Tag Archives: Simeon Miller

ORPHANS

★★★★

Jermyn Street Theatre

ORPHANS

Jermyn Street Theatre

★★★★

“he writer goes in decidedly oblique directions at every juncture”

Orphans director Al Miller says he ploughed through dozens of scripts looking for his next project. His mission: something with “real voltage”.

He alighted upon Lyle Kessler’s taut three-hander and thought, “It’s going to be a ride!”

The play has an impeccable pedigree from its 1983 LA roots with stars such as Albert Finney, Jesse Eisenberg and Alec Baldwin sinking their teeth into the deliciously ripe dialogue, with actors given meaty mouthfuls to chew up and spit out.

The set-up is this. Orphan brothers Treat and Phillip live in a rundown Philadelphia row house. Treat, with psychopathic tendencies, goes out into the world to rob innocents while tender and simple Phillip stays at home as a recluse fearing that if he were to step outside, he would die from his allergies.

Treat likes it this way, with Phillip cloistered at home. He cares for his sibling in his own demented way and strikes down any attempt by his docile brother to better himself. Treat is mutely terrified by the prospect of the boy moving on – the shadow of abandonment running through the entire piece.

One spring day, Treat brings home Harold, a middle-aged businessman, drunk beyond his wits and telling tales of his own motherless past. Handsomely dressed, Harold has stocks and bonds in his briefcase. With Harold tied to a chair, Treat heads downtown to see if he can find a friend who might pay to release the man they assume to be a well-upholstered industrialist.

But it doesn’t turn out that way. Harold is not a doughy journeyman in a natty suit but something altogether more intriguing. All conventions are upended. “You’re supposed to be a kidnap victim,” insists Treat.

There are inevitable notes of Pinter – in the covert menace – and Mamet – in the masculine hierarchies – but the writer goes in decidedly oblique directions at every juncture. Power gets passed around like a cheap bottle of vodka as relationships blossom and fracture in the most unexpected ways.

The credibility of this engrossing narrative relies on the performances. Here, there is not a flaw. Chris Walley as thuggish Treat is intimidating and rangy. Fred Woodley Evans manages to convey Phillip without the tendentious sentimentality to which such a role might succumb.

At the heart of the matter, and showcasing a career of craft, charm and presence, is Forbes Masson as Harold, swivelling on a sixpence from violence to empathy to comedy to wit, all to dazzle and confuse the brothers.

Imagine a cross between Tony Soprano and Papa Smurf.

At no point are his true motives transparent – he doesn’t appear interested in escape or revenge. In fact, you could probably construct a plausible theory that Harold is a figment of the boys’ imagination, filling in for the father figure their lives so obviously lack.

The play, ornamented by Sarah Beaton’s distressed set, is never less than electrifying, as the director had hoped. The story never goes where you think it might – or even should. Although this erratic tendency brings with it the peril of tonal uncertainty, the sure performances always take the production back to solid ground.

In theory, Kessler’s Orphans should be a conventional genre piece about gangsters and violence. It is not. It is something far more bamboozling. Expect the unexpected.



ORPHANS

Jermyn Street Theatre

Reviewed on 9th January 2026

by Giles Broadbent

Photography by Charlie Flint


 

 

 

 

ORPHANS

ORPHANS

ORPHANS

🎭 A TOP SHOW IN JANUARY 2024 🎭

COWBOIS

★★★★★

Royal Court

COWBOIS at the Royal Court

★★★★★

“The trans and queer characters are self assured heroes who inspire awe and universal swoons from cast and audience alike”

The transfer of Charlie Josephine’s Cowbois from the RSC’s base in Stratford-Upon-Avon to London has been hotly anticipated and much trailed and it’s easy to see why.

In a town 100 miles from anywhere, ostensibly on the American frontier, a group of women, children, and a perpetually drunk sheriff, have been left behind by their male townsfolk who have gone off to join the gold rush. A wood panelled bar and four leather bar stools, backed with a sign of ‘no guns, no politics’ is all that’s needed to take the audience to this familiar setting. We’re introduced to each of the women through a prolonged discussion about how the ladies take their grits, with sugar or salt, the cheeky subtext of which sets up for a fantastical journey of gender discovery ignited by the arrival of the outlaw, Jack Cannon.

Playing with the image of the American cowboy, an icon of masculinity, is nothing new. The popularity of films like Brokeback Mountain and The Power of the Dog show how exploring gender and sexuality in this repressively conservative setting works. But where Cowbois differs is in centring the voices of women and trans people in a way that’s uplifting, rather than tragic. The trans and queer characters are self assured heroes who inspire awe and universal swoons from cast and audience alike.

The infamous Jack Cannon, played with swagger and style by Vinnie Heaven, acts as a catalyst for change for all the townspeople in sometimes magical and mysterious ways. De facto leader of the group Miss Lillian, Sophie Melville, is enthralled by Cannon’s charm. Their intense sex scene is deliciously wet and wild, staged under blue light (Simeon Miller) punctuated with moans and splashes from a substage pool. Later events are unexplained and unexplainable, but that’s no bother – this is a fantasy after all.

“There’s plenty of high camp music, movement and costumes that keeps the silliness coming”

Lillian and Jack’s moments of tenderness are sweet but surpassed by those between Jack, Kid, wonderfully played by Lemuel Ariel Adou on press night, and Lucy/Lou, Lee Braithwaite, where the bandit’s arrival inspires a recognition of something in Lucy/Lou that had not before been named. A small but perfectly formed moment.

There’s plenty of high camp music (Jim Fortune), movement (Jennifer Jackson) and costumes (Grace Smart) that keeps the silliness coming. A four-piece band (musical director Gemma Storr) plays on stage throughout that could only have been improved through being more visible, rather than tucked off to the side.

The action of Act I proceeds seamlessly (co-direction Charlie Josephine and Sean Holmes). There’s broad coverage of themes from racial injustice to homophobia to trans bodies but these are all briefly danced over, with characters ready to absorb whatever is presented in front of them with childlike acceptance. This is no criticism – it’s cheering to just be absorbed in the charm and fantasy of the piece rather than having to think too deeply about injustice and inequality. But as the act comes to a close, things do feel like they are going all too well, and as the dancing spirals to a climax, low and behold the smoke clears and the long-forgotten men of the town are there in silhouette having returned to the town.

Act II brings the conflict, along with a barnstorming performance from LJ Parkinson as one-eyed Charlie, but it’s swiftly resolved. Rather than deep and brooding intellectual discussions, mostly the men just seem bemused and ready to accept the collective awakening that’s happened in their absence, before joining in for the gun slinging finale.

Cowbois is a queer western fantasy celebrating individual expression and love in all its forms. Its feminist exploration of gender identity will leave you feeling lighter and more optimistic than when you went in.


COWBOIS at the Royal Court

Reviewed on 17th January 2024

by Amber Woodward

Photography by Ali Wright

 

 

 

Previously reviewed at this venue:

MATES IN CHELSEA | ★★★ | November 2023
CUCKOO | ★★½ | July 2023
BLACK SUPERHERO | ★★★★ | March 2023
FOR BLACK BOYS … | ★★★★★ | April 2022

COWBOIS

COWBOIS

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