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'
An infectiously defiant spirit ... linguistically versatile and politically
charged ... heartening" Time Out****
Written
by Gbolahan Obisesan, Cressida Brown and Emily Randall, 'Home' tells the
story of a family living on the Beaumont Estate in the present day, mere
months before the planned demolition of the 3 iconic Beaumont Towers.
It is inspired by the words and stories of residents interviewed by Offstage
Theatre, which are dramatised to create a unique piece of site-specific
work that takes place in real-time as audiences are led around the different
rooms of a vacated flat in St Catherine's Tower. |
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The
‘Street Warden’ (Anna Jordan) guides the audience into and around
the space, relating information about family members and the estate's history,
whilst the 3 family members, ‘Mother’ (Miranda Cook), ‘Son’
(Abdoulie Mboob) and ‘Daughter’ (Géhane Strehler) are
seen in the grip of a tumultuous change in their lives: an unknown (but
clearly violent) event has taken place the night before, involving the daughter's
boyfriend, PJ, and she is faced with entering into his dangerous world and
losing her family, or leaving the estate. |
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Each
character has a distinctive and expressive lyrical style: the Daughter delivers
an explosive rap about being torn between the local gang and wanting to
escape the estate. She captivates the audience with her rhythmical speech
and entices them into her world by drawing them into her graffiti covered
bedroom to a soundtrack of hypnotic beats. |
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The
Son is a dreamer: he dreams of being a boxer in the 2012 Olympics and his
monologue paints an evocative picture of life high up in St Catherine’s
Tower, far from the gangland troubles below. He shares the secret world
he has created for himself up on the roof of the tower with the audience,
a world in which he dreams of playing real life Monopoly with his girlfriend
against the backdrop of London’s skyline. |
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The
Mother struggles to keep her children from falling prey to the pressures
of contemporary urban life and abandoning their dreams, and takes the audience
on a poetic journey that reveals the truth behind the Beaumont Estate and
the lives of its residents over the past 4 decades. |
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In
following the drama as it unfolds, the audience is taken on a tour of
the tower – from the communal rubbish shoots to the inside of the
family’s flat. The urgency lent to the narrative by the impending
destruction of the vibrant and troubled location in which it is set is
made all the more powerful by the ever-changing stage on which the story
unfolds, the stage which is the very home of this Beaumont Estate family.
"A
coup de théâtre ... a piece at once human, gripping, touching
... impeccably sensitive and nuanced. I consider myself priviledged to
have seen this very fine production." What's On Stage
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edge
graffiti |
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