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Entertainment May 16, 2026

Eclipse Review: John Morton’s Dark Comedy Unpacks Death in a Devon Rectory

John Morton’s debut play Eclipse turns a Devon rectory into a stage for unsaid family tensions and …
Opening Verdict: A Darkly Comic Exploration of Dying in DevonThe Guardian’s review frames Eclipse as a stark departure from Morton’s TV work, swapping satirical bureaucracy for a family‑riven meditation on death. The play’s humor is deliberately muted, allowing the weight of an unseen cancer patient to dominate the conversation.Staging the Unseen: How Morton’s Play Brings an Off‑stage Cancer Patient to LifeSet in a convincingly lived‑in kitchen designed by Simon Higlett, the action revolves around siblings Jonathan (Rupert Penry‑Jones) and Sarah (Sarah Parish) and their husband Graham (Paul Thornley). Two nurses, Karen (Selina Cadell) and Linda (Lizzie Hopley), provide the only direct link to the off‑stage patient, Edward, whose presence is felt through dialogue rather than sight.Numbers on Stage: Cast Size, Run Length, and Box‑Office ImplicationsCast: 10 actors, with four appearing in only a single scene.Venue: Minerva Studio, Chichester Festival Theatre.Run: Until 6 June 2026 (approximately three weeks).Ticket pricing (average): £35‑£55, reflecting a mid‑range price point for a regional festival production.These figures illustrate a modest financial risk that pays off by delivering a densely populated emotional landscape within a limited budget.Why It Matters: Shifting the Tone of British Dark Comedy and Hospice NarrativeMorton pushes the envelope of British dark comedy, moving beyond the corporate satire of Twenty Twelve and W1A into a realm where laughter is eclipsed by mortality. By foregrounding the “unsaid” through hyper‑realistic speech patterns—ums, stumbles, and meaningless affirmations—the play forces audiences to confront the discomfort of hospice care and family denial.Looking Ahead: Prospects for Morton’s Theatrical Future and the Play’s Life Beyond ChichesterIf the Chichester run garners strong word‑of‑mouth, Eclipse could tour the UK regional circuit and potentially attract a West End transfer, positioning Morton as a playwright capable of handling both TV satire and serious stage drama. The production also sets a precedent for future works that blend realistic dialogue with existential themes, suggesting a broader shift in contemporary British theatre toward confronting uncomfortable social realities.
#John Morton #Eclipse #Chichester Minerva Theatre
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Tv And Radio Mar 27, 2026

Hugh Bonneville Reprises Ian Fletcher Role Despite Calling TV Experience 'Most Painful'

Hugh Bonneville discusses his mixed feelings about reprising his role as Ian Fletcher in the new co…
When Hugh Bonneville was first asked to reprise his role as Ian Fletcher in John Morton's workplace satires, his emotions were conflicted. The actor described being 'absolutely delighted' yet 'terrified' at the prospect, calling the experience 'the most painful and horrible' of his television career.Bonneville, now widely recognized for his roles in Downton Abbey and Paddington, first portrayed Fletcher as 'Head of Deliverance of the Olympic Deliverance Commission' in Twenty Twelve. In W1A, he played 'Head of Values' at the BBC. Nine years later, the weary character returns as 'Director of Integrity' at an international football organization hosting a tournament, with its real-world basis deliberately obscured by the production.Despite the seemingly mundane setting of boardroom meetings and PowerPoints, the series stands out for its meticulously constructed naturalism and intricate dialogue. The scripts are twice as long as typical 30-minute sitcoms, featuring stammered half-sentences where the difference between phrases like 'yes well but' and 'but well yes' is profoundly significant.'It's the most impossible thing to learn because sometimes the sentences don't make sense,' Bonneville explains. 'The difference between 'yes well but' and 'but well yes' is profound', he adds, noting that he frequently struggles with the complex dialogue while his co-stars excel.Twenty Twenty Six shifts the setting to Miami, transforming Fletcher from a captain of British politeness into a mediator in American corporate culture. He's reunited with Will Humphries (Hugh Skinner), his hapless intern from BBC days, whose social uncertainty remains unrivalled. 'I'm now describing Will as the Paddington of the office world - he means well, but he's going to bump into everything and set the photocopier on fire,' Bonneville says.The series expands the ensemble with international characters including Belgian chief coordinating attaché Eric Van Dupuytrens, American sustainability head Sarah Campbell, and Mexican 'VP Optics and Narrative' Gabriela De La Rosa. If previous shows examined unspoken British social etiquette, this installment presents more of a culture clash comedy, with Fletcher navigating a world where people express themselves directly rather than through British subtlety.John Morton, the creator, chose the World Cup backdrop not for its football significance but because its unwieldy scale across 16 cities presents fertile ground for comedic mishaps. 'As a writer, you think: hmm, that smells like things could go wrong,' Morton explains. The show addresses contemporary issues including Trump references and environmental concerns, though Morton maintains it's not about football controversies.The filming itself presented unique challenges, with production in a Wembley school transformed to resemble a Miami arts center. Despite the artificial setting, the cast found the UK heat surprisingly authentic to Florida's climate. 'The irony being had we filmed it in Miami, it would have been air-conditioned,' Bonneville laments, capturing the production's British approach to discomfort.
#twenty #bonneville #his
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