Another successful Ink Festival!

Well done to everyone involved in INK this year.
Libby Purves reviews the 2021 INK Festival in Halesworth in the EADT..
Upstairs at the White Swan pub in Halesworth, clothes are coming off and a bed unrolling as two tipsy young partygoers prepare to hook up.
But they keep getting distracted from their passion mid-flurry by a political disagreement about Zionism.
The briefest pause as actors re-set, and now we are in a US shooting gallery in a tense conversation about fear and trust with Chris Larner as the instructor.
Another blink, and he is a different man entirely in the next miniature play, as a middle-aged man tries to pray and finds that God is a pushbutton call centre and ‘Your call is important to us”.
It’s one of the day’s funniest. Moments later a New York firefighter is dismayed that his blind date wears a hijab.
That was a refreshing hour. Meanwhile five minutes across town in the Kings garage next to the Cut I encountered Alan Titchmarsh’s stalker, then a wrenching portrait of bitter lonely affection for a partner in a care home, and finally a remarkable solo performance by Amber Muldoon – one of INK’s youngest discoveries, as a woman steeling herself against harsh odds to protect her unborn child.
INK is unique: it seeks out short plays (5 to 20 minutes usually) from previously unproduced writers.
Then it produces them, mostly onstage but also as radio work, employing seasoned actors and professional directors including the award-winning Paul Schlesinger..
It enlivens the town (Halesworth is definitely a place to be this weekend) but the deepest value of INK to the future of new writing can’t be overestimated.
Seeing your work come alive is not only a buzz, but an important education in how characters and stories develop.
I saw 18 plays on the first day (they are grouped, shown together in different sites) and as a critic can affirm that the standard varies from very high indeed to pleasingly entertaining or interestingly promising.
The festival belongs to its emerging unknowns, and the creative future of our region and nation, but every year INK invites a few “INKredibles”, better-known figures with local ties, to submit plays on a theme..