cavernous space is recorded protest music and echoes of war used to knit the scenes together. It is also the right choice to have only a small audience (32 seats) placed physically close to the action. We were fully engaged in seeing these two people work out how alone they can feel and, finally, what they mean to each other.



AN INTERVENTION

The Space

Reviewed on 27th August 2025

by Louise Sibley


 

Recent reviews from this venue:

A KISS FOR CINDERELLA | ★★★ | December 2024

 

 

AN INTERVENTION

AN INTERVENTION

AN INTERVENTION

FAR AWAY

★★★★

Ambika P3

FAR AWAY

Ambika P3

★★★★

“This play has reached a high point through imaginative design and dramatic setting”

I am a sucker for promenade and immersive theatre (especially one in which the audience is used only as an observer) and this was a real goody. But Far Away is a dystopian drama, so if you are looking for an uplifting evening this will not be for you. It explores dark themes, some of which seem dangerously real.

The descent into hell begins as you enter the ‘theatre’. And already the genius of Rebecca McCutcheon’s production is manifesting. You are received into Ambika 3 through wire barriers guarded by funerary-style ushers, and sent down a long track into the dismal concrete underworld of the University of Westminster building. Below ground you wait, disorientated and huddled with strangers for the ‘curtain’ – rolling steel doors – to go up and you are allowed into the cavernous performance space of a subterranean warehouse.

Caryl Churchill’s play, first produced in 2000 at the Royal Court, explores fear and citizen control, using absurdist scenes. It has had a mixed reception in previous iterations, some calling it ‘a small, oblique masterwork’ (Charles Isherwood), others criticising it for being muddled and lacking in resolution. Here, McCutcheon and her talented production team have married place, play, performance and promenade to extraordinary effect, one which fully explores the play’s foreboding atmosphere and sinister twists. It wasn’t long before I got the sense that I was part of the creation, even though this was billed as a non participatory experience. Sound (Lucy Ann Harrison) and lighting (Jack Hathaway) guide the audience in wandering between the dark corridors and low-lit scenes. Somehow we are also involved too. In Act Two, between scenes, the spotlights on the hatters’ tables are switched off, leaving the audience as silhouettes on the backdrop, with the hats. Are we the people that Joan and Todd are making these hats for? Are we being led to our doom?

The play pivots between three acts – and three primary settings. There is a timeline and character development but no actual explanations of how we got from one act to the next. Joan, the main character (played by Lorna Dale), is a young girl who sees a horrifying event but is gaslighted by her aunt Harper (Lizzie Hopley) when she tries to talk about it. In the next act, 15 years later, she is working with a colleague Todd (Samuel Gosrani) at an apparently creative and satisfying job as a milliner. They may be falling in love. An equally horrifying revelation, turns this scene on its head. The third and final act quickly whisks away any sense that there is going to be a happy ending, or even any ending. War and horror are fully present but, just as sinister, is the uncertainty of anything, even whose side nature is on.

There are strong performances by the actors – Dale perfectly displays bewilderment and vulnerability, with a final soliloquy that is powerfully delivered, Gosrani is magnetic in his turning between cynicism and concern, Hopley gives a subtle performance in the first act as she avoids answering Joan’s questions.

This play has reached a high point through imaginative design and dramatic setting. McCutcheon and the Lost Text/Found Space theatre group that she founded is acclaimed for site specific production and has lifted Far Away to another level. I was left with one reflection: 25 years after Churchill wrote her play, has the absurdism used then, now become a reality of our time?

 



FAR AWAY

Ambika P3, University of Westminster as part of Camden Fringe Festival 2025

Reviewed on 6th August 2025

by Louise Sibley

Photography by Ellie Kurttz

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Previously reviewed at this venue:

PEAKY BLINDERS: RAMBERT’S THE REDEMPTION OF THOMAS SHELBY | ★★★★★ | SADLER’S WELLS THEATRE | August 2025
THREE CHICKENS CONFRONT EXISTENCE | ★★★★★ | EDINBURGH FESTIVAL FRINGE | August 2025
SOME MASTERCHEF SH*T | ★★★★★ | EDINBURGH FESTIVAL FRINGE | August 2025
THE DIANA MIXTAPE | ★★★★★ | HERE AT OUTERNET | July 2025
EXTRAORDINARY WOMEN | ★★★★★ | JERMYN STREET THEATRE | July 2025
SINBAD THE SAILOR | ★★★★★ | LILIAN BAYLIS STUDIO | July 2025
THAT BASTARD, PUCCINI! | ★★★★★ | PARK THEATRE | July 2025
JUSTIN VIVIAN BOND: SEX WITH STRANGERS | ★★★★★ | SOHO THEATRE WALTHAMSTOW | July 2025
R.O.S.E. | ★★★★★ | SADLER’S WELLS EAST | July 2025
JESUS CHRIST SUPERSTAR | ★★★★★ | WATERMILL THEATRE NEWBURY | July 2025

 

 

 

Far Away

Far Away

Far Away