Tag Archives: Nicki Martin-Harper

A CHRISTMAS CAROL – AS TOLD BY JACOB MARLEY (DECEASED)

★★★★★

Upstairs at the Gatehouse

A CHRISTMAS CAROL – AS TOLD BY JACOB MARLEY (DECEASED)

Upstairs at the Gatehouse

★★★★★

“Each transformation is sharp and specific—a tilt of the head, a shift in posture, a complete recalibration of voice and energy”

In a bare room with nothing but a battered chair and the weight of eternal regret, James Hyland transforms Dickens’ most famous ghost story into a searing solo confessional. This stripped-back A Christmas Carol reveals the bones of the tale—and they rattle magnificently.

Jacob Marley doesn’t haunt quietly. From the moment he materialises in his dusty, ragged costume (designed by Nicki Martin-Harper)—chains conspicuously absent but implied in every weighted gesture—he commands the Gatehouse’s intimate space with ferocious energy. This is a spirit condemned not to silence but to tell his story, over and over. Hyland makes us feel the compulsion burning through every word.

The minimalist staging proves inspired. One chair. One actor. One chance at redemption through storytelling. Without elaborate Victorian trappings or special effects, we’re forced to confront the raw humanity in Dickens’ prose—and this adaptation wisely draws directly from the original text, preserving that magnificent language while reshaping it into Marley’s desperate monologue. When Hyland speaks Dickens’ words, they don’t feel like quotation but like fresh anguish. Sound and composition (Chris Warner) provides an eery atmosphere.

The physical performance is extraordinary. Hyland shifts seamlessly between Marley’s anguished narration and embodiments of Scrooge, the spirits, Tiny Tim, and a parade of characters from his former partner’s life. Each transformation is sharp and specific—a tilt of the head, a shift in posture, a complete recalibration of voice and energy. The single chair becomes bed, counting house, gravestone, whatever the story demands, as Hyland’s virtuosic performance fills every corner of the space. This is all the more astonishing as Hyland is the actor, adapter, director and producer. This is truly a one-man show. 

What makes this production particularly powerful is its psychological insight. By making Marley our guide, this adaptation asks us to consider not just Scrooge’s redemption but whether a ghost can find peace through bearing witness. Hyland plays this tension beautifully, showing us a spirit who is simultaneously beyond help and desperately hoping that telling the story might somehow lighten his chains.

The pacing never flags across the seventy-five minutes. Hyland modulates between driving urgency and haunting stillness, between bitter comedy and genuine pathos. His vocal control is remarkable—Dickens’ ornate sentences tumble out with clarity and purpose, never feeling declamatory or over-rehearsed.

In an era of spectacular stage effects and elaborate Christmas productions, this Carol dares to offer just one brilliant actor, Dickens’ luminous language, and a story that needs nothing more. It’s an utterly thrilling demonstration of what theatre can achieve with talent, text, and trust.



A CHRISTMAS CAROL – AS TOLD BY JACOB MARLEY (DECEASED)

Upstairs at the Gatehouse

Reviewed on 15th December 2025

by Elizabeth Botsford


 

 

 

 

A CHRISTMAS

A CHRISTMAS

A CHRISTMAS