The cringe lives on – the deep irony of setting a play about a collapsing A&E service in Glasgow

Professor John Robertson OBA

Above, a hospital in England where the A&E roof really did collapse but when Kilbarchan-based playwright, Uma Nada-Rajah, wrote Black Hole Sign for the Traverse Theatre, to be shown this autumn, she set it in Glasgow.

When a hole appears in the roof of a crumbling and understaffed A&E department, patients, porters and nurses do what they must to make it through the night.

Senior charge nurse Crea strives to deliver sage and effective care while porter Billy angles after a date. Staff nurse Ani juggles her bursting caseload, knowing that no one has come to Mr. Hopper’s bedside for his final moments. Octogenarian Tersia is trapped in a disco-fuelled fever dream, while a disgruntled Fred Turnbull prepares his strongly worded complaint. And student nurse Lina has No. Idea. What. Is. Going. On.

Personal principles clash with professional obligations as three generations of nurses and one ‘long in the tooth’ porter are pushed towards breaking point.

Written by practising NHS critical care nurse Uma Nada-Rajah and directed by Traverse Artistic Director Gareth Nicholls, Black Hole Sign takes a razor-sharp scalpel to the absurdities, tragedies and hilarity within one of our most beloved but besieged institutions.

An exploration of changing attitudes towards an institution once world renowned, the play asks what we want for the future of our National Health Service and, crucially, who will hold it together when it all falls down? https://www.traverse.co.uk/whats-on/event/black-hole-sign-autumn-25#%5Csupercool%5Csupercal%5Celements%5CEvent:797441

I know. it’s drama but it’s also political, very political and it will reinforce, only, the mis-representation we already suffer from the news media.

Here’s why Glasgow and, indeed, Scotland, is the last place in the UK to set crumbling decay, understaffing and breaking points.

7 thoughts on “The cringe lives on – the deep irony of setting a play about a collapsing A&E service in Glasgow

  1. This is just so blatantly politically biased I don’t even have to question why this absurd play was produced.

    Like

  2. No disrespect intended John, but are you not being overly triggered by the Glasgow setting without recognising the intent to connect with a Scottish audience ? – I sincerely doubt any in the audience would recognise “a crumbling and understaffed A&E department” from their own experience (it’s why the ‘troubled QEUH’ campaign by BBC Scotland so spectacularly backfired) rather than recognise it as projection of an issue from elsewhere ?

    Imagine setting the scene in a suburb of London with the entire cast struggling to maintain a ‘cockney geezers’ impersonation – It’s meant to be ART, not James Cook’s FART…

    PS – The widely reported Chester Hospital A&E ‘roof’ incident was actually a ceiling… πŸ˜‰

    Like

Leave a reply to johnrobertson834 Cancel reply

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.