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A s writer/director David Leddy’s body of work grows, certain recurring themes become apparent. This is common enough to all writers, but what marks Leddy out is a kind of largesse of spirit to his work, a generosity about the people portrayed that emerges from an understanding of the contexts within which they operate.

His recent Sub Rosa at the Citizens’, a site-specific account of a murder committed in a Victorian theatre, narrated by its witnesses in a series of brilliant monologues, exemplified this. However grisly the goings on described, each character was given a context which caused the audience to refrain from both sentimental empathy and the simple hostility which most narratives would ask them to lean on. Instead we were given full pictures of lives, and an understanding of the origins of each character, so that even the most unsympathetic of the characters could not be turned into a simplistic villain.

‘I’m interested in the question of why good people do bad things and bad people do good things,’ says Leddy. ‘What drives us in that direction? What is it that makes people come to brutal decisions and how do they excuse it to themselves? Or do they not excuse it? We tend to think that the biggest contributing factor to people’s decisions is their personality. But the big determinate in reality is the context. The pressure that they’re put under by the world or situation around them is what interests me.’

‘I’M INTERESTED IN THE QUESTION OF WHY GOOD PEOPLE DO BAD THINGS’

His new piece, White Tea, exemplifies this. Its story focuses on Naomi, a Scottish woman working in Paris. She has been estranged from her mother, a noted Japanese postwar peace campaigner, for many years, when she hears of her illness. After she at first refuses to attend the sickbed, a nurse is dispatched from Japan and the growing understanding that emerges between daughter and carer tells us a good deal about relationships, and not a little about tea, and how we use it in both Japanese and British culture. ‘White Tea is about that idea of context,’ Leddy explains. ‘It’s about the things that a person might have done in Japan in the immediate aftermath of the Second World War, where a younger generation of people were saying maybe this blind obedience to authority isn’t such a good thing, because it’s led us to a very bad place. White Tea is about that transition, and how that affects the mother-daughter relationship.’

The new work will act as a companion piece to an older one, Susurrus, a site-specific journey around a garden where a series of recorded voices act as your guide. It amounts to a sensual reinterpretation of A Midsummer Night’s Dream with a contemporary edge. ‘Theatrically, they’re at opposite ends of the spectrum, but the characters in each of the pieces know each other, and knew each other as children. So they have an impact on each other, that you have to see both pieces to understand. Underneath both is this thing about people who have these great parents who were better at doing their jobs than being parents.’

Context appeal

Theatrical experimentalist David Leddy talks to Steve Cramer about his inspirations, family relationships and warm beverages White Tea, Assembly Rooms, 623 3030, 7–31 Aug (not 11, 18, 25), 2pm & 5pm, £9–£10. Previews 6 Aug, 2pm & 5pm, £5; Susurrus, Royal Botanic Garden, 623 3030, 6 Aug–6 Sep, shows every half hour 10am–5pm, £8.

AFTER EIGHT Playwright Ella Hickson is living proof that Scotland’s got talent. Anna Millar meets her

It may be the title of her latest show, but Precious Little Talent is not a description you could apply to writer Ella Hickson. The surprise darling of last year’s Fringe, her stunning, emotionally ferocious debut show Eight garnered her plaudits galore not to mention Fringe First and Carol Tambor ‘Best of Edinburgh’ awards before embarking on successful outings in New York, and more recently, the West End. Not bad going for a girl who happily admits she accepted her slot at the Bedlam Theatre, with five weeks till curtain up, without having put pen to paper. A first-time writer Hickson, fresh out of university,

would create eight slick monologues offering a state- of-the-nation showcase, providing a voice to everyone from an upper class prostitute to a 7/7 survivor. It’s Hickson’s fascination with the apathy and trials of her generation that has largely inspired this year’s outing. ‘There’s a lack of people writing intelligently about who we are and what we are about,’ she says of her

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twentysomething generation.

Precious Little Talent, inspired by her time in the

States promoting Eight, tells of a young girl’s trip to New York to spend time with her father and the man she meets there; it’s suitably of the moment, addressing the recession, Anglo-American relations and the great ray of hope himself, Barack Obama. ‘It’s just such an inspirational place to go; it allows

you a freedom to step back and look,’ says Hickson. ‘I was looking at friends back home and realised that my generation is having to face up to its own mediocrity pretty quickly. We were told, “Get a good education, a degree, and your life will be sorted”, but that’s just not the case anymore.

‘We’re a generation fighting not to be forgotten and I wanted to address that.’ Precious Little Talent, Bedlam Theatre, 225 9893, 10–29 Aug (not 16, 23 Aug), 2.30pm, £8.50 (£6.50). Previews 6–8 Aug, £7 (£5).