BritishTheatre

Buscar

Desde 1999

Noticias y reseñas de confianza

25

años

lo mejor del teatro británico

Entradas
oficiales

Seleccione
sus asientos

Desde 1999

25 años

Entradas oficiales

Elige asientos

REVIEW: No Sweat, Lakeside Theatre, University Of Essex ✭✭✭✭

Publicado en

5 de marzo de 2020

Por

pauldavies

Paul T Davies reviews Vicky Moran's verbatim play No Sweat at the Lakeside Theatre at the University of Essex.

No Sweat.

Lakeside Theatre, University of Essex.

4 March 2020

4 Stars

The gay sauna has always been a venue for gay, bi and curious men to come together, in what should be a safe space, to enjoy intimacy, sex and companionship. What is little known about them, and an aspect I certainly wasn’t aware of, is that it provides refuge, no matter how temporary, for homeless LGBTQ men. Vicky Moran’s excellent play, created from verbatim and shared experiences, casts a light on this world and is an alarm call for a growing crisis.

Three men meet throughout regular visits to Flex, a gay sauna, and Alex Berry’s precise, yet free-flowing, set lands you right into the towel laden world. Tristan, the excellent Denholm Spurr, is well-spoken, a graduate, but thrown out of his parents home and having literally nowhere else to go. He meets Alf, (James Haymer), exiled from the Welsh Valleys by intolerance, an escort, drug user, embittered. It’s a tricky part, as Alf is not easy to like, but Haymer invests him with enough complexity that you understand totally the circumstances that led him to this. Most powerful of all is the story of Charlie, an asylum seeker from Pakistan, working cash in hand at the sauna to make ends meet, facing execution if returned to his home country. It is a beautifully nuanced performance from Manish Gandhi, who conveys a heartbreaking spirit of stoicism in the face of horrific circumstances.

Moran’s script uses voice-over to convey additional experiences, and it really shines when the characters speak directly to the audience and act out scenes of interviews, from Home Office officials or support workers for example. The trio works together well to create a tapestry of homelessness, and it is grim viewing, another play that raises the question of who cares within our failing care system, although a bond does begin to grow between the men. Above all, it shows how the worst kind of exile is exile from our own families, who should supply the support network and care that every human needs.

Check out further productions at the excellent Lakeside Theatre

El sitio web de BritishTheatre.com fue creado para celebrar la rica y diversa cultura teatral del Reino Unido. Nuestra misión es proporcionar las últimas noticias del teatro del Reino Unido, críticas del West End, y perspectivas tanto sobre el teatro regional como sobre las entradas para teatro en Londres, asegurando que los entusiastas puedan mantenerse al día con todo, desde los mayores musicales del West End hasta el teatro fringe más vanguardista. Nos apasiona fomentar y nutrir las artes escénicas en todas sus formas.

El espíritu del teatro está vivo y en auge, y BritishTheatre.com está a la vanguardia ofreciendo noticias e información oportuna y autorizada a los amantes del teatro. Nuestro dedicado equipo de periodistas teatrales y críticos trabaja incansablemente para cubrir cada producción y evento, facilitando que puedas acceder a las últimas críticas y reservar entradas para teatro en Londres para espectáculos imprescindibles.

NOTICIAS DE TEATRO

ENTRADAS

NOTICIAS DE TEATRO

ENTRADAS