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REVIEW: 5 Guys Chillin, C Too - Edinburgh Festival ✭✭✭
HomeNews & ReviewsREVIEW: 5 Guys Chillin, C Too - Edinburgh Festival ✭✭✭
17 August 2016 · 1 min read · 250 words

REVIEW: 5 Guys Chillin, C Too - Edinburgh Festival ✭✭✭

On the plus side, the cast are very good, and the damaging side of their partying is played very well. I liked the confrontational nature of the script, and it does not glamorise the scene. It's bleakness makes me worry for young gay men.

5 Guys Chillin'C TooEdinburgh FestivalEdinburgh FringeLGBTReviews

5 Guys Chilling

C Too

15 August 2016

3 Stars

Book Now Chem sex, (sex involving the use of drugs), is a worrying scene, connected to soaring HIV rates among gay men, especially in London. Created from over 50 hours of interviews from men on Grindr and other apps, the play is a demonstration of how difficult it is to create verbatim theatre. The cast constantly speak in just that- interviews. The transcripts have been allocated to characters, but the conversational tone is forced and unconvincing. For much of the play the characters scream and call each other bitch and relate ever increasing tales of sexual exploits. The problem is, they are so dislikeable that we don't go on an emotional journey with them. There's a better play struggling to get out- the Asian guy who is in an arranged marriage- but he is even silenced in the final scene. On the plus side, the cast are very good, and the damaging side of their partying is played very well. I liked the confrontational nature of the script, and it does not glamorise the scene. It's bleakness makes me worry for young gay men. Yet, in a play that discusses HIV, addiction, unsafe sex, loneliness and other issues, the dramatic stakes are not raised high enough. In an effort to neither condone or condemn their behaviour, the consequences are not fully played out and it feels as empty as their partying.

BOOK NOW FOR 5 GUYS CHILLIN AT EDINBURGH FESTIVAL

Paul T Davies
Paul T Davies

Paul is a playwright, director, actor, academic, (he has a PhD from the University of East Anglia), teacher and theatre reviewer! His plays include Living with Luke, (UK tour 2016), Play Something, (Edinburgh Festival Fringe/Drayton Arms Theatre, London 2018), , (2019), and now The Miner’s Crow, which won the inaugural Artist’s Pick of the Fringe Award at the first ever Colchester Fringe Festival 2021. In lockdown 2020 he created the audio series Isolation Alan, available on Youtube, and performed online in the Voice Box Festival. He is the founder member of Stage Write, a Colchester based theatre company, and his acting roles include Rupert in How We Love by Annette Brook, first performed at the Vaults Festival 2020 and revived at the Arcola and at Theatre Peckham in 2021. Follow: @stagewrite_

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