Tag Archives: Tim Graves

WALKING EACH OTHER HOME

★★★

Old Red Lion Theatre

WALKING EACH OTHER HOME

Old Red Lion Theatre

★★★

“a thoughtful and heartfelt piece”

Tim Graves’ Walking Each Other Home opens by inviting us into a set that immediately establishes the emotional terrain of the play: a modest family living room designed by Jason Marc-Williams and Noah Cousins. Beside the sofa sits a cluster of cards featuring family members, a simple but effective visual device that hints at memory, loss and fractured relationships before a word is spoken.

We first meet Frank Maloney, played by Christopher Poke, an elderly man living with early-stage dementia. Poke gives Frank a layered and deeply sympathetic presence. At times bewildered, at times lucid, Frank drifts between confusion and clarity, uncertain of the day, the moment, or even who is standing in front of him.

Into this uneasy domestic space arrives Frank’s son Michael, played by Edward Fisher, returning from Peru with a backpack and years of unresolved pain. From the outset, we understand that Frank often believes Michael is dead, a heartbreaking symptom of his condition. Their reunion is therefore not one of warmth but of collision: old wounds resurface immediately, and bitterness between father and son dominates the room. Michael’s sexuality, and Frank’s historic discomfort with it, becomes one of the central fault lines of the drama.

What emerges between them is not only estrangement but an ongoing contest. Father and son seem locked in a competitive game for emotional ground: who has been more wronged, who deserves understanding, who can wound the other first.

Graves begins the play at a high emotional pitch, with anger and trauma already fully ignited. While this gives the opening urgency, it also leaves limited room for the tension to build further. Much of the play therefore sustains the same heightened emotional register rather than developing through shifts in rhythm or surprise.

The production finds welcome contrast in Sandeep Singh, Frank’s live-in carer, played with warmth and precision by Amrik Tumber. Sandeep provides much-needed lightness through dry humour, wit and emotional intelligence, and many of the play’s jokes land sharply and effectively. Sandeep also acts as a mirror to Michael. Where Michael has travelled across the world searching for peace and belonging, unable to find acceptance at home, Sandeep embodies a quieter certainty rooted in family, responsibility and inner balance. Their contrast is one of the play’s most interesting dynamics.

Frank frequently speaks of “visitors” and seeing other people in the room. Whether these figures are hallucinations, memories or something more spiritual is left intriguingly open. Combined with Michael’s interest in Amazonian shamanism and Sandeep’s Sikh faith, these moments give the play an ambitious metaphysical dimension.

There are scenes of real beauty here. Poke is especially moving when Frank confronts his own reflection and no longer recognises himself. Tumber also shines in moments of blunt honesty and tenderness. Fisher captures Michael’s pain convincingly, though the character can feel more symbolic than fully grounded.

Marc-Williams’ direction handles the emotional themes with sincerity, and the play’s core concerns are compelling: intergenerational trauma, forgiveness, queer identity and the need for support systems beyond blood ties. At times, however, the script leans too heavily into repetition, restating motivations rather than trusting the audience to infer them. Some monologues embrace a heightened poetic theatricality that can occasionally feel at odds with the play’s grounded emotional realism.

Even so, Walking Each Other Home remains a thoughtful and heartfelt piece – one about reconciliation, memory and the difficult but necessary work of learning how to forgive. For all their flaws and pain, each of its characters is ultimately reaching toward hope.



WALKING EACH OTHER HOME

Old Red Lion Theatre

Reviewed on 30th April 2026

by Nasia Ntalla

Photography by Lidia Crisafulli


 

 

 

 

WALKING EACH OTHER HOME

WALKING EACH OTHER HOME

WALKING EACH OTHER HOME

MATES

★★★★

Hen and Chickens Theatre

MATES

Hen and Chickens Theatre

★★★★

“playful, delightfully bonkers yet intelligently conceived”

Mates – ‘sounds like something you’d put on at a pub’ complains one of the budding actors early on in this exuberant and often hilarious metatheatrical comedy; and indeed, it is. Or rather, a highly reputable theatre above a pub in Islington. Billed as ‘a play by four mates about four mates trying to make a play about four mates,’ Mates is an all-male four-hander which explores shifting friendship dynamics, male competitiveness and innate vulnerability; the boisterous yet fragile male ego is on full display here. So too is a zany, creative chaos engendered by the unenviable task of having to produce a play with no script, director or venue booked.

The four actor friends get together after years apart to devise a piece of theatre which has apparent funding from a mysterious backer referred to as ‘The Prince.’ Contracts have been signed with a £999,999 liability clause. This raises the stakes of the drama, and we see how the characters react under pressure and the cracks that begin to appear in their friendship. Ciaran Duce (Luke) Joseph Ollman (Max) Jack Staddon (Cosmo) and Kieran Urquhart (JJ) demonstrate great comic timing, physical stage presence and are to be commended for their boundless laddish energy and evident confidence and joy in working as an ensemble.

The director, Will Merick, and movement director, Emily Orme, are to be congratulated for creating dynamic and engaging fast-paced scenes and for the strong element of physical theatre in the piece. Contact improvisation, the ability to instantly recreate very different locations on stage through physical movement and a brilliantly conceived and hilarious dance routine raise it to the next level. Nick Coppell, the technical engineer, also helps to enhance the innate theatricality of the piece and atmosphere through timely music, and a variety of different sound and lighting cues.

The playwriting is topical, even zeitgeisty with references to toxic masculinity, radical empathy, and paedophile gangs in the upper echelons of society. It is also clever – deviating into more surreal, philosophical territory when the characters become talking heads through holes in a hastily erected piece of black fabric. Thus begins an existential angst-ridden discourse on the nature of time and human existence. And for those who delight in metatheatrical drama, Mates will not disappoint – this is not just a play within a play – but several plays within a play – each actor competing with his mates for his own outlandish idea to be chosen for the actual production.

The shift at the end of the play towards dramatising a more emotionally authentic connection between the characters is to be applauded. Yet the scene set on ‘Banana Island,’ whilst delightfully comical, doesn’t quite land emotionally. However, this play deserves a longer run. Mates is a playful, delightfully bonkers yet intelligently conceived and executed piece of theatre’ it will hold your attention throughout. Ultimately, it is a joyous celebration of straight male friendship, theatre, and the very human proclivity to imagine a life beyond the ordinary. As JJ (Kieran Urquhart) proclaims whilst directing his play within the play, ‘I say invoke the spirits of the theatre. Tell your theatre your dreams!’



MATES

Hen and Chickens Theatre

Reviewed on 30th January 2026

by Tim Graves

Photography by Sam Travis


 

 

 

 

Mates

Mates

Mates