Rocky Road

by Shaun McKenna

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This timely new thriller is a gripping exploration of grief, obsession and revenge. 

Zoe had everything to live for when her life was suddenly and violently ripped apart.

Seven years later, she still wants answers. A chance encounter reopens old wounds and sets her on a path that will lead either to devastation or redemption. 

What exactly does her Gene Kelly-loving, Plato-reading, butterfly-raising caretaker know?

And how far will she go to find out?

Rocky Road was nominated for an OnComm award, a new award from the Offies for outstanding theatre streamed during lockdown.

I make brilliant Rocky Road. It’s kind of my signature thing. It looks like a rocky road, you see. With mud and stones and unexpected holes, places you can trip up or get stuck, or hurt yourself. You bite into it, expecting something sweet then find you’ve cracked your tooth on a hard nut.”

A fine example of onscreen theatre wrought with the suspense of live drama and employing the aesthetics of film... The edge-of-the-seat effect is also down to the tautness of McKenna’s script, with its blend of revelation and withholding, and the intense and nuanced performances... Thrillingly baroque. Ultimately it explores the traumatic ripples of both crime and punishment and the difference between retributive and restorative justice.
— Arifa Akbar, The Guardian
Shaun McKenna’s text is full of cold calculating suspense, intertwined with pangs of heartache and fear, delicately balanced without too much exposition ... An intriguingly complex play, Rocky Road feels like a perfect mix between the exploration of theatre (to which we are finally returning) and the subtleties of recorded media. Without a doubt this is one that will keep me thinking for weeks to come.
— ayoungertheatre.com

Starring Tyger Drew-Honey and Kirsten Foster

Directed by Steven Kunis

Design by Ceci Calf

Lighting by Ryan Stafford

Sound by Dan Samson

Movement by Natasha Harrison

Produced by David Adkin, Damien Tracey and Panorama Productions

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This is an intelligent and ambitious piece of digital theatre ... it had me asking questions of what I was seeing throughout, trying to figure out who to trust and whether we really remain the same people all our lives.

A deeply unsettling piece of drama which strives to do something rather noirish with the theatre space and with the sense that revenge may not always be the best medicine. A fine, economical script will keep you guessing and the performers bring out the best and the worst of their characters, so it is not always clear where our sympathies should lie.
— LouReviews.com

Broadcast live from Jermyn Street Theatre jermynstreettheatre.co.uk via Stream.Theatre

Dates: Friday 30th April at 7.30pm and Saturday 1st May 2021 at 3.00pm and 7.30pm 

then streaming from 10th-30th May 2021 at 7.30pm

Running Time: approximately 110 minutes

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