Tag Archives: Nick Cassenbaum

REVENGE: AFTER THE LEVOYAH

★★★

Soho Theatre

REVENGE: AFTER THE LEVOYAH

Soho Theatre

★★★

“chaotic and irreverent”

What do you get when you mix action movies, gangsters and Judaism? ‘Revenge: After The Levoyah’ of course, a mad farce that tackles antisemitism through breakneck comedy and slick multi roling. Though the structure and escalation leave me wanting more, the show’s originality and audacity make for a refreshing seasonal offering.

In pre pandemic Essex, Jewish twins Lauren and Dan mourn their grandfather who – unbeknownst to them – was more than your average butcher. When ex-associate Malcolm Spivak turns up to offer condolences – and end Jeremy Corbyn’s antisemitism by kidnapping him – they steer clear. At least, until neo-Nazi harassment forces them back, plunging them into murder, abduction and chaos. Can they escape before they’re in too deep?

Nick Cassenbaum’s ‘Revenge: After The Levoyah’, winner of a Fringe First at Edinburgh 2024, earns its buzz with an irreverent script blending sincerity, politics and farce. Two actors conjure a chorus of characters, with some hilarious transitions and characterisations. Genuinely touching moments are mixed into the levity. That said, the reliance on Jewish archetypes and untranslated Yiddish leaves some humour beyond my reach. Some of the many gangsters fade away, and the two main characters lack meaningful development beyond Lauren’s radicalisation. With Corbyn captured too easily and his imprisonment falling short of true farcical chaos, the stakes and absurdity never quite launch, leaving the ending feeling incomplete.

Emma Jude Harris’ direction, with fight direction by Robin Hellier, ground the play in realism before spiralling into chaos, demonstrating crisp comic timing and well judged shifts in pace. Yet what initially feels like a hard left at Corbyn’s capture fails to go full mettle, leaving the climax lacking oomph and shading the irony with perhaps unintended darkness. Also, I find framing the stage with two bookcases of unused props somewhat puzzling. That said, the use of lighting and sound succeed in evoking the pulse of an action movie, transporting us convincingly from Essex to somewhere more fantastical.

Alys Whitehead’s set and costume design is simple yet striking, keeping the focus on the actors as they flit between characters. The initial sparseness evokes the solemnity of a levoyah (funeral), with a few items of furniture effectively creating new spaces and even characters. The towering blackboard is a hilarious addition though feels underutilised, as do the bookcases of untouched props. The ripped, grimy costumes immediately foreshadow the chaos to come.

Amy Daniels’ lighting design, with associates Abigail Sage and Graham Self, proves effective and arresting. Shifts in tone convey changes in mood, with pops and flashes punctuating dramatic peaks. The gameshow style sequence adds irony to the introduction of the motley crew of gangsters.

Adam Lenson’s sound design, with musical supervision by Josh Middleton, integrates effects seamlessly, earning laughs in their own right. Music and ambient cues – from helicopters, police sirens, and more – conjure an action film. Foreshadowing the ironic final music is a clever touch, underscoring the stark contrast between the play’s beginning and end.

Gemma Barnett and Charlie Cassen embody twins Lauren and Dan respectively as well as a host of other characters with impressive commitment. Their slick transitions and strong physicality make the entire cast believable. Their stage presence is magnetic, aided by deft shifts in pace, and their dynamic movement maintains momentum across the performance.

‘Revenge: After The Levoyah’ is chaotic and irreverent, if in need of a little development. Though for anyone eager to step off the seasonal path, this could be just the ticket.



REVENGE: AFTER THE LEVOYAH

Soho Theatre

Reviewed on 11th December 2025

by Hannah Bothelton

Photography by David Monteith-Hodge


 

 

 

 

REVENGE

REVENGE

REVENGE

Dadderrs / In A Way So Brutal

★★★ / ★★★★

The Yard Theatre

Dadderrs / In a Way so Brutal

Dadderrs / In a Way so Brutal

The Yard Theatre

Reviewed – 22nd January 2020

Dadderrs ★★★ In a Way so Brutal ★★★★

 

“This is an intensely theatrical evening, but it is stretching the definition of theatre, to the extent that you might well question it”

 

Just occasionally (I’ve only done it once before in my two and a half years reviewing for Spy in the Stalls) an assignment demands that I step out of the traditional anonymity assigned to the critic; last night’s double bill at The Yard was one such evening. This is visceral work that wants our involvement. And though, yes, there are elements of ‘audience participation’, that isn’t really what I mean. I mean, in LIFE. It is work that shouts, ‘BE ACTIVE. GET INVOLVED. THINK. QUESTION. LIVE.’ I’ll be turning 50 in a few months time, and was definitely one of the oldies in the audience, and I left feeling invigorated and excited by the creative possibilities being explored by these contemporary makers, even if not everything was to my taste. This is an intensely theatrical evening, but it is stretching the definition of theatre, to the extent that you might well question it. Is this theatre? Or is it performance art? Whatever your answer might be, it’s mighty refreshing to be made to think about it!

First up is Dadderrs, performed by husband and wife team – or husband and husband/wife team, as they introduce themselves – Daniel Oliver and Frauke Requardt. It isn’t a play, so much as a happening, akin to the work of 1960s performance artists, both here and across the Atlantic, and it combines many elements beloved of that period – nudity, paint, surreal costume, haze, audience involvement, singing and an otherworldly soundscape (credit here to Steve Blake’s terrific work). Frauke and Daniel invite us into their marriage, and into an uninhibited, intimate, honest, playful, shame-free world of their devising – the Meadowdrome. Daniel is dyspraxic and Frauke has ADHD, and the piece plays with their different tempos; in so doing, it invites us to think about difference, and how harmony can be found there. Ultimately, it is a piece about love. Spoken by an audience member and left hanging in the air as the stage is plunged back into the soundless dark, love is the very last word. Love.

Dadderrs / In a Way so Brutal

Coming back into the space after the interval, it’s clear that we’re about to witness a very different spectacle with In a Way so Brutal. (It’s also clear why the interval overran by 20 minutes!) The level of art and artifice has stepped up a gear, and we are presented with a stunning (and also seriously tongue in cheek) living picture. Eirini Kartsaki is posed like a Botticelli, all curvy flesh and flowing tresses, but…her nipples are suction-cupped with plastic, and there are Sarah Lucas-like stuffed stocking shapes adorning the ‘set’. Tasos Stamou’s table of sonic wizardry is lit up like a miniature futuristic cityscape, and Stamou himself produces sound as a chemist produces psychedelics. Quite apart from the exceptional music he was making, watching him work was hypnotic. Kartsaki is a powerful presence on stage, both visually and vocally. Although the words themselves seemed curiously ‘retro-shock’ to me, the combined visual, sonic and aural sense assault ended up seducing me with its fierce and sexy punk energy. And seduction by theatre is never a bad thing.

The Yard’s Now festival is billed as ‘the festival of the best theatre for right Now’. Whether or not you agree will arguably depend on what your experience of ‘right now’ is. If the status quo suits, this evening won’t be for you; if not, it might well be exactly the joyful, anarchic fix you’re crying out for.

 

Reviewed by Rebecca Crankshaw

Photography by Maurizio Martorana

 


Dadderrs / In a Way so Brutal

The Yard Theatre until 25th January as part of Now 20

 

Last ten shows reviewed at this venue:
Hotter Than A Pan | ★★★★ | January 2019
Plastic Soul | ★★★★ | January 2019
A Sea Of Troubles | ★★★★★ | February 2019
Cuteness Forensics | ★★½ | February 2019
Sex Sex Men Men | ★★★★★ | February 2019
To Move In Time | ★★½ | February 2019
Ways To Submit | ★★★★ | February 2019
Armadillo | ★★★★ | June 2019
Dirty Crusty | ★★★★ | November 2019
Pecsmas | ★★★★★ | December 2019

 

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