Cratchit
Park Theatre
Reviewed – 9th December 2021
β β β
“Dagleish is a genial, amusing Cratchit, winning the audience over with a jaunty charm”
Barring the actual nativity scene, A Christmas Carol is probably the best known seasonal story, not just in its original literary form, but also as a Muppet, a Donald Duck, the inimitable Michael Cain Christmas Carol of course. The same story every time, the same wholesome message of kindness and generosity of spirit. And unless youβre trying to entertain a bunch of kids, it gets a bit tired.
So itβs not a bad idea at all to mix it up and tell the story from a different angle. Writer and director Alex Knott has seemingly gone for a Rosencrantz and Guildenstern vibe, telling the story from the perspective of Bob Cratchit (John Dagleish), Scroogeβs hard-done-by employee and father of tiny Tim. Already suffering a very tight belt this Christmas Eve, Cratchit finds himself, through little fault of his own, owing money he doesnβt have to a couple of criminals.
In a moment of wretched despair he decides itβd be best for his family if he werenβt around to make matters worse. He tries to hang himself, but slips and falls into the frozen river, where he meets three spirits sent to give him a message.
Given that Scrooge is so close by- literally only next door to Cratchitβs cold, meagre office- I was hoping for a bit of story cross-over, maybe catching a glimpse of Scroogeβs own spiritual journey that evening, or perhaps adding something clever to the well-known plot. Instead βCratchitβ is a kind of shadow of the same plot with a bit stolen from βItβs a Wonderful Lifeβ.
Except that the message is a little garbled too. Rather than showing an alternate reality, the three spirits take Cratchit into the future, first showing him the second Industrial Revolution, people enslaved in furnace-hot factories. Next, weβre transported to Christmas Day in WW1, lads playing football and singing hymns on no-manβs land. We take a trip through glittering β80s Soho, finally landing in our present plague-ridden day, and moving a little further into the future, where we meet Cratchitβs great-great-grandchild, or thereabouts, whoβs doing very well indeed. This isnβt a subjunctive future, itβs just exactly whatβs going to happen, so why is Cratchit being shown it? Apparently to show him that if you βlive long enough, there must be reward for every man.β This is supposed to be the big heart-warming Christmas message: that his life and the life of his children and grandchildren and even great grandchildren might be torturous and near impossible to bear, but one day, someone in that long line might be allowed a little happiness. This seems deeply depressing to me. It also takes forever to work out what the point is.
Emil Bestowβs staging is simple but fairly effective. A criss-cross of wooden slats lays against the back of the stage, housing a few nestled lanterns and sitting in a pile of snow. This is most effective in the blue-black light of a cold winterβs night, when Cratchit is walking home, the warm glow of the lanterns in stark contrast to the bitter cold. Cratchitβs work desk serves as a general prop- something to sit and climb on, to move around and bang with an angry clenched fist. Itβs a bit lacklustre in its most anachronistic moments- sitting in the middle of a battlefield, or in the middle of a Soho nightclub- but it serves its purpose.
Dagleish is a genial, amusing Cratchit, winning the audience over with a jaunty charm. His character could do with a bit more meat, but he makes do. Freya Sharp does her best to play all the parts Dagleish canβt. Her facial expressions carry her, bringing a lot of physical comedy into what are generally quite surface parts.
I feel Iβve said this quite a lot recently, but it needs to be at least fifteen minutes shorter- thereβs an especially long rant about how awful Scrooge is which could definitely be chopped in half, and thereβs a weird Christmas feast hallucination-type scene on the battlefield that I didnβt really understand at all, and which didnβt appear to add anything to the story.
All in all it makes for an entertaining evening if youβre already in the jolly spirit and looking for something festive to hang it on (no pun intended). But through a cynical un-christmasy eye it doesnβt quite live up to its potential.
Reviewed by Miriam Sallon
Photography by Charles Flint
Cratchit
Park Theatre until 7th January
Previously reviewed at this venue this year:
Abigail’s Party | β β β β | November 2021
Flushed | β β β β | October 2021
Little Women | β β β β | November 2021
When Darkness Falls | β β β | August 2021
Click here to see our most recent reviews