This November, the UK premiere of Angela Betzien’s award-winning The Dark Room(Best New Australian Work, Sydney Theatre Awards) will be staged at Theatre503. The play is an intricately layered psychological thriller, exposing one of the most devastating issues of contemporary Australian discourse – the startling mistreatment of those most vulnerable in our society, our children, at the hands of those we most look to for protection.
The Dark Room is a real gift of a play. It transports us to a richly atmospheric, far-away world. We are immersed in a disturbing reality, strangely remote yet frighteningly familiar. It’s an exciting combination of complex characters – beautifully and warmly drawn – whose important and unsettling stories are both ambitiously and compellingly played out.
Whilst set amidst the claustrophobic heat of a distant, isolated town on the other side of the world in Australia’s Northern Territory, the events that unravel and the issues that are raised are alarmingly recognisable and deeply resonant in contemporary society here in the UK.
It throws up such a long stream of fascinating and challenging questions, exposing many hard-to-stomach, nevertheless wholly pertinent and vital social and political injustices, such as: police corruption; racism; homophobia; inadequate social care services – as experienced by those working within the system, in addition to those supposedly on the receiving end of these provisions.
The show also highlights the lack of support in education for teachers as well as for children and young people who have been marginalised in some way; failing mental health provision for young people in the community and in psychiatric hospitals, within an underfunded system, alongside under-supported and over-stretched employees that inevitably leads to an unsustainable and deeply flawed system.
Of these issues, I’d like to further illuminate one in particular that is of growing national concern –the many children in care, and our current service and mental health provision for these vulnerable young people.