Tag Archives: Traverse Theatre

CONSUMED

★★★★

Edinburgh Festival Fringe

CONSUMED

Edinburgh Festival Fringe

★★★★

“a sophisticated and ambitious piece of writing”

Four generations of Northern Irish women gather for their great-grandmother’s 90th birthday: a family kitchen, a table set for dinner, and a tangle of unspoken histories. Over the course of the meal, tensions simmer, humour bubbles, and old wounds begin to show.
Karis Kelly’s Consumed, winner of the Women’s Prize for Playwriting, starts as a sharp and funny domestic drama. There is a clear and believable connection between the four women, with glances, shared gestures, and that mix of affection and irritation that comes from a lifetime under the same family roof. The youngest of the four, Muireann (Muireann Ní Fhaogáin), passionate about climate change, patriarchy and oat milk, clashes with the more traditional views of her elders, while the matriarchal Eileen (Julia Dearden) and her daughter Gilly (Andrea Irvine) bring their own layered history into the room. References to marriage, relationships, and what it means to “wear the trousers” in a partnership give a smart, often funny look at generational shifts and the ways some things have not shifted at all.

The performances are uniformly strong. Dearden brings a magnetic, grounded presence to great-grandmother Eileen, her deep voice and unfiltered honesty contrasting beautifully with Irvine’s effervescent Gilly, who hides her own struggles behind a bubbly façade. Caoimhe Farren has admirable conviction as Jenny and takes her to the extremities of emotion on her journey through the play. Ní Fhaogáin is convincing as the teenager great-granddaughter, although at times could do a little more to ensure she is keeping in tone with the rest of the cast.

Lily Arnold’s set is gorgeous in its detail, from the mould creeping through the wallpaper to the scuffed skirting boards and the cupboard crammed with expired tins and Bags for Life. The latter is a sly nod to the generational gap between caring for the planet and knowing how to go about it in practice. The smell of real cooking drifts into the audience, making the kitchen feel genuinely lived-in. Beth Duke’s sound design, Guy Hoare’s lighting and Karis Kelly’s witty script combine to welcome us fully into this family home.

As the piece moves into its final third, the familiar realism tilts suddenly towards supernatural horror. Flickering lights and rumbling sounds hint at something darker lurking in the house. It is an exciting shift in the writing, but the transition feels abrupt in performance. The tone wavers between psychological horror and heightened dark comedy, leaving some moments caught between the two without committing fully to either. A couple of emotional escalations, such as Jenny’s sudden outburst trashing the room, also jar against the otherwise well-paced dynamics.

Even with those uneven final beats, Consumed is a sophisticated and ambitious piece of writing, rich with ideas about generational trauma, women’s roles, and the histories we carry in our bodies as well as our memories. It is sharply funny, often moving, and brought to life by four captivating performances. With a little more space to breathe into its tonal shift, it could land with even greater impact.



CONSUMED

Edinburgh Festival Fringe

Reviewed on 10th August 2025 at Traverse 1 at Traverse Theatre

by Joseph Dunitz

Photography by Pamela Raith

 

 

 

 

 

CONSUMED

CONSUMED

CONSUMED

HEAVEN

★★★★

Traverse Theatre

HEAVEN

Traverse Theatre

★★★★

“Both actors bring an electrifyingly defiant and liberating performance to the stage”

Heaven is a masterfully executed piece of theatre. Centring around the relationship between a wife and husband (Mairead and Mal) of twenty or so years, reckoning with their future and attending a wedding whilst doing so. The pair separately explore whirlwinds of their own mid-life crises and flirt with what life has and has had to offer them.

Set in the Irish midlands, the play teems with vivid storytelling that transports audiences to the spaces it travels through. From cheesy wedding dancefloors in local hotels, to the high streets Mairead and Mal know so intimately, Eugene O’Brien’s writing elegantly moves the audience through these character’s lives as they hurtle out of control in clashing ways. O’Brien’s writing entangles gorgeously with Jim Culleton’s direction which see saws focus between the couple. Though not always on board with the Mairead and Mal’s choices, the audience can’t help but lean in to hear what will happen next. From the moment the house lights and Whitney Houston’s ‘I Will Always Love You’ fade down, and we are confronted with Mairead’s matter of fact-ness and bubbling dissatisfaction, the audience hangs on Janet Moran’s (Mairead) every pause, breath, and word.

Moran and Andrew Bennett’s (Mal) chemistry intriguingly transcend the two ever having to share a glance or direct dialogue with one another. As they battle with their struggling marriage, their disconnect is made crystal clear through this brilliant piece of direction and writing. It is a shame, however, that not more of this chemistry between the two is utilised with even a smidge more interaction between the two. Moments where their monologues lead on from one another are some of the comedic highlights of the piece. Between monologues, Zia Bergin-Holly’s lighting and set design perfectly move the action where it needs to go- beautifully utilising the glow from inside a pub or under a streetlight to shift between the two characters to new ideas, motives and spaces. I would be keen to see how the full use of the depth of stage could enhance this play further.

Though the piece is certainly enjoyable and intriguing, much of it begs the question of what it wants the audience to take from it. The precision of this answer, at times, feels lacking. Mal’s journey of exploring his sexuality coupled with, shall we say, fascination with religious icons, marks a grappling with Mal’s key conflict. This aspect of the play is tenderly explored, as well as played for laughs. The balance between the comedic and serious considerations of Mal’s relationship to Jesus, could perhaps be deserving of greater plainness. It is hard for audiences to discern where the laughter of the situation’s absurdity stops and the pity of it all begins.

Both actors bring an electrifyingly defiant and liberating performance to the stage, commanding the play’s language and pacing deftly. Whilst Heaven is unafraid to sit in the quiet and uncomfortable moments of the story, it similarly moves with ferociously enjoyable speed through its hilariously awkward and quick moving plot points. Bennett’s entire sequence through the wedding as he is faced with cross-roads and upheavals in his own sense of self, is a privilege to watch. Furthermore, Moran’s comedy acting brushed again her truly saddening reflections on the state of her relationships and purpose in life showcase her depth of character and strength as an actor.

The light and shade of this play is extraordinarily out of this world. Heaven suggests what we mean to each other and ourselves in our relationships, and where to go from rock bottom; it speaks to a raw and flawed humanity in its characters that simply cannot be bottled.



HEAVEN

Traverse Theatre

Reviewed on 26th February 2025

by Molly Knox

Photography by Ste Murray

 


 

Previously reviewed by Molly:

PRESENT | ★★★★ | December 2024
GWYNETH GOES SKIING | ★★★★ | November 2024
ST MAUD | ★★★ | October 2024
MAISIE ADAM: APPRAISAL | ★★★★ | October 2024
IS THE WI-FI GOOD IN HELL? | ★★★★★ | August 2024
MY MOTHER’S FUNERAL:THE SHOW | ★★★★★ | August 2024
CRYING SHAME | ★★★★★ | August 2024
TIT SWINGERS | ★★★★ | August 2024

 

HEAVEN

HEAVEN

HEAVEN