2:22 A Ghost Story

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2:22 A Ghost Story
2 22 A Ghost Story poster.jpg
Poster for the West End production
Written by
CharactersJenny
Lauren
Sam
Ben
Date premiered3 August 2021
Place premieredNoël Coward Theatre, London
GenreThriller

2:22 A Ghost Story is a play by Danny Robins.

Production history[]

On 10 June 2021, the play was announced that it would premiere at the Noël Coward Theatre in London's West End from 3 August running until 16 October 2021. The production will be directed by Matthew Dunster, designed by Anna Fleischle with a cast including Lily Allen as Jenny, Julia Chan as Lauren, Hadley Fraser as Sam and Jake Wood as Ben.[1][2]

Following the successful run at the Noël Coward, it was announced the play would transfer to the Gielgud Theatre in from 4 December 2021 to 12 February 2022 with a new cast was announced including Stephanie Beatriz as Lauren, James Buckley as Ben, Elliot Cowan as Sam and Giovanna Fletcher as Jenny.[3]

Cast and characters[]

Character Noël Coward cast (2021) Gielgud cast (2021)
Jenny Lily Allen Giovanna Fletcher
Lauren Julia Chan Stephanie Beatriz
Sam Hadley Fraser Elliot Cowan
Ben Jake Wood James Buckley
Company / Understudies Richard Pryal
Bianca Stephens

Plot[]

Jenny and her husband Sam have recently bought a large house. Each night at exactly 2:22 am she hears the sound of someone moving around the house, often via the baby monitor in her child's bedroom, and becomes convinced that the house is haunted. Sam insists that it isn't and offers alternative natural explanations for the noise. The couple hosts a dinner party for Lauren, an old friend of Sam's, and Ben, her new boyfriend. After discussing the strange noises, Jenny persuades the others to stay up until 2:22 to see what happens.[4][5]

Reception[]

In The Guardian, Kate Wyver wrote, "With a brilliant sense of mounting dread and just the right number of jump-scares, Danny Robins' new ghost story is a slick, chilling romp of a play", adding, "You wouldn’t know this is Allen's first time acting in the West End. She is strong as the frantic, afraid and exhausted Jen […] though it’s in her moments of stillness that the fear best finds its way in".[4] She described the cast as "gleaming", noting "Fraser’s Sam is so realistic it’s hard to believe he’s acting", that Wood "revels in [his role of Ben], drawing out the humour and diving into the mysticism", and that "Chan does a brilliant balancing act, shifting Lauren’s loyalties throughout the night".[4] Wyver praised Robins' script, finding it "sharp, quick, and cleverly layered with clues. While his handling of horror is nothing new, it’s done smartly, toying with the tropes. In one of the most chilling scenes, absolutely nothing happens yet the grand old room is electric with the fear of expectation".[4] She was less impressed with "an overuse of deafening fox screams" and found that "arguments occasionally escalate into one-note yelling" but judged that "neither of these things do much to detract from the steadily growing tension". Overall, she decided, "This show is not scary enough to cause nightmares, nor is it gruesome or graphic or gory; it’s more human than the creepiest horror movies. But there are genuinely chilling moments, scary enough that the whole theatre is tense and pin-drop quiet. […] Scary enough, perhaps, to have you turn on the light the next time you hear an unusual sound at night, just to check the time".[4]

Reviewing the play for The Independent, Annabel Nugent wrote, "Allen is superb as Jenny. Exhaustion thrums a fraction below her palpable fear – just visible enough in her performance to have you questioning Jenny’s version of events. And while it may be Allen who everyone has come to see, she isn’t bearing the weight alone", adding, "Fraser embodies the role of his condescending character so fully that you come away hating him just a little", noting that "Wood steals scenes as Ben, giving the comedic character punchlines that stick, as well as an unforeseen likeability", and judging that Chan "confidently treads a delicate line in one of the more complicated parts".[6] Nugent also found Robins’s script "tight and layered. On-stage action waxes and wanes but the mounting sense of dread is relentless" adding that he "is well-versed in what makes scary stories scarier, and uses that to brilliant effect here" and praising his "adept writing of emotionally charged two-handers, which provide a useful toehold into the characters’ psychological universe".[6] She concluded, "Much more than simply a successful first foray into theatre for one British singer, 2:22 stands on its own merits. Bar a handful of genuinely terrifying moments, it’s hardly The Exorcist, but maybe that’s for the best. There are enough scary things happening in the world right now to keep us up at night".[6]

External links[]

References[]

  1. ^ "Lily Allen to make West End debut in Danny Robins' 2:22 – A Ghost Story | WhatsOnStage". www.whatsonstage.com. Retrieved 2021-06-10.
  2. ^ "Lily Allen makes her West End debut this August in West End chiller '2:22 – A Ghost Story'". Time Out London. Retrieved 2021-06-10.
  3. ^ "2:22 a Ghost Story transfers to Gielgud Theatre". 8 November 2021.
  4. ^ a b c d e Wyver, Kate (12 August 2021). "2:22: A Ghost Story review – Lily Allen gives you chills in slick, clever horror". The Guardian. Retrieved 12 August 2021.
  5. ^ McIntosh, Steven (12 August 2021). "Lily Allen on making her West End debut in 2:22 - A Ghost Story". BBC News Online. Retrieved 12 August 2021.
  6. ^ a b c Nugent, Annabel (12 August 2021). "2:22 A Ghost Story review, Noël Coward Theatre: Lily Allen makes an eerily good stage debut in tense horror". The Independent. Retrieved 13 August 2021.
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