Sennockian 2018-2019 | Page 53

DNA As the second part of the Year 11 double bill, we saw in Dennis Kelly’s play DNA the consequences of how a teenage joke can go badly wrong. Set in the round, the production allowed audience members an intimate view into the lives of a group of teenagers abruptly forced to change when Jude (Jude Vyas), the subject of brutal bullying, is suspected to be dead. An interesting aspect of the show was the way in which each character’s reaction to the death was explored. We saw how personal responsibility for a peer’s death can really affect one’s mental health, through the experiences of Cameron (Cameron Delpech) and his subsequent diagnosis and prescription of medications. The responses of other characters, Imogen (Imogen Salmon), Valery (Valery Bogdanova) and Katerina (Katerina Panayiotou), perfectly encapsulated how people respond differently to such events. The cast delivered the often challenging lines with true emotion. Dennis Kelly’s use of repetition and constant interruption was used to full effect. The ensemble and duologue scenes pushed the tension as the characters showed regret and remorse for their behaviour towards Jude. In the ensemble scenes, the control exerted by Alice (Alice McQuail), created a powerful image of how scared the group were, not only of what they had done, but also of being found out, and illustrated how the death shook up existing group dynamics and hierarchies. Mia Hart, Lower Sixth SEVENOAKS SCHOOL 2018-2019 47