Tag Archives: Louise Sibley

STRANGE CASE OF DR JEKYLL AND MR HYDE

★★★★

Upstairs at the Gatehouse

STRANGE CASE OF DR JEKYLL AND MR HYDE

Upstairs at the Gatehouse

★★★★

“Hyland pulls out all the stops of horror to bring us a must-see play”

The stage is shrouded in dark, hung with black curtains, a wooden lectern in a spotlight the sole prop. Already we, the audience, know we are in for a sinister hour in the presence of one of the towering characters of Victorian gothic horror. Actually two characters, of course.

On to the stage strides Dr Jekyll (pronounce that ‘Jeekyll’, we are immediately instructed). He approaches the lectern, about to deliver a lecture on the duality of mankind and his frustrated attempts to find a cure that will relieve the sufferings of evil doers. He has argued with the medical establishment over a potion which – he believes – will provide relief to split personalities. Prevented from experimentation on patients, to prove his point, he has self-administered. We are about to hear the outcomes and lessons of his experiments.

One of the great pleasures of watching a familiar story unfold, is that you don’t have to work out what is happening: you can just sit back and enjoy the show. And what a show this is. James Hyland – writer, actor, producer and founder of Brother Wolf productions – himself has a towering on-stage presence. Switching rapidly – and shockingly – between Jekyll, his alter ego Hyde, the innocent victims of the experiment and the upright associates of his profession, Hyland gives us an outstanding physical performance. He writhes, twists and spasms. He straightens to resume his lecture then collapses into a crippled heap of distorted anatomy to seek out another victim. His contortions scare and shock. He swings the lectern out to become a bench, a bier and a body. Finally, he paces to and fro, directly addressing the front row of the audience (I was glad I had chosen to sit at the back, for once), shape-shifting then confronting us with our own worldly intentions and the unwitting evil we all hide. He withdraws out of the spotlight, back into the black.

This is not an hour for the faint-hearted. It is a dark play in a dark setting, with a dark message. At one point some members of the audience screamed – a tribute to a master. There are a few moments of humour, although the laughter is more a relief from tension than due to anything truly comic.

Under the direction of Phil Lowe and with sinister musical interludes by Chris Warner (admittedly I was so wound up that I didn’t fully notice these) Hyland pulls out all the stops of horror to bring us a must-see play for those who enjoy grim revelations brought home. There is evil nesting in us all, if only we could see it.



STRANGE CASE OF DR JEKYLL AND MR HYDE

Upstairs at the Gatehouse

Reviewed on 9th February 2026

by Louise Sibley

 

 

 

 

 

 

STRANGE CASE

STRANGE CASE

STRANGE CASE

MRS PRESIDENT

★★★

Charing Cross Theatre

MRS PRESIDENT

Charing Cross Theatre

★★★

“exciting and compelling to watch”

There are a few key questions at the heart of Mrs President, a reworked and deepened version of John Ransom Phillips’ play, first presented last year. Who gets to control your image, especially when a visual representation is intended to enter the public domain as a painting or a photograph? Is the subject in control, or the creator? Then, once the portrait gets set in collective memory, can the real person behind it ever be truly known or understood? Questions for our time, perhaps.

Mrs President reimagines the story of Mary Todd Lincoln as a series of scenes set in a photographer’s studio after critical moments in her life – becoming the First Lady, the death of her son Willie and the assassination of her husband, President Abraham Lincoln. Shunned by society, accused of treason, and struggling with grief, she approaches photographer Mathew Brady to create a portrait that will show the world who she really is. But Brady has his own ideas and their fraught collaboration becomes a psychological exploration of truth, identity and agency.

Keala Settle plays Mary Todd Lincoln. It is an inspired piece of casting. Settle first grabbed attention in the film ‘The Greatest Showman’ when, as the bearded lady, she belted out the song ‘This is me’. As Lincoln fights for control of her image with Brady – Hal Fowler – that cry for recognition is at the heart of the battle. Although this is a non-singing role for Settle, she brings all the power of her voice and commanding presence to give us a towering performance as the misunderstood wife.

Fowler has a lot to do. Through a number of dream-like sequences and transitions designed to illustrate Lincoln’s complex journey, he takes on many parts, from the artist James Audubon, to the judge Marion R.M Wallace who committed Lincoln to an asylum as legally insane. As a result, his character as Brady is never fully developed, and he comes over as rather weak, which is a shame because Brady himself achieved renown for his pioneering work in the Civil War and after. But this is not his story.

The technical achievement is particularly notable. Director Bronagh Lagan and a very strong creative team work with a single-set stage – suitably enclosed within a gilded picture frame – using lighting and video projection to illustrate and support the narrative. This is critical because there are so many shifts and transitions, between characters, time, emotional states and narrative that the play threatens to descend into chaos but survives just in time – no doubt an echo of Lincoln’s life itself.

This complexity makes Mrs President exciting and compelling to watch, but not straightforward. I did a bit of background reading before coming to the show and some familiarity with Mary Todd Lincoln’s story definitely enhances appreciation of the nuances. In the end, as written and probably intended, the underlying question was never really answered. Just who was Mary Todd Lincoln? We are left wondering whether she even knew herself – and whether a photograph could ever show her, even if she did?



MRS PRESIDENT

Charing Cross Theatre

Reviewed on 27th January 2026

by Louise Sibley

Photography by Pamela Raith


 

 

 

 

MRS PRESIDENT

MRS PRESIDENT

MRS PRESIDENT