The room belongs to Charlie, Katie’s recently deceased brother. Set designer Mim Houghton creates a space heavy with interrupted life; an unmade bed, scattered clothes, half packed boxes and books. Katie (Catherine Ashdown) enters already mid grief. Moments later, Roni (Eileen Duffy) arrives. What begins as guarded politeness is slowly peeled back. The fourth wall remains firmly intact; we are not invited into the conversation so much as positioned to observe it. The effect is almost voyeuristic, as secrets surface, resentments reanimate and grief is contested rather than shared.
Naturalism of this kind places enormous demands on performers. Everyday emotion is messy and unconscious; on stage it must be recreated precisely and repeatedly without appearing performed. With no scene changes or stylistic flourishes to lean on, the actors must sustain and vary emotional truth in real time.
 
 
 
 
In the opening stretch of 1.17am, or Until the Words Run Outthat pressure shows. Katie’s grief begins at a high pitch but initially feels slightly laboured, the tempo tight and the breath shallow, as if reaching for the required intensity. Roni, entering with lower stakes, seems more grounded at first. As the rhythms settle, however, both performers grow into the space. Their exchanges gain subtlety and credibility, revealing two flawed young women bound by defensiveness, ignorance and a stubborn, messy love.
Thematically, the play is resonant. It explores class friction, female friendship, and the uneven visibility of grief. One loss is socially legible and centred; another lingers more quietly at the margins. Neither character is wholly right nor wrong. They wound each other not out of cruelty but overwhelm. The fragility of their connection feels painfully recognisable.
Yet the dramatic temperature occasionally plateaus. With no shifts in time or space to re energise the action, the production relies entirely on modulation of performance. Some emotional beats recur without sufficient variation, and repeated movement patterns around the bed become a little predictable. In such a stripped back format, any redundancy is magnified and momentum dips.
Still, there is ambition in the simplicity. The desire to go deep by staying small is clear. 1.17am, or Until the Words Run Out may not fully escape the limits of its rigid structure, but it remains a brave and intimate portrait of how grief distorts love, and how unfinished conversations linger long after the words run out.
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