A quietly tremendous celebration of activism
Dementia The Musical
The Studio, Edinburgh ★★★★
Murder on the Orient Express King’s, Glasgow ★★★ In a time of stress, it’s good to see contemporary Scottish theatre returning to its strong roots in the barnstorming agitprop theatre of the 1970s, pioneered by 7:84 Scotland and Wildcat. After a packedout runs in Edinburgh and Glasgow, Sleeping Warrior’s musical To Save The Sea – about the Greenpeace occupation of Brent Spar in 1995 – heads off on a Scotlandwide tour; and now, straight out of left field, here comes new touring show Dementia The Musical, a quietly tremendous celebration of activism in the face of a condition that affects around 90,000 people in Scotland.
Written by Ronnie Coleman, himself diagnosed with a form of dementia, Dementia The Musical is a 70-minute play with songs (eight fine ones, by composer Sophie Bancroft) that celebrates the real-life stories of three great dementia activists – James Mckillop, Nancy Mcadam and Agnes Houston – who have not allowed their dementia diagnoses stop them fighting, living, laughing, and campaigning for their basic rights.
The play imagines that James, Nancy and Agnes – brilliantly played by Ross Allan, Fiona Wood and Kirsty Malone – have been detained as troublemakers by the dementia authorities, and forced to live in a care facility where they are put on trial for the sin of creating “chaos and confusion”.
That Rigid System appears in the small but frighteningly overbearing person of actor Pauline Lockhart, who interrogates them about their “crimes ”, while appointing the audience as a jury absolutely required – “for their own good” – to find them guilty. And while a television reporter ably played by a fourth dementia activist, Willy Gilder, reports on screen, each interrogation offers space for powerful dialogue and songs.
All these elements are beautifully and forcefully co-ordinated by director Magdalena Schamberger; so when, towards the end, the actors step back to allow us to meet the real-life John, Nancy and Agnes on screen, the effect is almost overwhelmingly moving. Yet it’s also profoundly life-affirming.
If pure escapism is what you need this autumn, though, then you could do worse than head along to the Festival Theatre in Edinburgh next week to catch the current UK touring production of Ken Ludwig’s stage version of Murder On The Orient Express, one of the most famous of all Agatha Christie’s Hercule Poirot mysteries.
Agatha Christie was a wise woman, of course, and her image of a train travelling across Europe in the winter of 1934, stuck in a snowdrift somewhere in the Balkans while horrible violence is discovered on board, is not innocent of a sense of the politics of the time, and a darkening global scene.
For the most part, though – and despite the tormenting dilemma Poirot faces when he discovers the truth of the murder – Murder On The Orient Express is a thoroughly enjoyable shock-horror whodunnit. Only first-class passengers get to play a full part in the story, of course; but Michael Maloney’s thoughtful Poirot offers tantalising glimpses of a more complex world, in a show that offers a couple of hours of old-school entertainment, but also just a little food for thought.
Dementia The Musical on tour until 9 November; for details see www.deepnessdementiaarts.co.uk/theatre/dementiathe-musical. Murder On The Orient Express is at the Festival Theatre, Edinburgh, 22-26 October, and His Majesty’s Theatre, Aberdeen, 11-15 February 2025.