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The 5 Dagger Mystery
Father
Brown – The Curse of the Invisible Man
South
Shields Customs
House
Until
Tuesday
26th April 2016
Rumpus
Theatre brings Gilbert Keith Chesterton’s mild-mannered Father Brown to live in
order to solve another mystery.
Diana
Hope is a keen archaeologist who found two of a set of five 8th century
daggers. Each dagger had been inscribed with the name of an enemy of the time
and a part of a phrase in Latin. Her wish had been to piece together all 5
parts of the mystery. Unfortunately one of those daggers was stolen, presumably
by the former fiancé of her neice.
Her
niece Ella then receives a letter written in red rink suggesting that they need
to hand over the second dagger to the former boyfriend. Rather than contact the
police, Diana decides to pop into Father Brown’s church to see if her life long
friend fancies working out the mystery.
As Father Brown investigates there are some killings, centred around
these daggers, but no witnesses.
John
Lyons will be remembered for his role as David Jason’s sidekick DS George
Toolan in ITV’s A Touch of Frost for 17 years. He moves from that detective
role to that of Father Brown. John’s experience leads to a pleasing second act
in which his character takes control of the situation.
Diana
Hope, the archaeologist aunt, is played by Karen Henson. Again the character
benefits from a much better second act. The trouble in the first act is that
she has to deliver a huge chunk of exposition about the history of the daggers.
This could have been cut down someone and that would have help improve the pace
of the early scenes.
Charlotte
Chinn appears as the artistic niece Diana. Both Charlotte and Karen give
engaging performances as the likeable, if not slightly dotty, characters.
John
Goodrum is the playwright, co-director (with David Gilbrook), setting &
lighting designer and appears as current fiancé of Diana, Angus Turnbull. Angus
is fresh out of the army and keen to protect Diana.
Sometimes
murder mysteries suffer from too many scene changes but that is not the case
here. However, a little bit of trimming of the back story would have helped
make this a tighter tale.
That
said, Father Brown – The Curse of the Invisible Man represents a welcomed yet
fairly rare stage appearance by GK Chesterton’s popular crime buster. It is
nice to see someone detect a case without engaging in histrionics. John Lyons is a delight to watch and a great
supporting cast make this an enjoyable evening’s entertainment.
This review was written by Stephen
Oliver for
Jowheretogo PR (www.jowheretogo.com). Follow
Jo on twitter @jowheretogo, Stephen @panic_c_button or like Jowheretogo on
Facebook www.facebook.com/Jowheretogo.
Read the original North East Theatre Guide preview: http://nomorepanicbutton.blogspot.co.uk/2016/04/preview-father-brown-at-south-shields.html
Tickets:
Father Brown – The Curse of the
Invisible Man is on at the Mill Dam theatre on Monday and Tuesday from 7.45pm.
Tickets start from £14 with meal
deal options available from the box office on 0191 454 1234 or by visiting www.customshouse.co.uk.
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