REVIEW: 2:22 A Ghost Story, spooking out Grand Opera House, York, till Saturday *****

James Bye’s Sam takes a vote on a point of debate with Shvorne Marks’s Jenny, Natalie Casey’s Lauren and Grant Kilburn’s Ben in 2:22 A Ghost Story.

THE Battersea Poltergeist and Uncanny podcaster, broadcaster and journalist Danny Robins’s smart, modern-day London supernatural thriller is haunting York once more, only 23 months since last doing so.

Is that return too soon? Tuesday’s audience could have been fuller, and a cursory inspection of the Grand Opera House box-office website reveals a similar picture for the rest of the week, but your reviewer urges those yet to encounter this Best New Play winner in the WhatsOnStage Awards to do so. In a nutshell, if you enjoy regular returnee The Woman In Black, then clock on for 2:22.

Robins’s nerve-shredder looks very much at home in Europe’s self-proclaimed “most haunted city”, but with a notable metropolitan flair to Anna Fleischle’s set design of a state-of-the-art, open-plan, glass-encased kitchen, complemented by a sleight of hand worthy of Derren Brown’s mind games, topped off by Magic Circle member Chris Fisher’s illusions.

Directors Matthew Dunster and Gabriel Vega Weissman crank up the tension pre-show with the too-quick-for-the-naked-eye turnover of numbers on the electronic kitchen clock – never stopping at 2:22 – while Ian Dickinson’s sound design grows ever louder and more discordant to heighten your senses for what lies ahead.

Throughout, Dickinson and lighting designer Lucy Carter will work those senses to the maximum with mischievous glee and a conductor’s sense of perfect timing, regularly interrupting with shocking sounds, screams, blinding lights and a framing of the proscenium arch in red light at the start of each scene. You will judder, you will shudder, you may well shriek, jolted further by the yelps of foxes doing what foxes do in the garden.

Robins combines the cultural and social commentary of James Graham’s dramas with his own canny podcast insights in his  paranormal tale of teacher-on-maternity-leave Jenny (Shvorne Marks) and irritatingly always-right scientist Sam (James Bye) hosting their first dinner party since becoming the latest “posh tw*ts” to move into a newly gentrified Greater London neighbourhood.

Sam will be heading back from a work trip on the Isle of Sark. For several nights, however, Jenny has been disturbed at 2:22am precisely by the footstep thud of someone moving around the house and the sound of a man’s crying voice, picked up via the baby monitor in newborn daughter Phoebe’s bedroom. Already convinced  the house is haunted, Jenny whiles away the hours each night by painting until that time arrives.

Robins, in partnership with his meticulous directors, is stirring the ingredients of a classic thriller with Hitchcockian chutzpah, just as guest Lauren (Natalie Casey), Jenny’s American psychiatrist best friend since university days, is stirring the risotto on arrival.

Lauren has brought along her latest boyfriend, house renovator Ben (Grant Kilburn) a streetwise, working-class counter to the yuppie London intellectuals, who did up her kitchen, never left and likes to wear his shoes without socks.

Last to arrive is Bye’s Sam, a self-righteous, hyper-opinionated sceptic, apologising for losing his phone on Sark but not for his sarky attitude. Whereupon these two stags lock horns in splenetic class warfare on what turns out to be Ben’s old “manor” before Sam and Jenny stripped out everything, like in every house around them that all end up with the same soulless look, says Ben, who has designed plenty of them.

Sam is a belligerent non-believer in ghosts, adamant that more logical reasons can explain the noises. Ben believes in the supernatural; tipsy Lauren could be persuaded either way. Let’s stay up to 2:22am, suggests Jenny, as the trendy wine flows, the guards drop and the arguments rise – as ultimately does the sexual heat – in an echo of the sparks flying in Edward Albee’s Who’s Afraid Of Virginia Woolf or a Tennessee Williams play, played out in performances that all catch fire.

2:22 A Ghost Story has the spooks to rival The  Woman In Black, but now filtered through modern technology (the baby monitor and an erratic Alexa). Then add the razzle-dazzle to and fro of the dialogue in Robins’s state-of-the-nation character study: the choices of wine and risotto for supper; Sam’s dinner party playlist (Massive Attack) and Jenny’s too (The XX); the reference to Sam and Lauren working together for a charity in Africa.

Robins is happy for his quarrelling quartet to discuss how the lizard, mouse and monkey sections of our brain work and to reflect how fear, rather than love, is our most powerful emotion. You may well want to join that debate afterwards, once your heart rate has returned to normal.

2: 22 A Ghost Story has shocks and alarms aplenty, but above all it is uncomfortably, truthfully humorous, becoming all the spicier for the intellectual jousting that sometimes leaves the dialogue almost too hot to touch under Dunster and Weissman’s combustible direction.

Robins fills the hours until 2:22am so thrillingly, building the chills while thickening the plot with relationship revelations; setting up a debate over the existence or non-existence of ghosts; telling the Charles Lindbergh story behind the invention of the baby monitor, and orchestrating the climactic séance conducted by Ben. 

You will have to see the show- and you really should – to discover the truth behind the spooks, but all the while Ben serves as a ghost of the street’s past that cannot be erased, no matter the aspirational revamp.

“Shhh, please don’t tell” requests a neon-lit message in shepherd’s-warning red after the final “reveal”. Lips sealed, note taken, review concluded.

2:22 A Ghost Story, Grand Opera House, York, until  Saturday, 7.30pm nightly plus 2.30pm Saturday matinee. Box office: atgtickets.com/york.

Why 2: 22 A Ghost Story is more than jump scares for Natalie Casey on stage return in timely Danny Robins supernatural thriller

Natalie Casey’s Lauren and James Bye’s Sam in Danny Robins’ 2:22 A Ghost Story, on tour at Grand Opera House, York, next week

THE numbers add up for metropolitan supernatural thriller 2:22 A Ghost Story. Seven West End seasons, 12 productions worldwide, one record-breaking UK and Ireland tour, now being followed by another.

Next stop, a return to the Grand Opera House, York, from March 31 to April 4 after a first spooking in Europe’s self-proclaimed “most haunted city” in May 2024.

From the imagination of The Battersea Poltergeist and Uncanny podcaster, broadcaster and journalist Danny Robins comes the paranormal tale of teacher-on-maternity-leave Jenny (Three Little Birds’ Shvorne Marks) and always-right scientist Sam (EastEnders’ James Bye) hosting their first dinner party since becoming the latest “posh tw*ts” to move into a newly gentrified Greater London neighbourhood.

For several nights, Jenny has been disturbed at 2:22am precisely by the sound of someone moving around the house and a man’s voice crying, picked up via the baby monitor in daughter Phoebe’s bedroom. 

She is convinced the house is haunted, but Sam scoffs at the suggestion, sparking an argument with dinner guests Lauren (Natalie Casey), Sam’s best friend since university days, and her latest boyfriend, builder Ben (Grant Kilburn), a streetwise, working-class counter to the yuppie London intellectuals.

Can the dead really walk again? Belief and scepticism clash, but as the sudden sounds, screams and blinding lights multiply and the trendy wine  flows, they will stay up until 2:22am to discover the answer in Robins’ thriller of Hitchcockian elan.

Facing up to the supernatural: James Bye, left, Shvorne Marks, Natalie Casey and Grant Kilburn in 2:22 A Ghost Story

“The thing about this show is that it’s a phenomenon,” says cast member Natalie Casey, once of Two Pints Of Lager And A Packet Of Crisps. “I’ve never been involved in anything like it. MAGA [Make America Great Again] is a cult, but 2:22 is a phenomenon. I’ve never done a show before where people scream, they cry, and it grabs them by whatever they want to be grabbed by!

“I first auditioned for it many years ago, but didn’t get it and was very sad about that, but I think I must have stayed on their radar as I was asked to do this tour – though I hadn’t toured for a long time – and got very excited when I saw who else would be doing it.

“It’s reinvigorated my love of touring, and it’s been amazing meeting people around the country, where we know that this is a time when lots is going on to divide people, when in fact  all we want is to get on with our neighbours and just hug each other.”

Analysing why 2:22 is more than a supernatural thriller, Natalie says: “It’s very richly layered. On the surface it’s about the jump scares, but it’s also a play about fear, longing and our refusal as human beings to let things go when we need to.

“To be able to deliver that message to people in the dark of a theatre, where they can feel real emotions together, is an amazing feeling to get as an actor. As dark as our times are, I can feel we want better, we want more, and theatre is a magical part of that.”

Natalie’s character, Lauren, comes from California. “So I’m doing a slight ‘Valley girl’ accent – I’m good at American accents as they infect every part of our lives,” she says. “I’m playing someone who’s completely unlike me, but that’s the chameleon quality of acting, where my dream is to be in Star Trek. I’d love to play a Klingon!”

New house, old friends: James Bye’s Sam, left, and Shvorne Marks’s Jenny, right, welcome Natalie Casey’s Lauren and Grant Kilburn’s Ben for dinner in 2:22 A Ghost Story

Actress, presenter, narrator and singer Natalie feels very lucky to be on stage with James Bye, Shvorne Marks and Grant Kilburn. “It’s very easy to ramp up the tension when you have actors so committed to doing that, and immediately the house becomes very claustrophobic: that feeling of walls closing on you,” she says.

Throughout, the clock is on the move. “There is the symbolism of time, how it will inevitably pass, whether we like it or not, and how it will reveal too, whether we want it to or not,” says Natalie.

Does she believe in the supernatural? “I’m not a believer, I’m a ‘man of science’. I’ve never experienced what could be classed as ‘supernatural’ or felt it, but I also know that science takes a long time to catch up, so I would never say that anyone who has had a supernatural experience is wrong. It’s just that we’ve not  yet reached the point where we can explain it,” says Natalie. “In an infinite world with infinite possibilities, there are infinite explanations.

“It’s part of our collective psyche, that obsession with what is just beyond our periphery; our need to reach out to what is just beyond our understanding. We will always look to give meaning to our world.”

Summing up 2:22 A Ghost Story, she says. “It might look like a simple piece of theatre with two couples sitting around a dinner party table, but it turns into a play about love and loss, mourning and yearning for a different life. This play will be watched for decades. This play will never die. Oh, the irony.”  

2:22 A Ghost Story, Grand Opera House, York, March 31 to April 4, 7.30pm nightly plus 2.30pm Wednesday and Saturday matinees. Box office: atgtickets.com/york.