Tag Archives: NOOK

NOOK

★★

Riverside Studios

NOOK

Riverside Studios

★★

“The play scratches the surface of too many things, and is ultimately frustrating in its lack of resolution or revelation.”

Cameron Corcoran’s play, “Nook”, opens with an emotive monologue. A very loose paraphrase of the ‘Three Little Pigs’ fable, although there are now four of them and the littlest seems to be in as much danger from the other pigs as from the big bad wolf. We are not supposed to know yet who the teller of the tale is, but they are clearly a damaged soul, and we look forward to the ensuing narrative during which, we hope, the deliberately ambiguous prologue will become clear.

Unfortunately, it doesn’t. Not really. The setting is the family home in which four estranged, adopted siblings congregate following the funeral of their mother. Not for any sort of wake or show of respect, however, but to read the will (but let’s ignore the dubiously erroneous timing of this ritual for now). None of them have much affection for the deceased matriarch, and even less affection for each other. The stage is set for tensions to surface and past traumas to knock on the door threatening to ‘blow the house down’.

First up is Kenny (Daragh Cushen), the eldest son who believes he has escaped his working-class background by marrying Sarah (Zannie Benfield), the queen of snobbish put-downs. Younger brother Tom (played by Corcoran himself) is hot on his brother’s heels with fiancé Maya (Lucy Allen) even hotter on his. Not so fast moving is the socially awkward Phillip (Jack Sunderland). He still lives in the family home, so he hasn’t had as far to come, although he arrives with plenty of emotional baggage and unwarranted apologies. Last but not least is black sheep of the family, Beth (Lara Deering). A sheep in wolf’s clothing? She’s certainly no sacrificial lamb as she holds her own against the ensuing acerbic squabbles.

The dialogue is quite enigmatic. Not just difficult to interpret, but hard to follow and near impossible to swallow. Anguished mini-monologues spring from nowhere while non-sequiturs lead nowhere else. There is little logical flow to the narrative which capsizes any potential tension before it can even cast off.

The piece addresses a hotch-potch of issues: class divide, adoption, sexual and emotional, abuse, false memory, domestic violence and incest are a few of them. But the storms whipped up from the past blow in too many directions. Occasionally even the cast seem a little unsure of the material and too often Pinteresque pauses come across as fumbled lines. The performances are solid, nevertheless, even if the characterisation isn’t always convincing. Except for Deering’s Beth – who drops a delicious bombshell late into the action – actions and reactions don’t ring true and the cyclical verbal fights have been written with inadequate care or connection. Which is a shame as the premise has the potential for intrigue, if only the atmosphere of the opening passage could be maintained.

Moments of humour help drive the action. Kenny’s contemptuous wife, Sarah, has some of the best lines which Benfield delivers with cool exasperation. Her growing incredulity as secrets are revealed is a joy to watch. Pivotal moments, though, are glossed over, and the secrets and traumas shared lose their impact. It is like we are denied access. Reya Muller’s direction mirrors this distancing with some awkward but perversely effective staging, often placing the actors apart as though sections of the space are cordoned off, like some unapproachably dark memory.

It’s all a bit of a mystery. We learn the contents of the mother’s will, but we never understand what led to her decisions. The play scratches the surface of too many things, and is ultimately frustrating in its lack of resolution or revelation. At just an hour long, “Nook” still has the feel of a scratch performance, despite an initial run at the Union Theatre last year. Hopefully, in time, it will dig deeper and gain focus, once it finds its niche.



NOOK

Riverside Studios

Reviewed on 23rd August 2025

by Jonathan Evans

Photography by Reya Muller


 

Recent reviews from this venue:

A MANCHESTER ANTHEM | ★★★★ | August 2025
HAPPY ENDING | ★★★★ | July 2025
DEAR ANNIE, I HATE YOU | ★★★★ | May 2025
THE EMPIRE STRIPS BACK | ★★★★★ | May 2025
SISYPHEAN QUICK FIX  | ★★★ | March 2025
SECOND BEST | ★★★★ | February 2025

 

 

NOOK

NOOK

NOOK

NOOK

★★½

Union Theatre

NOOK at the Union Theatre

★★½

“Nook is best in its moments of tenderness”

A tense family drama revolving around a shared history of trauma, Off Main Stage’s new production Nook shines a light on the lasting effects of wounds from childhood: how they shape entire lives and cause permanent fissures between siblings.

Writer Cameron Corcoran, who also plays Tom, the younger of two brothers, creates a simple but effective narrative device: following their mother’s funeral, two brothers and a sister return to the home where they grew up, in order to read the will. The brothers are accompanied by their wives, and their uncle Phillip (Tim Molyneux) an alcoholic in recovery who lived with their mother and credits her with turning his life around. He is also the only one to hold any tenderness for the mother, and he tries to convince the siblings that she was more than the monster they remember her as. The tensions simmering just below the surface erupt when the will is read and everything is left to the eldest brother Kenny, played by Shannon Smith.

The play addresses the insidious consequences of physical and sexual abuse, with the mother’s ‘hands on’ parenting and an obscure past incident between sister Beth (Velvet Brown) and Phillip never far from the minds of the characters. The tensions emerging from class dynamics within relationships are also central: both brothers have married aspirational middle-class women – as evidenced by their choice of children’s names: Hugo and Arabella – who are appalled by their husbands’ behaviour upon returning to the house, where they revert to their old, combative selves.

Overall, the performances are good, Brown is compelling as the emotionally damaged sister trying to keep the family together. Kenny’s wife Sarah, played well by Zoë Scott, is all barely contained rage and contempt, while Tom’s partner Maya (Aoife Boyle) is by turns supportive and exasperated. The stage set is simple and evocative, a basic living room set up of sofa, armchair and coffee table is a fitting backdrop for the confrontations, uneasy alliances, and emotional outbursts that drive the play. Hector Smith’s direction enables the actors to make the best of this space, and the physical performances are striking; Corcoran’s adoption of childlike mannerisms in the presence of his overbearing older brother is particularly commendable.

Nevertheless, the narrative lacunae and the things left unsaid, while perhaps an accurate depiction of the difficulties sharing traumatic experiences, leave the audience too uncertain about events – there is little for us to grasp onto in terms of plot, leading to a sense of waiting for a revelation that never truly emerges. Nook is best in its moments of tenderness, as Sarah and Maya try to comfort and guide their husbands, but these are too fleeting. The play opens with Sarah’s bitterness and irritability, and this sets the tone for the action to come, creating a piece that is possibly too tonally consistent, and lacking in the elements of comedy that make the malevolent family-oriented work of playwrights like Harold Pinter so compelling.


NOOK at the Union Theatre

Reviewed on 19th August 2024

by Rob Tomlinson

 

 

 

 

Previously reviewed at this venue:

WET FEET | ★★★★ | June 2024
THE ESSENCE OF AUDREY | ★★★★ | February 2024
GHOST ON A WIRE | ★★★ | September 2022

NOOK

NOOK

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