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Isabelle review – a sprawling debut driven by big ideas and family conflict

Key Points

Marc Graham's debut play, "Middle Child," is a sprawling production that explores themes of inheritance, class, and family resentment. The play is presented by Hull's Middle Child, a small but ambitious theatre company based in Yorkshire. This company is noted for its commitment to developing new writers and has become a resident company at the National Theatre.

69 Humber Street, Hull
Marc Graham’s debut stretches from festival short to full-length play, tackling inheritance, class and familial resentment with plenty of theatrical confidence

There are many reasons to admire Hull’s Middle Child, a small but determined company in Yorkshire’s East Riding.

It has a genuine interest in developing new writers, enormous ambition (the founders say they want it to be “the most influential new writing theatre outside London”) and it has become one of the first resident companies at the National Theatre under Indhu Rubasingham.

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Originally published by The Guardian UK Read original →