Connect with us

Theatre

REVIEW: Wish You Were Dead by Peter James at Cambridge Arts Theatre

Published

on

In a macabre twist on the seaside postcard cliché, Wish You Were Dead describes the holiday from Hell.

The play has been adapted by Shaun McKenna from the whodunit written by Peter James –a past-master at the cliff-edge thriller – which always turns out all right at the end. Until then, he likes to keep his readers guessing.

This story was inspired, says James by a real stay in a creepy chambre d’hote in France. James and his wife Lara arrived at an ancient, foreboding old chateaux, with eccentric owners.

Not just whodunit but whydunit. It’s a diverting night out. Wish You Were Dead is at Cambridge Arts Theatre until Saturday, March 11.

Not just whodunit but whydunit. It’s a diverting night out. Wish You Were Dead is at Cambridge Arts Theatre until Saturday, March 11.

They were apparently the only guests. “We lugged our bags into a grand hall, there were creaky floors and the feeling that nothing had been painted or dusted for several centuries.” In the play, echoing that experience, the electricity flickers on and off.

Not just whodunit but whydunit. It’s a diverting night out. Wish You Were Dead is at Cambridge Arts Theatre until Saturday, March 11.

Not just whodunit but whydunit. It’s a diverting night out. Wish You Were Dead is at Cambridge Arts Theatre until Saturday, March 11.

There is no Wi-Fi, no mobile phone signal or telephone landline. The stuffed heads of dead animals stare glassily down from the walls. “It looked better in the dark,” says James’s hero, Detective Roy Grace, played by a slick George Rainsford.

When Grace and his wife Chloe, try to leave, they find their car battery is flat. They are stuck, as Peter James and his wife found themselves, in a room with an ancient four-poster bed and a seven-foot-tall image of Jesus on the cross looming over them.

Advertisements
canopyuk.com in-article
Not just whodunit but whydunit. It’s a diverting night out. Wish You Were Dead is at Cambridge Arts Theatre until Saturday, March 11.

Not just whodunit but whydunit. It’s a diverting night out. Wish You Were Dead is at Cambridge Arts Theatre until Saturday, March 11.

On a treacherous and stormy night, the humourless French chatelaine (played by Rebecca McKinnis in a stand out performance) can only keep reminding them, when they say they are hungry, that they have arrived late.

The holiday for the Graces, their baby and their nanny turns out to be nothing like the idyl  the website promised. These are ghostly surroundings but, just before the end of the first half, we find that it isn’t the dead they need to be afraid of – it is the living.

Their hosts are not what they seem and they are anything but hospitable.

The play is tightly directed by Jonathan O’Boyle with a chilling set by Michael Holt – you really wouldn’t want to stay there. Good work from Gemma Stroyan as the American babysitter Kaitlyn Carter, Clive Mantle and Callum Sheridan-Lee as father and son Curtis and Brent and Leon Stewart as police officer Glenn Branson.

The plot is sign-posted as it unfolds and it’s fun finding the clues.

Not just whodunit but whydunit. It’s a diverting night out.

Wish You Were Dead is at Cambridge Arts Theatre until Saturday, March 11.

 

 

Facebook

Read More

News3 weeks ago

Cambs transport charity launches scathing attack after losing subsidised bus route to Stagecoach

FACT operated the 68 Wisbech service for a number of years

News3 weeks ago

Mayor attacks ‘cheap theatre of negativity’ over £48m Peterborough station facelift

Labour hopes Great Northern Hotel will be in future phase of re-development

News3 weeks ago

Opposition to 8am to 11pm pavement wining and dining in Wisbech by Wetherspoon

In Whittlesey Wetherspoon hope to use Market Place for outdoor drinkers

News3 weeks ago

Cambridge ‘drug lord’ caught with loaded gun, cash, and £500,000 worth of drug

Rahman ran a criminal enterprise across Cambridge

Mill Road, Cambridge: We should be following the lead of successful towns and cities around the globe in reducing traffic and making our shopping streets attractive places where people want to spend time. Mill Road, Cambridge: We should be following the lead of successful towns and cities around the globe in reducing traffic and making our shopping streets attractive places where people want to spend time.
News3 weeks ago

Opinion: We have a positive vision for a Mill Road Cambridge that is vibrant, attractive, safe, and healthy

'Surely it’s local residents who should decide the fate of a ‘C’ road'

On September 4 the Combined Authority board is being invited to re-appoint John Hill, East Cambridgeshire District Council chief executive, as returning officer for the mayoral election on May 1, 2025 On September 4 the Combined Authority board is being invited to re-appoint John Hill, East Cambridgeshire District Council chief executive, as returning officer for the mayoral election on May 1, 2025
News3 weeks ago

John Hill ‘bags’ top role in Cambridgeshire and Peterborough Combined Authority mayoral election 2025

Combined Authority has allocated £1.04m for the 2025 elections

Police are appealing for witnesses and dashcam footage after a man died in a collision on the B645 in Cambridgeshire Police are appealing for witnesses and dashcam footage after a man died in a collision on the B645 in Cambridgeshire
News3 weeks ago

Driver, 22, dies after B645 crash in Cambridgeshire

St Neots woman passenger has serious injuries

An electricity pylon in Oldfield Lane Wisbech caught fire after being used to illegally abstract power to run a cannabis factory in a neighbouring scrapyard. A second cannabis factory elsewhere was discovered. PHOTO: Policing Fenland/Cambs Fire and Rescue An electricity pylon in Oldfield Lane Wisbech caught fire after being used to illegally abstract power to run a cannabis factory in a neighbouring scrapyard. A second cannabis factory elsewhere was discovered. PHOTO: Policing Fenland/Cambs Fire and Rescue
News3 weeks ago

£700,000 worth of cannabis plants seized after ‘accidental’ Wisbech pylon fire

306 plants worth £257,000 were growing inside lorry trailers

A teenage boy has died following a collision on the A1M on Saturday (24 August). A teenage boy has died following a collision on the A1M on Saturday (24 August).
News3 weeks ago

Teenage Cambridgeshire crash victim, 16, dies in hospital

Crash victim named as Isaac Nockels

A 14-year-old girl was attacked at about 4.20pm on Wednesday, 21 August, in the red car park of Queensgate Shopping Centre, Peterborough. A 14-year-old girl was attacked at about 4.20pm on Wednesday, 21 August, in the red car park of Queensgate Shopping Centre, Peterborough.
News3 weeks ago

Wanted: Man in connection with sexual assault of 14-year-old girl in Peterborough

Assault happened at Queensgate shopping centre