• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar
  • Skip to footer

News and entertainment worth sharing – York and North Yorkshire

  • News
  • Radio
  • Vouchers
  • WIN
  • More
    • Tickets
    • Lifestyle
    • Advertise
    • About
    • Contact

Review: The Be All & End All

Thu 10 May

Angie Millard sees a world premiere at the York Theatre Royal

Thu 10 May 2018  @ 1:45pm
Angie Millard
Things to do

This is the world premiere of a play with challenging themes – and is an excellent choice by York Theatre Royal artistic director Damian Cruden.

An interrogation of our morals, The Be All & End All is thought provoking and as such, balances the season nicely.

The Be All & End All

York Theatre Royal

Till Sat May 19

£14.50-£30.50

More details

The question at the heart of the play is: how far you would go to secure that all important A level grade A*?

Imagine the mark is for your child. We all know how competitive entrance to the top universities is. Would you cheat? Manipulate? How could you justify such deception?

And what is most important… how could you?

Labyrinth of deceit

The play deals with what is superficially a happy and successful family and examines how they are drawn into a dangerous labyrinth of deceit.

They already have privilege and power so why can they not trust in the system? What makes them so sickeningly afraid of what they see as failure?

The play itself is a real family affair. It is written by Jonathan Lewis who also appears in the piece under his stage name of Jonathan Guy Lewis.

He plays the Tory minister husband of Imogen Stubbs who is, in fact, his partner in real life.

Imogen Stubbs, Robyn Cara and Matt Whitchurch

As the piece unfolds the motives and driving forces behind their actions spiral towards a very clear and tragic conclusion.

Lewis, as Mark, is essentially a political ‘fixer’ and plays the confident and entitled character with supreme conviction.

When he finally breaks it is violent and uncontrolled. Imogen Stubbs as his wife Charlotte is similarly privileged but shows no insight.

Her blind devotion to the cult of success means that she offers a solution to every problem and has produced a totally dependent son.

He is played with clever ambivalence by Matt Whitchurch: a self-harming, confused individual who manages to manipulate his girlfriend Frida to pity and love him for his weakness. His vulnerability is key.

Subtlety and precision

Intense… Robyn Cara

Robyn Cara plays her part as the girlfriend with intensity – she is the ‘scholarship girl’ who corrects his father’s Latin and his mother’s use of a split infinitive but her earnest desire to help is her weakness and facilitates the climax of the drama.

Damian Cruden directs with an intelligently deft touch, never allowing the action on stage to overpower or dictate the audience’s response. When there is a denouement we feel the shock of discovery and are led skilfully to the next event.

Charlotte’s cancer treatment is handled sensitively as are the other issues. But I won’t tell you any more, suffice it to say, that whatever happens is presented with subtlety and precision.

The designer has created a smart kitchen and lounge which gradually become more and more dishevelled as the action unfolds, A mess of bottles, money and stained cloths litter the stage.

Being found out

Tackling the issues of our age

The Be All & End All deals with issues which beg to be explored and are sustained by the superb quality of the acting.

It begins by talking about the universal problem of exams, ambition and the stress people bring upon themselves and ends by telling us so much more about love, dependency and the need to be heard.

It is a play which questions the dishonest self-serving politics of our time and suggests that while we can try to influence destiny, altering it is essentially much more difficult.

As Mark says everyone is cheating… it is being found out which causes the problem.

Related YorkMix stories

Classic films and modern music lined up for York venue’s exciting new season

‘An evening of celebration’ – York LGBT Forum to stage its first big theatre show

Showbiz legend Joan Collins is coming to York


Trending »


Primary Sidebar

Footer

Contact us

General
01904 375 029

Studio/competitions
01904 375 030

Email YorkMix »

5-6 King's Court
Shambles
York  YO1 7LD

Listen to us

You can listen to YorkMix Radio using your DAB+ radio, Alexa or Google smart speaker, or online using the links below.

Click here to listen to YorkMix Radio »

Download the app from Google Play store
Download the app from Apple App store
About us

YorkMix is a trading name of
York Sound Ltd

Registered in England
Company no: 12831940
VAT no: GB289462452

YorkMix Radio public file

  • About
  • Public file
  • Privacy policy
  • Corrections & complaints
  • Contact

Copyright © 2025 YorkMix