Theatre

Eddie and the Slumber Sisters

Corn Exchange, Haddington

Mary Brennan, four stars

IF THE comforting warmth of bedtime cocoa had a voice, it would sound like the Slumber Sisters. Their acappella harmonies don’t dwell on lullabies,however: the trio ‘s mission statement, as they monitor the world’s snoozy-time, is the upbeat 1940’s number “Ac-Cent-Tchu-Ate the positive” – which means eliminating nightmares with happy dreams. Like their boogie-woogie role models, the Andrews Sisters, these three - Natalie Arle-Toyne, Colette Dalal Tchantcho and India Shaw-Smith - are entertainingly sassy, vocally well-matched, briskly successful. Until nine year old Eddie sets off alarm bells in Slumber HQ with nightmares that leave her a dozy day-time wreck.

If there is a witty flourish to the fantastical Slumber zone, there is a harsh and troubling reality to the root cause of Eddie’s sleepless nights: her beloved Gran has died and the wee girl is lost in grief - her (unseen) sobbing Mum is out of the support loop, can the Slumber Sisters help? Writer Anita Vettesse and director Gill Robertson take the bold, but wise, decision not to dodge the pain and bewilderment that are engulfing Eddie. And if the Slumber-solution has a decidedly odd-ball, quirky feel to it - let’s just say that gran’s beloved Elvis is back in the building! - Eddie’s journey towards peace of mind is genuinely affecting with Chiara Sparkes making her emotional rollercoaster really reach out to young (ages 8+) and old alike.

With composer Danny Krass and designer Karen Tennent conjuring up the dream-time realms of Slumber HQ and Eddie’s bedroom - close-up audiences encircling the action- this touring production by Catherine Wheels (with National Theatre of Scotland) brings inventive humour and compassion to an upheaving issue that concerns us all. Elvis’s Love Me Tender - superbly harmonised by the cast – is a final note that makes the heart squeeze...