Waterloo East Theatre – until 26 October 2024
Reviewed by Claire Roderick
4****
After a run at Theatre at the Tabard last year, Peter Hamilton’s tragicomedy comes to Waterloo east with a new director and new cast.
When Ashley Davenport’s (Richard Linnell) never-ending gap year took him to India, he came face to face with Yama, King of Death (Tanya Katyal) and decides to turn his back on life and embrace death. Booking himself into the exclusive Gethsemane Garden Village Retirement Home, he is met with incredulity by the staff and residents – but money talks – so Ashley becomes the newest resident at the ripe old age of 24.
The comfortable but repetitive, institutionalised lives of the elderly residents as they reminisce about past lives and fatalistically look to the future are at odds with the staff – undocumented immigrants who share their stories of abuse and captivity from their perilous entry to the UK. Hamilton plays with culture clashes between teenagers and the elderly, the entitlement of the rich compared to those struggling to survive in a cruel and unfair world, and whimsical riffs on happiness, life, and death.
All these threads felt a little disconnected in the previous production, but director Ross McGregor uses music and movement with the entire cast to create a mystical feel and a more coherent play. James Maxwell’s elephant animation is fantastic, and Lucy Moxon’s design – with a simple screen allowing scenes in different locations to flow almost seamlessly – Johnathan Simpson’s lighting, Alistair Lax and Michael Bird’s sound, and Susie Hamilton and Lucy Ioannou’s art design add layers of weird and wonderful atmosphere, while movement directors Will and Dorie Pinchin create a gentle ritualistic dance of life and death. The addition of Yama, constantly watching and silently influencing the characters helps the plot, making journeys to and returns from the lilac room, and Miguel’s (Ryan Crellin-Simpson) sad choice more reasonable and emotional.
Richard Linnell is great fun as the entitled and clueless Ashley, bouncing bemusedly off the effusive but tragic Mr Krish (Jamie Zubairi). The residents (the fantastic Ian Crowe, Annette Holland, Sian Howard, and Moray Treadwell) have become less caricatures with more humanity and an underlying melancholy, making their sillier moments much more affecting.
A fun, thought-provoking and thoughtful production about life, death and free will. Well worth a look.