Talisman Theatre and Arts Centre Barrow Road, Kenilworth CV8 1EG

Monday 9th - Saturday 14th February 2026

The Unfriend

We have two wheelchairs spaces as indicated on the seating plan above.

To check availability and book please contact the Box Office on 01926 856548 (or email us through our Contact Us page)

Click for Seating Plan

Dying of manners?

by Steven Moffat

Directed by Vanessa Comer

Assistant Director  – Connor Bailey

Join us for an evening of uproarious comedy and cringeworthy farce in this new play by award-winning writer, Steven Moffat (Doctor Who, Sherlock).

At the end of their holiday, Peter and Debbie reluctantly agree to stay in touch with their newly-met American cruise-friend, Elsa. However, when she later invites herself to stay they look her up online and discover the deadly truth surrounding this powerful, extravagant woman. Chaos and hysteria ensue as the couple attempt to protect their family and their comfortable lives without seeming rude.

Take a hilarious look at middle-class England’s perennial struggle to keep up appearances, all to avoid social embarrassment.

Age recommendation: 12+ or at parental discretion.

An amateur production by arrangement with Nick Hern Books.

PERFORMANCE DATES & TIMES

We have two wheelchair spaces available for each performance. To book wheelchair spaces, be added to the waiting list or ticket returns, please contact Box Office on 01926 856548 (or via our Contact Us page) 

Tickets are available via the online booking system with concessions available for full time students, those in receipt of a pension, Talisman members and group bookings (for parties of 10 or more).
 

Talisman Theatre and Arts Centre
Barrow Road, Kenilworth CV8 1FN

We have two wheelchairs spaces as indicated on the seating plan above.

To check availability and book please contact the Box Office on 01926 856548 (or email us through our Contact Us page)

Click for Seating Plan

SHOW DETAILS

Dying of Manners?

by Steven Moffat

Directed by Vanessa Comer

Assistant director  – Connor Bailey

Join us for an evening of uproarious comedy and cringeworthy farce in this new play by award-winning writer, Steven Moffat (Doctor Who, Sherlock).

At the end of their holiday, Peter and Debbie reluctantly agree to stay in touch with their newly-met American cruise-friend, Elsa. However, when she later invites herself to stay they look her up online and discover the deadly truth surrounding this powerful, extravagant woman. Chaos and hysteria ensue as the couple attempt to protect their family and their comfortable lives without seeming rude.

Take a hilarious look at middle-class England’s perennial struggle to keep up appearances, all to avoid social embarrassment.

Age recommendation: 12+ or at parental discretion.

An amateur production by arrangement with Nick Hern Books.

CAST & CREW

 

Cast

Peter – Mark Plastow

Debbie – Esther Riggs

Elsa – Julie Ann Randell

Neighbour – Phil Reynolds

Alex – Adam Turner

Rosie – Alais McCluskey

PC Junkin – Mark Oram

 

DIRECTOR'S NOTES

Frankenstein has been adapted numerous times since it was published in 1818. There are serious films, comedy films, paired back interpretations and gory ones. The National Theatre’s production with Jonny Lee Miller and Benedict Cumberbatch springs to mind as notable, and who doesn’t remember Mel Brook’s Young Frankenstein with fondness?

What makes Rona Monroe’s 2019 play different is that Mary Shelley is present throughout the retelling of her story. We see her grapple to compose a novel she can be proud of, but which people would want to read, would challenge them, and would not lead everyone to think she was completely mad. She shares Victor Frankenstein’s struggle to create life out of dead matter, as she conjures up an original, terrifying tale quite unlike any other.

The audience is treated to the entire dramatic story, guided by Mary Shelley, who moves the action forward creatively and physically. Staging this production has required a cast of receptive, inventive and cooperative actors who have been happy work within the blurred boundaries of fiction, Mary’s creative spirit and what is possible on the stage. It has been a rewarding and enlightening experience for all, and I am so grateful that Monroe’s play has left us the space within it’s lines to create something truly original of our own.

Kathy Buckingham-Underhill

CAST PHOTOS

NEXT EVENTS...