Monday, 11 November 2019

“Consent” by Nina Raine
Nottingham Lace Market Theatre.
Nina Raine's “Consent” is a play about attitudes towards rape, and how victims of rape are treated by the current British justice system. It follows the lives and friendships of a group of London barristers. By day, they prosecute or defend crime suspects. Outside of work, like any other working environment, they socialise and of course talk about work.
Things begin to sour when Ed and Tim represent opposing sides in a rape trial. The details of the case and the tensions surrounding it set off a chain reaction among the six friends, bringing old grievances and new accusations to the surface.In the end there are no winners!
The play, which I've never seen before, is very gritty with some very gritty language; it pulls no punches on that front. Wherever you get grittiness you should always find great passion, and there is plenty of passionate performances from every member of the cast as every relationship is put on a slide and scrutinised under a microscope and then dissected.
Don't get me wrong there are injections of comic value, which you quite welcome because a lot of this play is very intense, and parts of the comedy at times make you feel a little uneasy at laughing because of the tension and unease, created so well by this cast.
Laura Chambers (Kitty), Mark Gadsby ( Edward), Alex Milligan (Zara), John Halstead (Tim), Matt Huntbach (Jake), Charlie Osborne (Rachel) and Michelle Smith (Gayle/Laura) gave absolutely everything in their performances, you could not have asked for more emotion and passion from every single one of these seven actors
Directed by Jim Brooks continues to carry the baton of excellence with this production. I for one would gladly have forgone the interval just to see the play all the way through because of the intensity. Some on the other hand may have needed the break just to release the pressure cooker atmosphere in this production.
Hugh Philip’s Lighting Design and Darren Coxon's Sound Design helped to keep the atmosphere with total blackouts for the scene changes and partial blackouts for the different scenes for the court room and Tim's poltergeist inhabited apartment. The sound, along with blackouts, had a strange soothing effect for just a short time, before the next explosion of emotions.
There is so much that i would, and want to tell you about this production, the intertwining stories and the utter horror of rape, and the rippling effects it has on characters on the interim.
We also get an incite into the way the law works, the composition of the questioning and the clever way that the law has the ability to influence the answers they want to hear, to bring about a chosen result.
Yes, the language is shocking. Yes the story is emotive. Yes the acting is powerful. Yes you should get a ticket, while you can because this is one of the most powerful plays I've seen for a while, and you wouldn't want to miss that... now would you?
“Consent” is at the Nottingham Lace Market Theatre until Saturday 16 November
Photographs by Grace Eden

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