Tag Archives: X25

GAWAIN AND THE GREEN KNIGHT

★★★★

Park Theatre

GAWAIN AND THE GREEN KNIGHT

Park Theatre

★★★★

“an uproariously funny adaptation”

The story of Gawain is a deeply serious one – a man who takes on a mighty quest for his pride. However, this production playing in the Park90 space at Park Theatre is anything but serious.

Gawain and the Green Knight tells the story of a truly boring man (played by co-writer Felix Grainger) who is set to get fired from his cybersecurity job, where the company is taking on dramatic changes inspired by the Middle Ages (and a little bit of AI). Gawain pleads with his superiors, but they are simply appalled by his lack of a spark. As Gawain gets sacked and goes down the elevator, his world turns upside down and he finds himself in a completely different era, where he must now go on a journey to find the Green Knight.

We’re initially situated in a regular office environment, but Simon Nicholas’ set transforms seamlessly into the Middle Ages, with the nifty elevator in the middle of the playing space providing a useful tool to transport Gawain through time. Kelly Ann Stewart’s direction brings us along on Gawain’s mission through a variety of obscure and hilarious challenges, utilising the very malleable cast of four at her disposal. The firing of Gawain in the first act is executed hilariously, as Gabriel Fogarty-Graveson as Lance and Cara Steele as Arthur maintain a great back-and-forth, with Laura Pujos as Guinevere being the helpless bystander in the background. The writing is witty and the jokes feel effortless, yet relentless, with most of them landing like a treat. Despite the constant comedy we enjoy in the first act, we are reminded of the heart of the story through Laura Pujos’ beautiful singing that stops the show, as she steps forward singing through tears, which enables the audience to fall in love with Guinevere and begin rooting for her and Gawain. After the musical interruption, the comedy continues to thrive into the second act, with lyrical words of the original story being filtered in throughout. The laughs actually intensify as Gawain explores the Middle Ages, and the ensemble alternate in playing different wacky characters that Gawain has to befriend. Just as the comedy reaches an absolute peak in the second act, it does slightly simmer, losing momentum, and perhaps Gawain’s quest begins to go on for too long, but the story gets wrapped up nicely, leaving audience members with a feel-good factor by the end.

Gabriel Fogarty-Graveson has such a skill in deadpan comedy and is able to amplify any line of text he is speaking – which is surely helped by him co-writing the piece (with Felix Grainger). Cara Steele has an excellent physicality she uses to embody the wide range of characters she has to portray and Laura Pujos uses her voice so adeptly to distinguish between her different roles. Felix Grainger plays the perfect hero in this story, with his puppy-dog eyes enabling the audience to feel a paternal quality when Gawain is faced with danger. He is such clarity and is so crisp in his dialogue, ensuring we don’t miss a word.

This is an uproariously funny adaptation that fully justifies its attachment to the source material, yet also becoming its own completely separate entity. This production undoubtedly deserves a future life where it can hopefully expand and be given a chance to grow this world even more.



GAWAIN AND THE GREEN KNIGHT

Park Theatre

Reviewed on 12th December 2025

by James Simons

Photography by Kira Turnpenny


 

 

 

 

GAWAIN AND THE GREEN KNIGHT

GAWAIN AND THE GREEN KNIGHT

GAWAIN AND THE GREEN KNIGHT

THE SIGNALMAN

★★★★

Drayton Arms Theatre

THE SIGNALMAN

Drayton Arms Theatre

★★★★

“a nerve-tingling and thought-provoking adaptation”

We begin in rural Somerset, at the Clayton Inn boarding house in the small hamlet of Clayton. It’s a tight-knit Victorian community where visitors are warmly welcomed. Yet beneath its peaceful surface lies the memory of a long-ago railway disaster — a tragedy whose ghost still casts a shadow over the village.

Helen Bang, as our visitor to the village (this production’s version of the narrator), and Peter Rae (as the signalman) lead a riveting adaptation of the short story first published by Charles Dickens in 1866. Dickens wrote the story shortly after surviving the Staplehurst rail crash in 1865, an incident that affected him deeply and inspired the eerie sense of trauma and claustrophobia that permeates the signal box.

This trauma comes through in the signalman, who claims to have seen the same apparition shortly before two previous tragedies that occurred on the section of the line that he is patrolling; its first appearance coming hours before a train crashed in the tunnel, its second preceding the death of a young woman on the line, whose life the signalman had tried desperately to save. Most eerily though, the apparition has returned for a third time, leaving him incessantly trying to decipher its warnings and avert whatever may be the next tragedy.

Peter Rae expertly crafts this role as our protagonist descends further into confusion and anxiety following the unusual goings-on. Rae acts as Dickens’ storyteller and moves the plot with excellent precision. The most impressive part of his performance is that he encapsulates the themes that were central to the original story over a century later. We see the dangers of isolation, with the signalman working long hours in an isolated location. The performance also achieves a balance whereby the conclusion can be made by the audience as to the origins of the ghostly appearances. Could they be the result of a psychological episode driven by stress and sleep-deprivation-induced hallucinations? Alternatively, could we have entered into the realms of the supernatural?

The tremendous two-hander is completed by Helen Bang, the visitor, who befriends the lonely signalman and accompanies him on his night shifts. Earning his trust, she acts as a sounding board, allowing him to open up about his psychological frailty. She seems an innocuous passer-by but her greeting — “Halloa, below there” — hints that she may be more closely tied to the apparitions than she first appears. It is a quietly stylish performance, as any break in her calmness would destroy the tension of the piece.

The play is able to effortlessly transport us to the scene due to the excellent set design (Karen Holley); incorporating a signal box, fully kitted out with signal flags, levers and switches, behind a railway track. This is accompanied by, in a first for the Drayton Arms Theatre, surround sound effects (Steve Ramondt) which bring the audience into the action.

The climax is arguably not as strong as the set-up, with the ending feeling slightly abrupt. This also means that the play had potential to explore some of the themes in greater depth, where, for example, it felt like the visitor may develop her own character arc in the story. Nonetheless, the show is a nerve-tingling and thought-provoking adaptation which gives new life to the famous novella.

 



THE SIGNALMAN

Drayton Arms Theatre

Reviewed on 11th December 2025

by Luke Goscomb

Photography by Victoria Lari


 

 

 

 

THE SIGNALMAN

THE SIGNALMAN

THE SIGNALMAN