From
the moment the audience entered it was obvious CYTO meant business. Whilst many
are pondering on the growing scourge of knife crime, the members of CYTO chose
the subject for a play commissioned with funds from the Croydon Youth Service,
and the piece by local writer Richard Vincent is observant, perspicacious and
salutary, astutely directed by Viv Berry.
The simple set is chairs, forming seats on a tram where the large cast are passengers.
An argument brews, voices are raised and four young people run off leaving another
youngster dead - stabbed.
The short drama explores different angles. Some passengers are loathe to give
statements, for fear of reprisals; the old boy (Richard Gibbons) lamenting the
loss of a strict upbringing in 'the good old days', the girl (Tamera Stradis)
more concerned about compensation for her bloodied expensive new trainers than
the death; the settlers from Sarajevo lamenting the gang warfare they see growing
in their adopted country; the gang's violent initiation of the boy who eventually
wields the fatal knife; the 'killers' from the tram, running very scared of
their actions; and finally the victim's family.
Karson Green's difficult role as the killer received a mature understanding
of the need to join the gang in the first place and Sam Crisp created the big,
boasting Axle who shrank to a frightened boy under questioning.
Comedy lightened the sober subject with Tony Portsmouth's Ikea Man who wins
a two-minute 'free grab' and is returning on the tram with his stuff.
But the heart-breaking impact of the play comes at its close when the cast give
out many of the names of youngsters who really suffered this fate, and an unforgettable
plea from the dead boy's mother, in which Kayla Meikle, 16, speaks the emotional
words written by Richard Vincent with an understanding way beyond her years.
The whole cast are to be congratulated on their achievement.
The following short question and answer session revealed the discussions which
had shaped the building blocks to enable a youthful cast to create such a meaningful
play.
This was the first theatre piece ever to be performed at Loud Tate at Tate Britain,
and the Croydon Youth Opportunities Fund are funding free CYTO performances
at local schools, colleges and youth centres until November 20.
Theo Spring
5 stars