BEN Brown's first full-length play, All Things Considered, has lodged in the memory bank of Esk Valley Theatre artistic director Mark Stratton ever since he saw its 1996 premiere at the Stephen Joseph Theatre.

Under Alan Ayckbourn's leadership, the Scarborough theatre had given Tim Firth his big break with similar foresight in its 1992 commission of NeviIle's Island. As chance would have it, revivals of All Things Considered and Neville's Island are now running opposite each other; Brown's play at Glaisdale, near Whitby, and Firth's middle-management misadventure as part of the SJT's 60th anniversary season.

Neville's Island has played plenty of Yorkshire theatres since its debut, but Brown's play has not done so, all the more surprising in the light of the award-winning success of his later work Larkin With Women.

Enter Mark Stratton and the consistently wonderful Esk Valley Theatre. Not only has Stratton broken the moorland company's mould by expanding his usual summer cast of two or three to six but also he has engaged Bill Champion to lead the company. Champion by name, he is a champion actor too, whose Stephen Joseph Theatre repertory work hit a peak in the multiple interlinking plays of Ayckbourn's Intimate Exchanges.

York Press:

Esk Valley Theatre's cast and production team for All Things Considered

All Things Considered is a comedy, albeit a comedy about suicide, and yes, it is dead funny, right down to the plastic bag over the head, the pills, the whisky and the gun, but Brown is not being flippant.

Like Ayckbourn before him in 1985's Woman In Mind, Brown mines humour with bleak sensibility from suicidal contemplation, with no less brio in his writing, where he frames one man's desperate desire to end his life in a comedy of modern manners with the pace of a farcical sitcom.

Champion's David Freeman is an Oxbridge professor of philosophy who has just published his latest book to the usual indifference. He has decided, with his customary formidable powers of reasoning, that The End should now be his own. After Matters Of Life And Death, his work is complete, life no longer matters; it is time to put down Plato, his dog, and exit himself, Freeman freed. The End.

If only it could be that simple. The living room of David Freeman's college flat – designed by Ruby Savage in the familiar wood-panelled style – is more like a carousel, where people endlessly enter and exit. An electrician (Tom Bevan), a lecherous lecturer (David Chafer), the college priest (Bevan again), an American researcher (Clara Perez), a department secretary (Alison Darling) and a broadsheet hack (Rachel Barry) all want something from him, leaving suicide suspended.

"We are always looking for plays that tackle difficult subjects and stimulate debate in an intelligent, witty and thought-provoking way," said Stratton in his What's On interview, and All Things Considered does exactly that. Especially in Champion's typically understated depiction of the entirely rational, clear and free-thinking Freeman, unencumbered by the need for politeness or English reserve any more.

This is a classically constructed, character-driven piece of living-room sitcom with a pin-sharp cast, but better still, it not only stays at least one step ahead of the audience with pleasing slipperiness but it asks philosophical questions too.

In Stratton's summation, Brown's play contends that we should be able to determine our own destiny. That is for you to decide, but if your reviewer could have one wish, it would be that All Things Considered is destined to succeed this summer and not return to the deathly quiet of the backwaters afterwards.

All Things Considered, Esk Valley Theatre, Robinson Institute, Glaisdale, near Whitby, until August 29. Box office: 01947 897587 or eskvalleytheatre.co.uk