Googling how to get to the Harold Pinter Theatre for Macbeth and Street View is back when DT and Sharon Small did Good. My Good Omens brain rot is trying to make something out of this. Stupid brain!!
@ivankaramazov07 (otherwise known as @a-singing-lunatic) this is just standard protocol for siblingcore no need to worry! ;P
p.s. I have so much to say about this play and yet I couldn't find the time for it but don't worry peeps I'm done joking around so angsty rant coming soon!
I’ve recently discovered this radio comedy. It is by no means new (2005 - 2006) and there are only 12 episodes so I’m trying to drip feed myself with it.
It is a cracking cast (as you can see) and is very much a dry humour rather than laugh out loud.
It’s set at Cambridge University. A man dies, seemingly naturally, but the Master doesn’t believe it so calls in Simon (Sam West) to investigate. Simon is bored with his job as a health and safety exec, eternally snarky, and determined to solve the murder that nobody else thinks happened whilst also trying to get back with Zoe (Sharon Small) his ex. Meanwhile Gilbert (Geoffrey Palmer), the Dean (Michael Maloney, Bernard (Jonathan Coy), and Patricia (Rebecca Front) all involve themselves in the competition to become the new Master when the old one dies suddenly.
If dry British humour is your thing, I’d recommend it. With a cast like that how can you go particularly wrong?
Who is uncomplicated? Who is without moments of selfishness? And without moments of selflessness? John Halder has both, and that is what makes the journey he goes on all the more fascinating and chilling, actually, because I think we can all see ourselves in John Halder, to some extent.
David Tennant, Elliot Levey, Sharon Small, and director Dominic Cooke talk about Good ahead of its cinema release with National Theatre Live