Dear England

Reviewed by Nikki Cotter

Opening Night Verdict ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️

The revival of the 2023 Olivier Award-winning Best New Play has opened at The Lowry for a month-long away fixture offering regional audiences their first chance to catch this inventive production outside of the Capital.

Following the fascinating story of Gareth Southgate’s memorable eight years as England Manager this National Theatre production has all the exhilarating highs and gut-wrenching lows familiar to football fans; however, it goes far beyond the sport itself offering a thrilling and insightful exploration of culture, connection and what it means to hold the hopes and dreams of a nation in your hands.

Having updated the ending to reflect England’s 2024 Euro’s journey, writer James Graham grabs every opportunity to show the audience that this truly is a game of two halves, at times joyous, other times brutal but always authentically honest.

Beginning with a flashback to Euro ’96 as a young Southgate steps up to take the now infamous missed penalty, this moment cleverly sets the tone and returns as a running theme to challenge Southgate (Gwilym Lee) throughout the piece. As we fast-forward to 2016 we see Southgate drafted in as caretaker manager following Sam Allardyce’s sacking after just one game in charge. Determined to make a positive change and do things differently, Southgate brings in sports psychologist Pippa Grange (Liz White), what follows is an incredible journey that goes way beyond football.

Taking on the role of Southgate is an impressive Gwilym Lee, having seen Lee portray Brian May so accurately in Queen biopic Bohemian Rhapsody it comes as no surprise that he hits the mark once again. With every measured tilt of the head, folding of the arms and blink of the eyes his nuanced performance is perfection. He leads this fine cast with a gentle hand and captures the essence of Southgate perfectly.

Liz White as Pippa Grange is a consistent presence of calm, challenged by resistance from both players and coaching staff she never wavers. Graham in his writing uses Grange’s character to gently remind us that while Southgate was becoming a mentor and father figure to many in the team he was also battling his own demons, struggling to show himself the kindness he was so brilliantly instilling in others.

The ensemble cast compliment Lee and White perfectly, they portray their real-life counterparts with incredible accuracy. Josh Barrow as Jordan Pickford is mesmerising. He fizzes with energy throughout, his subtle shift from raw, untamed, chomping at the bit goalie to trusted teammate and backbone of the squad by the end if fascinating to watch.

Ryan Whittle steps into Harry Kane’s Captain’s boots with a well-observed nervous hesitation and grows in stature throughout while Gamba Cole as Raheem Sterling opens up to reveal his fears and disappointments as he learns to trust in his team mates.

While there is incredible humour and lots of it, the play doesn’t shy away from the harsher themes that sadly have dogged both football and English culture for many years. Most notably here the appalling racism faced by young black players specifically during the 2020 Euros final. Tane Siah, Jude Carmichael and Kadell Herida as Bukayo Saka, Marcus Rashford and Jadon Sancho highlight these dark moments with an honesty that reminds you just how quickly supposed loyal fans can turn and just how important standing up collectively to that hopefully small minority truly is. 

The ensemble cast work tirelessly to showcase Rupert Goold’s inventive staging (with Elin Schofield as revival director) with a slick, swift brilliance. Co-movement directors Ellen Kane and Hannes Langolf score no own goals with their incredibly tight sequences as this cast convincingly recreate matches, penalty shootouts and meaningful dressing room moments. Es Devlin’s inspired set design is perfectly lit by Jon Clark while Dan Balfour and Tom Gibbons sound design and Ash J Woodward’s video design hit the back of net. 

From euphoria to crushing heartbreak, Dear England takes audiences on a thrilling journey inviting us into the very heart of the action, allowing us to scratch way beyond the surface with its carefully crafted storytelling and visual brilliance. We live through the highs and the lows as one with the team, willing for the result to be different, hopeful, heart-warmed and inspired by the end of this groundbreaking piece. This is theatre at its absolute finest which taps right into the heart of what it is to be human, to believe in yourself and to have the bravery to face your fears regardless of the magnitude of the situation.  

Whether you’re a football fan, a theatre fan or just love a fascinating story brilliantly told this is a must-see production that will capture the imagination of audiences night after night, so good, so good, so good!

Dear England is on at The Lowry until Sunday 29th June, tickets are available here.

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