About The Show – Consent

Feature-Consent

Today, we sit down with Samantha Lambert, one of the stars of the upcoming, much-anticipated legal drama Consent, a courtroom and relationship drama replete with fierce wit and an intense exploration of justice and humanity.

About Consent

What is this Production about?

When two emotionally desensitised friends take opposing briefs on a sexual assault case, can justice be served?
Ultimately, Consent is a fierce and witty courtroom/relationship drama, about a group of lawyers and their private lives, and how their jobs impact their humanity.

Full synopsis:
Why is Justice blind? Is she impartial? Or is she blinkered?

Friends Ed and Tim take opposing briefs in a rape case. The key witness is a woman whose life seems a world away from theirs. At home, their own lives begin to unravel as every version of the truth is challenged.
A powerful, painful, funny play that sifts the evidence from every side and puts Justice herself in the dock.

★★★★★ “Jammed with ideas, rich with humanity… A modern classic.” – The Times
★★★★★ “One of Nina Raine’s most enjoyable and intelligent plays. Unreservedly recommended.” – The Independent
“A tense, entertaining modern-day tragi-comedy.” – Telegraph
“Modern classics don’t come along very often. Consent is, without a shadow of a doubt, just that: an intricately constructed philosophical drama that does for love, law and language what Michael Frayn’s Copenhagen did for particle physics and Tom Stoppard’s Arcadia did with time.” – Variety

Mature Audiences (16+ Event). Content Warning: Discussions and depictions of sexual violence, coarse language, smoke haze, and themes of suicide.

What character are you playing, and what can you share with us about them?

I’m playing Kitty, the wife of a charming, professionally callous barrister, Edward, who is cross-examining a key witness in a sexual assault case. Kitty and Ed’s friends are also barristers, making Kitty the only non-barrister in the room. She is incredibly empathetic and intelligent, but indulges her emotionally detached friends and their blunt, somewhat inhumane opinions.

What’s challenging about bringing this script to life?

I think there’s an incredibly challenging balance between the quick-paced, charming but fiery wordplay and the emotionally impactful drama of the script.

What sort of person is going to love this show?

Anyone who enjoys black comedy, legalistic witty wordplay, and courtroom/relationship dramas.

What’s going to surprise people about this show?

I think being such an impactful drama, the meaty chunks of vibrant comedy throughout the piece, are not only an audience reprieve, but as insight into these seemingly amoral, charming humans.

Is there anything else you’d like to add?

Poster Images by Joerg Lehman (@joerg_lehmann_photography).
Rehearsal photos by Madeline Ballie (@madeline.baillie)

Where can patrons purchase tickets to this production?

To book tickets to Consent, please visit https://www.trybooking.com/DKLHJ.

Thank you so much for sharing your insights and giving us a peek behind the scens of “Consent”. Break a leg as you delve into the challenging world of legal ethics and personal truths.

Other production interviews can be viewed in our About The Production Series.

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The Messy Truth of Reality – Consent

What I was expecting: A courtroom drama about a rape case, and the effect it has on the lawyers who are trying the case. A play that was going to be uncomfortable and confronting, but presented an important discussion into the way we think about “consent”.

What was presented: A dark comedy that looks at the breakdown of a housewife’s relationship with her husband. It was a deep and complex interrogation of the concept of truth, perspective and fidelity that had me laughing with and relating to the characters.

Although the play does follow a rape case, the case and the personal life of the barristers are quite disconnected. My two initial thoughts of how the performance would run were completely off; the barrister does not fall apart feeling guilty about getting a rapist off, nor does the play end with a guilty verdict that sets the world right again.

Instead, Consent looks at how being “technically right” through legal reasoning can work to ignore and deny the messy truth of reality. The audience is presented with everyone’s side of the story and refreshingly isn’t forced to agree with any one character’s perspective. Each is right. Each is wrong. Each is deeply flawed. Everything is thrown up in the air and allowed to settle with the audience wherever it falls.

The rape case in this performance is presented almost as a play within a play. It is used as a way to emphasise the unflinching and unmerciful reasoning of the law and the lawyers that use its logic. The lawyers hold all of the control, yet the victim Gail (performed in this production by Jessica Belle) resists their version of the truth. She refuses to become an actor in their play and demands to be heard.

In this production, the first act is performed entirely downstage, and a partition was placed in the middle of the stage and used as a “backstage” for the actors. However, lighting effects allowed the partition to become see-through at times, providing an eerie, foreboding, and ever-present reminder of the darker themes of the play.

The partition changes at the end of the first act, where Jessica Belle’s Gail tears it asunder. It’s a powerful choice of staging as Gail literally breaks that fourth wall down to get her truth across. With the partition broken, it’s as if all of the complex issues and emotional chaos that were so intensely avoided in this first act are allowed to flood in. And like a tsunami they do.

Cue act two. Every single actor came alive in this second act, revelling in their characters’ disturbed emotional states. In particular, Kitty (played by Anna Samson) became a woman unhinged. Statement costume pieces and strong sound design emphasised the power shift within the play, and Anna Samson skillfully portrayed the transformation from a doting housewife to a woman on a mission.

Another standout performance was delivered by Nic English in his portrayal of Edward. Whether he was cross-examining a rape victim, having a verbal spat with his wife, or cuddling a soft toy whilst crying like a small child, Nic English was an absolute pleasure to watch.

Outhouse Theatre Co‘s production of Consent tackles its heavy and dark themes seriously, whilst also making the audience laugh out loud as they do. The actors combined perfect line deliverance and expert timing amidst the thoughtful stagecraft making the production come together seamlessly.

This play is not as dark as the promotions and publicity might make you think, and I hope that anyone who has the opportunity to see it does. It was a thoroughly enjoyable performance from a very talented cast.

Consent runs for three more weeks Wednesday through to Saturday until the 24th of June.

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