The Critics Circle Awards announced on 3rd April that they would be giving The Original Theater a commendation for Exceptional Theater Making During Lockdown. More than any other Theater Company they demonstrated extraordinary innovation and creativity as they developed their techniques to create a compelling and gripping streamed drama for our home consumption. They are at their best when the production takes on a cinematic feel while retaining the sense of being live as in the wonderful Into the Night in December 2021. This latest offering is completely different. The Red is a very polished theatrical staging of a radio play filmed in a single location in the Vaults. It is very well acted and produced with a powerful very personal feeling message but lacks the energy, drama, and innovation of some of last year’s work.

The casting of Bruce Alexander and his own son Sam as the father and son in the play John and Benedict was inspired by adding a touching reality to their verbal jousting over whether he should risk it or not. They create two very convincing believable characters, and the dusty setting adds realism to the play. The Director, Charlotte Peters, at first had Benedict ignoring the physical presence of his father but soon they are talking directly to each other although there is never any physical contact. It is slightly curious that when they recall the AA meeting the camera reveals the fourth wall is the seating in the Vaults Theater in a rather cold and odd shot.
The format of an enacted radio play is the drawback. We never meet the other family members, his brother and sister who share the inheritance, his mother, his current girlfriend or the mother of his children or his work colleagues. How would they react and what impact has his battle with abstinence had on them? It’s hinted at but the real drama would have been developed if we had seen more of what is at stake. I wanted to care more about him, and the consequences of a drink rather than just see a well-acted clinical discussion of the pros and cons of just one sip.
Review by Nick Wayne
Rating: ★★★
Seat: Online | Price of Ticket: £20