Life on a Loop is a tender, funny and deeply human look at life in a rest home, told through the eyes of a devoted carer with a big heart.
In Life on a Loop, Ellie Smith delivers a solo performance that is both stark and stunning: a theatrical meditation on aging, caregiving, and the quiet battles fought within the walls of a rest home. With nothing more than a handful of chairs, a wheelchair, and a cube of fairy lights, Smith conjures a world that is heartbreakingly familiar and unflinchingly honest.
This is not a play that seeks comfort. It doesn’t offer easy sentiment or tidy resolutions. Instead, it invites the audience into the daily rhythms of institutional care: the repetition, the indignities, the shrinking sense of self. And yet, within this bleak terrain, Smith finds flickers of humour, moments of connection, and a resilient humanity that refuses to be extinguished.
The set design is deliberately sparse. Cast-off recliners are arranged with casual disarray, each one serving as a stage for a different character. A few soft toys hint at attempts to soften the sterility. Smith, dressed in a caregiver’s smock, moves between these chairs with fluidity, transforming herself with posture, voice, and subtle gesture. The lighting, designed by Tony Black, and the ambient soundscape by Victor Chaga, provide just enough texture to support the transitions without ever distracting from the performance.
Smith’s portrayal of Grace, a caregiver who recounts placing her husband in care after his mind began to unravel, is a standout moment. Her monologue is tender, painful, and deeply relatable. The guilt she carries is palpable, and the audience responds with a quiet empathy that fills the room. It’s one of many instances where Smith’s writing and performance pierce through the theatrical veil and land squarely in the heart.
The play is set on Christmas Day, though the holiday is barely distinguishable from any other. Party hats and cake do little to lift the mood. The rituals of the day, from medication and hygiene, to meals, continue as usual. There’s no spiritual transcendence. Instead, the focus is on the body: its needs, its failures, its stubborn persistence. The residents aren’t preparing for the next Mass; they’re hoping for a successful bowel movement. It’s grim, yes, but it’s also real. And in that realism, Smith finds dignity.
Life on a Loop doesn’t shy away from the discomfort. It leans into it. The discomfort of residents who feel forgotten. The discomfort of family members who visit out of obligation, then leave with guilt. The discomfort of staff who, through emotional fatigue or systemic neglect, begin to see their charges as tasks rather than people. Smith captures all of this with nuance and compassion.
But the play is not without light. There are moments of joy: small, fleeting, but powerful. A shared joke. A stubborn rivalry that becomes a friendship. A resident who weaponizes their wit against the slow erosion of their autonomy. These moments are golden threads woven through the grey fabric of the narrative. They remind us that even in the most diminished circumstances, people find ways to connect, to resist, to matter.
Smith’s ability to inhabit multiple characters is remarkable. With no costume changes and minimal props, she creates a cast of distinct personalities. Occasionally, the voices blur, but the emotional clarity of each character soon reasserts itself. Her transitions are deft, her timing impeccable, and her emotional range expansive. It’s a masterclass in solo performance.
The play resonates across generations. Younger audience members may see their grandparents (or themselves) in the stories. Older viewers may feel the weight of recognition, the fear of becoming a burden, the hope of being remembered. It’s a mirror held up to a universal experience, and it reflects back both the horror and the grace.
What makes Life on a Loop so effective is its refusal to flinch. It doesn’t romanticize aging. It doesn’t villainize caregivers or families. It simply tells the truth, with humour, with heart, and with a deep respect for the complexity of the human condition. It’s theatre stripped to its essentials: one actor, a few chairs, and a story that matters.
In the end, Life on a Loop is a celebration of resilience. It’s about finding joy in the mundane, connection in the routine, and meaning in the moments that others might overlook. It’s a reminder that even when the world shrinks to the size of a care home lounge, the human spirit can still stretch beyond its confines.
Ellie Smith has created something unique; a play that is both minimal and monumental. Life on a Loop is not just a performance; it’s an act of witness. And in bearing witness, it invites us to see, to feel, and perhaps, to care a little more deeply.
Life in a Loop is being performed between 11 November - 16 November at Auckland Q Theatre - Rangatira
You can purchase tickets here





















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