Killymuck, The Bunker Theatre


Killymuck, looking at life for a Northern Irish benefit-class woman living amongst the troubles isn’t just a moving portrayal of the past but a worrying reminder of how little has changed for those facing poverty.

Aoife Lennon plays Niamh, a boisterous young Catholic living in a large family with an alcoholic father and a struggling mother on benefits, relying on food banks and charity clothing donations. Niamh takes through the trials of tribulations of growing up on a housing estate that was built on a pauper’s grave. Is the estate cursed with poverty, injustice and inequality?

Kat Wood’s story puts women front and centre; the pressure to make ends meet such as the neighbour who works as a prostitute but whose collection of porn the young Niamh stumbles across seeming quite progressive. The babysitter who finds herself pregnant in her GCSE year, Niamh’s mother struggling with an alcoholic husband and four children and Niamh herself who struggles with the disappointment of not getting into the local grammar as her abusive father judges her to be a failure.

Woods isn’t afraid to say what is often left unsaid; without opportunity and knowledge the benefit class will never succeed. It often reminded me of Derry Girls, with tales of attempts to break sectarianism and the dominance of the Catholic Church. Clever people are being left to rot because they are poor. It is an excellent production and Lennon, as Niamh and other characters in her life is believable as a person who even when she finds opportunity is haunted by not only her past failures. Lennon gives a strong and well rounded performance.

As part of a double bill with Box Clever it is a real shame that both plays aren’t being given a chance to shine. The second of the double bill (which alternates) starts at 9pm and it is a real problem if The Bunker want more people to see these productions because it means attending over two nights to catch a 19:30 show or a late finish if you see both in a double bill, which both offer a unique role of women in working/benefit class society.

Designer Minglu Wang
Lighting Designer Joe Price
Associate Lighting Designer Gareth Weaver
Sound Designer Benjamin Grant
Stage Manager Ella Corcoran
Movement Director Louise Kempton
Production Manager Zara Janmohamed

Killymuck is on until 13 April https://www.bunkertheatre.com/whats-on/killymuck/book-now


Leave a Reply

Fill in your details below or click an icon to log in:

WordPress.com Logo

You are commenting using your WordPress.com account. Log Out /  Change )

Facebook photo

You are commenting using your Facebook account. Log Out /  Change )

Connecting to %s

%d bloggers like this: