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The Last Picture review – talking dog leads a journey from horror to hope

2026-02-09 - 15:25

York Theatre Royal In Catherine Dyson’s absorbing play, the audience become a class of year 9 pupils visiting a Holocaust exhibition with an emotional support animal Can we ever truly learn from history? This is the question hovering over Catherine Dyson’s The Last Picture – first shared in a rehearsed reading at York Theatre Royal as part of the RSC’s 37 Plays initiative in 2023 and now receiving a full production. It’s a piece that moves constantly between past and present, testing the empathic capacities and limits of theatre as an art form. There’s a touch of Tim Crouch to Dyson’s writing, which invites the audience into the imaginative act of bringing her words to life. This is a play about pictures in which not a single image is shown. Addressed in the second person, we are cast as audience members in a theatre as well as a class of year 9 students on a school trip to an exhibition about the Holocaust. As the unseen photographic evidence of genocide is described, the play flings us backwards into the scenes captured, placing us in the position of those being led to their murders – as well as that of the neighbours who looked the other way. Continue reading...

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