Tag Archives: Sam Edmunds

THE CHAOS THAT HAS BEEN AND WILL NO DOUBT RETURN

★★★★★

Southwark Playhouse Borough

THE CHAOS THAT HAS BEEN AND WILL NO DOUBT RETURN

Southwark Playhouse Borough

★★★★★

“There is humour in abundance – terrible gin, awkward meet-cutes, frantic booze runs – but Edmunds also weaves in harder truths”

One night in Luton. Sounds like hell. But it’s going to be a trip.

There will be tears. There will be laughter. You will make friends and say goodbye.

But don’t be frightened, two best mates – familiar because they’re everyone’s best mate ¬– are taking us on a tour both of their own turf and their outlook in writer-director Sam Edmunds dazzling, vibrant and rocking anthem to teenage kicks.

It’s sometime in the 2000s. A house party is the frame – we’re going from pre-drinks bravado to dazed aftermath – but what Chalk Line Theatre delivers is an odyssey into the heart of a community, co-directed with Vikesh Godhwani and performed with unrelenting, heart-pounding gusto.

This is Under Milk Wood for millennials.

Nathaniel Christian and Elan Butler – both remarkable for their stamina and craft – explode onto the stage, whipping up the audience before we have even caught our breath. Leanne Henlon joins them in a carousel of cameos: mums, mates, corner-shop clerks, each sketched with quick wit and affectionate precision.

Rob Miles’s set of looming brick blocks doubles as playground, alley, shop and living room, while Matteo Depares’s sound design adds percussive punch to accompany chest-thumps and fist-bangs.

It is high-energy stuff, rattling along at 100 miles an hour. The dancing is contagious. The flirting gorgeous. The bond between the bros becomes one we love and share, and the audience is part of the gang from the outset, the trio exuding charm through clouds of Lynx Africa, fist-bumping their new pals in the front row.

The text is rich in 00s detail: Tinie Tempah on tinny speakers, Blackberrys buzzing in pockets, fake Ralph Laurens worn like armour. There is humour in abundance – terrible gin, awkward meet-cutes, frantic booze runs – but Edmunds also weaves in harder truths. Debt as a weight. Futures clouded by recession, tuition fees, and the claustrophobic squeeze of austerity Britain. Adults dream of better, but as one character notes, “People round here walk as if they are being held back.”

What keeps the play aloft is its refusal to demonise. It never pillories working-class kids on council estates; instead, it honours their energy, humour and ¬– above all – hope. Hope is the dope.

If there is fury, it comes from fear; if there is violence, it is the consequence of deprivation. The writing is affectionate, sharp, and sometimes filthy but everyone in the audience recognises something from their own youth in this pick’n’mix panorama of bluster and pain.

The cast’s commitment is total. Narrator Christian sustains the pace, anchoring the whirlwind with charisma and warmth. He is our Captain Cat, seeing through windows and into souls. Butler – with a cheerful loping melancholy – bounces between bravado and vulnerability, Henlon dazzles with her versatility, dancer, temptress, bully. Together they radiate raw joy. Even when tragedy strikes, the finale brims with uplift. It is impossible not to leave smiling.

This is theatre as rallying cry. Against knife crime, against despair, for pride of place and community, for ground-up revolution. Chalk Line has an excellent track record but The Chaos That Has Been and Will No Doubt Return feels like the clincher.

Brash, funny, bold and exuberant. Total theatre.



THE CHAOS THAT HAS BEEN AND WILL NO DOUBT RETURN

Southwark Playhouse Borough

Reviewed on 4th September 2025

by Giles Broadbent

Photography by Harry Elletson


 

Recently reviewed at Southwark Playhouse venues:

THE ANIMATOR | ★★★ | August 2025
BRIXTON CALLING | ★★★★ | July 2025
THE WHITE CHIP | ★★★★ | July 2025
WHO IS CLAUDE CAHUN? | ★★ | June 2025
THIS IS MY FAMILY | ★★½ | May 2025
THE FROGS | ★★★ | May 2025
RADIANT BOY | ★★½ | May 2025
SUPERSONIC MAN | ★★★★ | April 2025
MIDNIGHT COWBOY | ★★ | April 2025
WILKO | ★★★ | March 2025

 

 

THE CHAOS

THE CHAOS

THE CHAOS

Testament – 4 Stars

Testament

Testament

Bread & Roses Theatre

Reviewed – 11th October 2018

★★★★

“manages to make themes of grief, suicide and guilt an entertaining and even humorous affair”

 

It’s fringe festival time again! Now, it is Clapham’s turn in holding the torch, offering new work from emerging artists in the South London area. One such piece being showcased is Testament – a short but affecting drama that combines humour with sober reality, and naturalism with the surreal inner workings of our heads.

Max is in hospital. He’s in hospital after having tried to commit suicide. He tried to commit suicide due to the devastation of the death of his girlfriend, Tess. She died in a car crash they were both in, along with his brother Chris. When Max wakes up from his failed suicide attempt in a hospital gown, in a hospital bed, he is adamant that Tess is still alive. In a cloud of hallucinations and confusion, as a result of the damage made to his brain, Max is questioning what happened to Tess, as well as his own mortality. While the Doctor and Chris are trying all they can to save him, in the present world, Max is in the middle of an abstract dream, where modernised biblical characters appear, pushing and pulling him between surviving or giving up the fight. What will Max choose? Does he still have it in him to pull through?

What makes this production such a delight to behold, is the highly imaginative and visceral staging and choreography that represents the non-linear, jumbled memories of protagonist Max. The abstract physical theatre is a welcomed contrast to the realism of the scenes between the Doctor and brother Chris. Hats off to the cast and directors Sam Edmunds and Patrick Harrison, for being able to manoeuvre around the tiny stage at The Bread and Roses while executing the frenzied movements with such precision.

A stand out scene that leaves the whole audience laughing is the abstract re-enactment of a lads night out: the getting ready, the taxi ride, the club and the funny strangers you meet along the way. The scene demonstrates the quality of Edmunds’ writing – able to handle comedy with as much competence as the more thoughtful, serious scenes. Edmunds proves his ability as a writer (particularly of everyday conversations) is as strong as his eye for the physical staging.

The high energy pace makes the majority of the fifty-five minute running time move very quickly, however the last quarter does seem to lose a little steam. This is the climax where Max is making a literal life or death decision so it does make sense that this monumental choice needs the space to be made.

All of the cast pull out the stops in Testament, with each member offering a different element to the production. Whether it be truth and believability, or comic relief, all actors prove a commitment in the facet they are providing. An exciting piece of new writing, Testament manages to make themes of grief, suicide and guilt an entertaining and even humorous affair, without ever losing its honesty about human emotions.

 

Reviewed by Phoebe Cole

Photography courtesy Chalk Line Theatre

 


Testament

Bread & Roses Theatre as part of Clapham Fringe

 

 

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