The Moth

Micky Cochrane as Marius and Faz Singhateh as John in The Moth
Image credit: Victoria Wai

Written by Paul Herzberg

Directed by Jake Murray

Aldridge Studio, The Lowry Theatre

On paper The Moth is ticking all the right boxes as an exciting piece of drama that examines some highly pertinent issues around racism, fascism and the legacy of Apartheid. South African writer Paul Herzberg has crafted a full length play from his award winning 12 minute piece for The Covid-19 Monologues The Moth. Elysium Theatre Company and Director Jake Murray have a strong track record in delivering high quality productions such as Jesus Hopped The A Train, and this tour is their biggest yet taking in 25 venues. This is an ambitious production with a lot to say about how our history haunts and informs our present and whether forgiveness is always possible or even appropriate.

You think you know me. You don’t. So its time to talk.”

In 1997 two men meet by chance on a train from Scotland to King’s Cross. Sat opposite each other on this long journey these very different men are connected through their origin stories. John Jordana played by Faz Singhateh is a successful black British journalist who was born in a prison in South Africa and came to Britain via East Berlin where he fled with his father, an established political activist. He has great pride in his father but no relationship with his mother who stayed in South Africa. Marius Muller (Micky Cochrane) is a white South African who was conscripted into the Army and fought in the horrific Angolan Border War. Brutalised by a violent pro Nazi father and traumatised by his war experiences, he was also abandoned by his mother. These men share an uneasy conversation which leads to a shocking revelation that John writes about and the resulting fallout over the subsequent years leads to further meetings. This finally sees them face each other in a television studio as they come together to share their stories with us as the studio audience.

This is an interesting premise and is actually based on some true experiences. Writer Paul Herzberg was also a conscripted soldier in the War and has written an number of plays about the South African military experience. Here the focus is on what happens when the son of a freedom fighter comes face to face with a one time soldier responsible for war atrocities. The simple staging is effective and allows for a sense of a television studio while also serving as seats on a train or John’s home office. The use of a large monitor serves to create the illusion of scenery flying by on the train journeys, while also allowing Adjoa Andoh to pop up on Skype as John’s mother or images of family photos for both men that give a further sense of their background. stories.

Both actors give powerful performances in this lengthy and intense production. Micky Cochrane is particularly impressive maintaining a strong South African accent throughout. They both play complex and damaged men who seem frustratingly unable to connect yet appear to have an invisible thread pulling them together over decades.

Image credit: Victoria Wai

There is a real need right now for theatre that explores difficult political and ethical issues in new ways that help us make sense of a troubled world. The Moth does impart a real sense of the horror and brutality of war but it veers toward repeating its narrative in order to emphasis the story and instead this dense repetition loses the Director and his actors an opportunity to real breathe life into this production. Including the interval the play runs at about two hours that is heavy on dialogue but seems to fail to truly capture a sense of either protagonist. Scenes like the one in John’s upstairs office just don’t feel authentic. His loving wife would be highly unlikely to let a man she had never met but knew to have been the perpetrator of violent war crimes upstairs in her home to surprise her husband while their children were in the house. This feels like a missed opportunity to use that time to flesh out these complex men or to make a decision to run at 70 mins and tell an important war story succinctly and powerfully.

Aldridge Studio 10th-12th April 2025

Tour dates

Mushroom Language: A Fungal Gothic

Ali Matthews and Tom Hall in Mushroom Language: A Fungal Gothic at The Aldridge Studio, The Lowry
Image credit: Georgiana Ghetiu

Written and Conceived by Ali Matthews

The Aldridge Studio, The Lowry

Dreamy, disquieting and dystopian are some of the words that come to mind watching this striking and playful production. Creator Ali Matthews and her fellow performer Tom Halls open the doors to their playroom and it is a dark and unsettling place. There are moments where they create an uncomfortable voyeurism seemingly a couple with a predilection for quirky game playing…other times it is like watching Hanzel and Gretal going feral in a bleak forest where a fox masquerading as Granny would be a veritable walk in the park!

This darkly funny eco horror blends hypnotic and poetic story telling with B-Movie zombies, plastic baby dolls gleefully spored out like jizz, decaying animals and soothsaying crows. Clever and wonderfully weird Matthews looks at cycles of fertility, birth, death and decay by literally immersing herself in the ground and becoming one with the kingdom of the mushroom. This production is literally oozing concepts and ideas and in many ways feels like a serious of improvised theatre games where Matthews and Hall are egging each other on to new creative extremes. The results are utterly bonkers at times but the two performers are so slyly charming and engaging it is impossible not to be won over by this freakish new world unfolding on stage.

Ali Matthews in Mushroom Language: A Fungal Gothic.
Image credit: Georgiana Ghetiu

This third world of the Fungi is imagined by set designer Ruta Irbite using what seems like acres of crumpled dark brown tarpaulin and stark trees seemingly formed from a merging of bare branches and human and animal bone. There is magic in this set as the performers forage and root in the ground and props keep appearing like rabbits from a magicians hat. Baby dolls, crows, lengths of intestine like gauze, pigs heads all emerge from this primordial earth and even the performers seem swallowed up at times.

Strange and otherworldly yet accessible our world collides with this third kingdom as the intrepid pair explore the forming of lichen, the intoxicating stench of truffles and the slow decay delighting the oyster mushroom while referencing Zombies, Linda Blair and disposable nappies. Both central performances are perfectly pitched with Matthews at times bewitching and enchanting then childishly demanding. Halls is delightfully quirky and clearly relishing this darkly playful role. There is genuine charisma between them which makes the scenes where they are literally as ‘one’ work very effectively.

Mushrooms may indeed hold the key to our future survival as they are so highly adaptable. We are continually learning more about their secret world and this production is certainly a loving homage to the magic of Mushrooms and may possibly have been inspired by the ingestion of a few of the more magic ones!!

The Lowry 25/26th October 2023