Tag Archives: Malcolm Jeffries

THE LOST LIBRARY OF LEAKE STREET

★★★★

The Glitch

THE LOST LIBRARY OF LEAKE STREET

The Glitch

★★★★

“There is wonder and enchantment here”

Are you ready for some Christmas magic? Well by stepping down into a basement beneath a café in Waterloo, you may find a taste of what you’re looking for.

In a beautifully designed (Oli Savage) low-ceilinged room, adorned with Moroccan rugs and shelves piled high with everything from juggling balls to Marlboro Reds, hard hats to plush toys, this dark-panelled space becomes The Lost Library of Leake Street. Though billed as suitable for ages 8+, it’s a surprisingly grown-up festive show. There is wonder and enchantment here, certainly, but once the premise settles, the story leans into weightier themes: grief, loss, and the unexpected kinship that can arise from both.

Our guide to this hidden world is Isla (Ronay Poole), the narrator and emotional anchor of the piece. She introduces us to the library with cheeky energy, teasing out the idea of how such a place might become “lost”. The explanation, never fully watertight, that this is a library of lost things doesn’t quite align with what we see. The most likely explanation, that it’s a library of lost things, doesn’t quite seem to fit the narrative. Here, every item holds a story dear to its owner, and can be deposited as payment in kind for an item with a story of equal value. The mechanics of the mythology may be slightly fuzzy, but it hardly matters; the emotional logic is sound.

The story unfolds through Isla’s discovery of the library for the first time, meeting its enigmatic proprietor, Maximilian Crimp (Malcolm Jeffries).

Both actors are ineffably charismatic. Poole is delightful both as a curious young girl encountering this den of delights and later as Max’s partner, told through the stories of the keys to the library. Jeffries, meanwhile, brings a gentle melancholy to Max, a sort-of-Scrooge whose hermit-like habits stem from an ill-fated love, cut short in its prime.

Together, they navigate a script that is rich, sometimes dense, and delivered at a clip that takes a moment to adjust to. Writer-director Oli Savage clearly relishes language – most evident in saddling his protagonist with the delightfully pompous name “Maximilian Crimp”. Occasionally the running gag of Isla refusing to call the place a library, and Max’s repeated reprimands, wears thin. But otherwise the script is tight, its drama emerging less from interpersonal conflict than from the stories the characters tell, and the emotional worlds those stories open up.

Ultimately, The Lost Library of Leake Street is a play about storytelling itself – about the power of narrative to transport us from our humdrum or grief-stricken realities. In its love of stories, one hears echoes of Matilda, Little Women, even Cinema Paradiso. At its best, it transported me back to evenings listening to my father read to me and my siblings before bed, some of my most treasured childhood memories.

Sweet without being saccharine, this show offers a gentle reminder that the real magic of Christmas lies in connection – through family, friendship, and the tales we share. It’s Christmas-adjacent rather than overtly festive, but delivers the warm glow of the season all the same.



THE LOST LIBRARY OF LEAKE STREET

The Glitch

Reviewed on 27th November 2025

by Amber Woodward

Photography by Phoebe Dyer


 

Previously reviewed at this venue:

BOY BAND | ★★★ | October 2025
NEVER GET TO HEAVEN IN AN EMPTY SHELL | ★★★ | July 2025
THE RISE AND FALL OF VINNIE & PAUL | ★★★★ | April 2025

 

 

THE LOST LIBRARY OF LEAKE STREET

THE LOST LIBRARY OF LEAKE STREET

THE LOST LIBRARY OF LEAKE STREET

Reading Gaol – 3.5 Stars

Gaol

Reading Gaol

Theatre N16

Reviewed – 25th July 2018

★★★½

“the work could do with more contrast and development to illustrate the various parts of the original text and to expound the ideas it inspires”

 

From their new home in Tottenham Hale, Theatre N16’s collaboration with Styx art space provides a challenging yet creative location for its programmes. Behind a trendy outside bar area, the shows are staged in the bleak warehouse of an old brewery, allowing plenty of scope for invention. Proforca’s director, David Brady, cleverly uses this stark setting to bring out the darkness and pathos in Oscar Wilde’s ballad, ‘Reading Gaol’, written in reaction to his time in prison. Free but disgraced, his last work is not only in protest at the Victorian penal system but also an exploration of the paradoxes of morality as he describes the execution of one and the collective feelings of the other inmates. In this production, an updated version, new writing has been incorporated to expand on the ideas of freedom, oppression and conflict.

Beams of light, smoke and sounds effects combine to create an atmosphere of desolation. A scarlet jacket on a red chair is the only focus of colour. Five actors recite the ballad, pacing like prisoners to its plodding meter. At intervals, each in turn offers a character to illustrate the vulnerability of human nature and its consequences. Breaking up the poem with fresh material is effective considering that the rich, detailed language is hard to assimilate in one sitting, some lines being thrown away due to a lack of clarity and expression. However, at almost two hours running time the work could do with more contrast and development to illustrate the various parts of the original text and to expound the ideas it inspires.

The three central stories make the most impact. ‘Human’ uses imaginative, dramatic lighting effects with handheld lamps and a strong performance by Nic James to take us to the jungles of Africa. Interestingly offbeat in its rhythm, ‘Guardian’ sees Malcolm Jeffries anxiously fighting his isolation and in a soulful tale, ‘Innocent’ tells of a country lad, touchingly played by Miles Parker, in prison for his naivety. But it is the first and last parts which require stronger personality to give the play its overall shape. James Vincent underplays the disturbing quality of the cold-blooded ‘Monster’ and the writing of ‘Hero’ (Nick Cope) fails to convincingly finalise the play with its meandering thoughts.

Even though it could do with a spot of further remodelling, it has the novelty of mixing classical and contemporary narrative and a great sense of live performance from the moment we enter the building. The technical aspects are innovative and slick and the actors work well together and individually, and all in a venue which will be a discovery for most.

 

Reviewed by Joanna Hetherington

Photography courtesy Proforça Theatre Company

 


Reading Gaol

Theatre N16 until 3rd August

 

Related
Also by  Proforça Theatre Company
Feel | ★★★★★ | Lion & Unicorn Theatre | March 2018
Feel / More | ★★★★ | Lion & Unicorn Theatre | March 2018

 

Click here to see more of our latest reviews on thespyinthestalls.com