To set the scene I can't do better than to quote the programme:" The events depicted here are very frightening and may be disturbing to those of a delicate nature. Hill House stands by itself against the hills, holding darkness within. It has stood for 130 years . . . silence lies steadily against the wood and stone, and whatever walks there walks alone."
The audience then enters a dimly-lit, mist-filled auditorium and gropes to find their seats which turn out to provide a viewpoint as if from behind the fireplace of a dark, wood-panelled drawing room. A corner of the fine set served, with the aid of ingenious lighting, for the bedroom scenes where Eleanor ( Andrea Jamieson) is spine-chillingly haunted by her mother. All 7 of the cast gave excellent performances and Harry Atkinson's very convincing "Dr Montague" should have a special mention. But the whole purpose of the play is to terrorise and top-billing for the evening must go to the sound effects. Sometimes sudden, making one jump out of one's seat, sometimes carefully orchestrated to create a sense of growing menace, sometimes seeming to involve the whole audience as they reverberated around the auditorium and always spot on for timing, these were a real triumph for designer Beverley Grover and operator Maria Dunn.
Their next production is Noel Coward's "Hay Fever", 23rd to 27th June.
When I lived in Chelmsford with my parents, our house was called Hill House. It too was haunted.
ReplyDeleteMy mother often reported that at night the temperature would suddenly drop, a fetid smell would pervade the bedrooms and strange animal grunting noises could be heard. On a few occasions, she said she caught glimpses of a ghastly apparition moving about on the landing.
I never saw or heard any of this and apparently the manifestations stopped when I moved out.
I don't suppose I'll ever get to the bottom of it now. It will have to remain one of life's great mysteries.
Thank you for the excellent contribution. That is the best comment left so far on this blog.
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