Student Life
‘Our House’ in the middle of Beaumont Street
Cross Keys’ production of Our House at the Oxford Playhouse is an ambitious one. With a 30-strong cast, no shortage of intricately choreographed musical numbers, and the challenge of sustaining a dual timeline narrative, it attempts a great deal. It largely succeeds. Whimsical, high-octane, and joyfully irreverent, the performance brims with heart. Uniquely, Our House, a musical first written by Tim Firth in 2002, manages to effortlessly combine wit with tragedy, the heights of joy with the depths of grief.
Set in Camden in the 1980s, the musical, directed by Madison Bouchta, follows Joe Casey (Alex Innes), who makes a split-second decision which changes the course of his life. The play opens on Joe’s 16th birthday. His father, once imprisoned for his criminal exploits before dying young, looms large over Joe’s life – “a loser and a scumbag”, Joe bitterly calls him. Trying to impress his new girlfriend, Sarah (Maya Flint), he breaks into a flat to show Sarah a viewpoint overlooking his home on Casey Street. As the police arrive, Joe’s life fractures into two parallel paths. In one, he stays and accepts responsibility for the break-in, ultimately being sent to a correctional facility. In the other, he flees the scene. “I thought I was a good judge of character”, Sarah tells him afterwards in this second storyline, disillusioned by his cowardice, and the two break up.
From there, the musical follows the divergent trajectories of Joe’s life. We watch as the two versions of Joe move increasingly further apart: one remains fundamentally honest and true to himself, but suffers for it; the other evades accountability and descends deeper into moral compromise. “I’m a reformed young offender”, Joe insists in the former timeline. “This isn’t crime, it’s enterprise culture”, Joe claims in the latter, having fully embraced a corrupt corporate world.
Yet even as the moral distinctions between the two versions of Joe become increasingly pronounced, the production avoids reducing the story to a simplistic lesson. Instead, it presents both paths as responses to the same underlying insecurities, allowing the audience to understand even Joe’s most questionable decisions. The dual narrative, therefore, becomes more than a straightforward morality tale: it is a sharp exploration of class, loyalty, and the dangerous allure of wealth and social ascent.
As a jukebox musical, Our House is a nostalgia-filled celebration of 1980s ska-pop band Madness, reviving classics including ‘Baggy Trousers’, ‘Embarrassment’, ‘Night Boat to Cairo’, and, of course, ‘Our House’. The musical also includes one song, ‘It Must Be Love’, written especially for it.
Alex Innes delivers a standout performance as Joe Casey. Though at first I struggled to differentiate between the different courses of Joe’s life, Innes’ subtle acting, aided by costume changes, soon made it clear. He projected an affected confidence as the Joe who has ingratiated himself with the corporate elite, before pivoting effortlessly to the anxious vulnerability of the struggling offender. Innes portrays Joe with impressive complexity, displaying his endearingly exuberant charisma and confidence bordering on brashness, but also his insecurity.
Maya Flint’s Sarah is similarly nuanced. There is the ambitious Sarah, determined to attend university and become a lawyer, increasingly at ease within a more educated social milieu. Yet there is also the Sarah who cannot fully let go of Joe Casey, who returns immediately upon hearing of his arrest and remains, despite everything, compassionate and loyal. Flint captures both aspects beautifully.
Beyond the central couple, the supporting cast is consistently strong. Joe’s friends Emmo (Peter Hardisty) and Lewis (Luke Carroll), alongside Sarah’s friends Billie (Lottie Hutchison) and Angie (Imogen Bowden), exude a camaraderie that genuinely feels real. Harriet Wilson, as Kath Casey, vividly conveys the anguish of a mother forced to watch her son repeat the mistakes of his father. Meanwhile, Becca Harper’s Reecey is all swaggering aggression and brash, in-your-face confrontationality.
The second half of the play introduces hard-nosed upmarket property developer Mr Pressman, played to perfection by Beth Hunt. The slick superiority of Pressman, coupled with his callous heartlessness, brings a chilling effect to every scene he’s in.
Even fleeting performances leave an impression. Mr Pressman’s receptionist, for instance, subtly differentiates between the two timelines in the contrasting ways she treats suited businessman Joe and offender Joe – a small but highly effective detail.
One of the production’s most emotionally compelling devices is the frequent presence of Joe’s father (Tristan Hood), who silently observes events unfolding onstage. His presence becomes a powerful reminder that Joe’s choices are inseparable from the shame and insecurity inherited from his father’s failures. Running through the musical is a compelling paradox: Joe is driven to escape the humiliation associated with his father, yet in trying so desperately not to become him, he gradually follows the same path.
The production reaches its emotional peak in the final stages of the narrative. Standing silently at his mother’s funeral, Innes reveals a young man overwhelmed by guilt and regret. His carefully constructed corporate confidence drains away; his shoulders sag, and what remains is not a successful businessman but a frightened young man who has lost sight of himself. It is one of the production’s most devastating scenes.
The musical is full of extravagant, exuberantly choreographed set pieces – Joe’s last day of school and Joe and Sarah’s paradise wedding – during which one can only marvel at the complex dance sequences performed by the ensemble. Yet my one reservation is that these dazzling sequences occasionally threaten to overshadow the play’s deeper emotional core: its exploration of grief, love, family, coming-of-age, and difficult decisions.As the play drew to a close, the most powerful element of the play for me was its exploration of a young man’s crippling insecurity. Beneath Joe’s veneer of confidence is simply a terrified 16-year-old boy trying desperately to do the right thing without the guidance of a father. Our House ultimately becomes not just a story about crime or morality, but about the vulnerability of growing up and the frightening uncertainty of trying to decide who you are.
Student Life
Oxford Union election count suspended amid electoral fraud allegations
The Oxford Union’s Trinity Term 2026 election count has been suspended after the Returning Officer identified substantial evidence of interference, before any ballot boxes were opened.
In a notice posted for all members on 12th June, the Returning Officer announced that the counting process would not proceed under Standing Order D3(f), having determined that it would not yield a reliable result. A number of membership cards have been seized, and an Election Tribunal will be convened, with a full independent investigation to follow.
The suspension came after Electoral Officials identified what the Returning Officer described as a “systematic attempt to undermine the election”. Polls had opened earlier that morning, with results expected today.
Among the incidents prompting the decision is a formal allegation filed under rule 33(c) (iii) of the Union’s Rules and Standing Orders by Shermar Pryce. In a document seen by Cherwell, Pryce alleges that an unknown individual attended the Poll Room on the evening of 12th June and attempted to cast a vote using his membership card. The attempt was intercepted by the Deputy Returning Officer before any vote was cast, and the membership card was confiscated. Cherwell has seen two other documents in which members allege that they were impersonated during the vote.
Pryce told Cherwell: “I had already voted legitimately earlier in the day and had not given my Membership Card to anyone. Upon learning of this, I filed a formal complaint with the Returning Officer this evening. I have also reported the matter to Thames Valley Police, as the conduct in question may amount to fraud and criminal impersonation.”
The suspension echoes a previous case this term involving another member, Catherine Xu, which established a precedent for electoral interference proceedings at the Union. Sources with knowledge of the situation suggest that the pattern of the incidents may have been intended to trigger a count suspension rather than to cast decisive fraudulent votes. Under the Union’s rules, evidence of sufficient interference can render a count invalid, sending the results to a tribunal rather than a ballot tally.
The Returning Officer’s notice states that the number of affected ballots is difficult to ascertain, but that a meaningful number are believed to have been compromised.
Prajwal Pandey, one of the two candidates for President-Elect, told Cherwell: “First, I would like to thank my incredible campaign team, as well as everyone who took the time to vote in yesterday’s election. Their hard work, commitment, and engagement reflect the very best of what the Union should stand for, which makes the reports that have emerged since yesterday all the more unfortunate.
I am shocked and saddened by these reports, particularly given the wider context of the previous term. I am aware that there is now a live process to facilitate an investigation into this matter, and I remain confident in the ability of the Union’s procedures and officials to establish facts and ensure that a clear and legitimate result can be returned.”
Milo Donovan has been contacted for comment.
The Oxford Union has been contacted for comment.
Additional reporting by Mercedes Haas, Ned Remington, and Hattie Simpson
Student Life
Nonsense and sensibility: Adapting Austen for the screen
It is a truth universally acknowledged that not all Jane Austen adaptations are created equal. But this fact hasn’t stopped a cycle of new adaptations from dominating our screens every few years and captivating our attention each and every time. Both ‘good’ and ‘bad’ versions share equal success in revitalising discussions on what constitutes accurate representations of women, relationships, historicity, and above all, the nuanced social commentary at the heart of all of Austen’s novels. Butchered adaptations will not only find themselves sentenced to the depths of IMDb, but also condemned for the indignance it strikes in the heart of every ‘Janeite’ for its contribution towards a pervasive media culture that so often fails to present women and romance with multifaceted depth. A ‘good’ adaptation inspires quite the opposite reaction, with fans often planting it firmly on an immovable pedestal, second only to Austen’s writing itself.
Two new adaptations of Austen’s novels are due to be released this year alone – Sense and Sensibility and Pride and Prejudice – and in doing so, both are inevitably placing themselves on the chopping block of opinion, where every minutia is scrutinised and compared, and any creative liberties taken are examined in microscopic detail. Netflix has declared that every generation deserves its own adaptation of Pride and Prejudice. Regardless of whether you agree with this statement, what can be said with certainty is that, in filming a new version of an Austen novel, the final form shoulders the significant responsibility of shaping, at least in part, the contemporary perspective of such classic works.
So what does constitute a good Austen adaptation? Is it one that lingers dreamily in the collective memory, its tendrils shaping Pinterest boards and helping romanticise the Regency era? Or does a more successful adaptation try to shed its source material, using its skeleton to instead tailor the content to modern audiences? To answer in short, an Austen adaptation should aim to be as timeless and enduring as the novels themselves.
In the check-box for good Austen adaptations, a realistic and genuine portrayal of female characters must come top of the list. Each of Austen’s novels centres primarily around their female protagonists, with some even being eponymous, such as Emma or Lady Susan. Although now a much beloved character, Austen famously wrote that Emma would be a heroine “whom no one but myself will much like”, anticipating the reception of Emma’s most explicit flaw: vanity. But it is this degree of verisimilitude that should be translated on screen, since these female characters are intentionally imperfect, designed to hold a mirror up to their audience. Romola Garai’s portrayal of Emma Woodhouse in Emma (2009) convincingly embraces the character’s penchant for snobbery, self-importance, and meddling, whilst also highlighting her intelligence and growing self-awareness. Likewise, Kate Winslet’s portrayal of Marianne Dashwood in Sense and Sensibility (1995) captures her headstrong naivety, without compromising her playful and amusing character.
Appropriate on-screen dialogue is integral to the success of any period piece, whether it’s the accent, delivery, colloquialisms, or the words themselves. Jennifer Ehle as Elizabeth Bennet and Anna Chancellor as Caroline Bingley in Pride and Prejudice (1995) both diligently balance the witticisms, humour, and carefully barbed jabs peppered throughout Austen’s novel. Ehle delivers the quick-witted back-and-forth between Elizabeth and Mr Darcy (Colin Firth) with playful yet biting precision, capturing the evocative tension in the dialogue that emanates from the page itself in the novel. Chancellor embodies the highly-strung, sharp-tongued Miss Bingley, with her arched eyebrows and tense posture constantly reminiscent of a predator stalking its prey.
On the opposite end of this spectrum, however, is Persuasion (2022), which failed to win the hearts of its audience. Listening to Dakota Johnson’s Anne Elliot describe, in a slightly jilting ‘English’ accent, how she and Wentworth are “worse than exes – we’re friends” in an awkward attempt to break the fourth wall, feels jarring, to say the least. The vocabulary of this Anne Elliot is littered with weird anachronisms, which are exacerbated by her oddly forced habits of drinking alone and stroking her random pet rabbit. In attempting to create a ‘wine-drunk-girlboss-cool aunt’ out of Anne, Cracknell obscures the intelligence and emotional depth Austen equipped her with. So it could only be through Anne Elliot that Austen could voice such social commentary: “Men have had every advantage of us in telling their own story. Education has been theirs in so much higher a degree; the pen has been in their hands.”
Yet the blatant 21st-century vernacular in Persuasion (2022) begs the question – does modernising these historical storylines make the audience lose touch with the original material, and to what extent? There seems to be an implicit assumption that the modern audience would not be able to meaningfully comprehend or engage with the notions of 18th-century society, and certainly not its phraseology. So do these novels need to be adapted or abridged to remain relevant or accessible to a contemporary audience? The respective success of both Clueless (1995) and Emma (2020) might answer this for us. Both films are based on the original novel, yet interact with their source material in entirely opposite yet highly engaging ways. By retaining the core plot of a well-intentioned but ultimately misguided and meddling matchmaker, but adapting the setting, characters, dialogue, and costumes entirely to the era in which it is set, both films convincingly tap into the timeless themes of girlhood and personal growth.
However, the appeal of Austen in TV and film isn’t just restricted to the canonical sphere. Spin-offs of Austen’s works have been flooding our screens for decades, with the greatest source of inspiration for these adaptations being Pride and Prejudice. From Pride and Prejudice and Zombies (2016) to Death Comes to Pemberley (2013), and most recently The Other Bennet Sister (2026), the captivating and enduring ingenuity of Austen’s novels lends itself well to reinvention time and time again. Much like Clueless (1995) – and very unlike Persuasion (2022) – these Austen-adjacent adaptations demonstrate that modern creativity in a historical context can certainly thrive.
Although these aspects are not a guaranteed recipe for success, the realistic portrayals of female characters, appropriate dialogue, and believable historicity, are, in my opinion at least, the fundamentals for a ‘good’ Austen adaptation. Even if you disagree, the continuous remaking of Austen novels suggests our appetite to be enthralled or appalled by the many different renditions remains as insatiable as ever. After all, it has been over 80 years now since the first major adaptation of Pride and Prejudice in 1940, and we’re still waiting for the next.
Student Life
Mansfield College redevelopment plans approved by City Council
Oxford City Council unanimously approved Mansfield College’s development plans on Tuesday, 26th May. The project, known as the Estate Transformation Project, will be delivered by architects Feilden Fowles. Mansfield told Cherwell that the development would “provide students and the College with up-to-date facilities they need for generations to come”.
The John Marsh Building has been approved for demolition, and will be replaced by a four-storey building containing 174 en-suite bedrooms. This will increase the number of student rooms on the college site by 70, from the current 104.
Development will be concentrated in a new South Range, which will include additional academic, social, and work spaces. A new entrance garden on Mansfield Road will replace the existing car park, while a new Porter’s Lodge gatehouse will be set back from the street. The college’s new Junior Common Room will also be located in the South Range, described as a “centre of daily life”.
The new buildings are intended to act as a “contemporary counterpart” to the existing Grade II*-listed North Range, which will in turn see redevelopments of its own – the project is expected to “not only provide high-performance new buildings, but also improve the existing listed building fabric”.
The proposals include new green spaces across the site, including a second quad, a new garden quad, a publicly accessible pocket park, and new site-wide landscape design. The College also plans to reduce carbon emissions through “low carbon design and energy-efficient systems”, as part of its target to reach net zero carbon by 2050. Mansifeld told Cherwell that “the project will cut Mansfield’s carbon emissions by over 40%”. Building stone from the existing John Marsh Building, and other buildings set for demolition, will be recycled in both the new South Range and landscaping elements.
Alongside the approved proposals, Mansfield College is also bringing forward plans for its historic Champneys buildings. Oxford City Council will be considering applications to build a three-story extension with a lift to the Chapney’s building, improving access to the library.
As part of the demolitions, the College’s WWII bomb shelter will be removed from the side of the Champney’s building. Oxford Preservation Trust stated that “the WW2 history of the college will be reflected in the proposed interpretation plaque”.
Mansfield College says it aims to minimise disruption during construction. Mansfield told Cherwell: “College life will continue as normally as possible, with the majority of student and academic activity concentrated in the main Champneys buildings and the Hands Building”. Student representatives have been involved through the planning and design process, providing feedback on the layout of facilities. The College has also said that meals will be subsidised during the construction period, and that it will work alongside the JCR and MCR to maintain college activities.
Construction is expected to begin later this summer, with the project scheduled for completion before the start of the 2029/30 academic year. Helen Mountfield KC, Principal of Mansfield College, described the plans as “the most significant transformation of the College estate since it moved to central Oxford from Birmingham”.
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