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REVIEW: Cruise, Duchess Theatre ✭✭✭✭✭
Home News & Reviews Review REVIEW: Cruise, Duchess Theatre ✭✭✭✭✭
Review 21 May 2021 · 2 min read · 486 words

REVIEW: Cruise, Duchess Theatre ✭✭✭✭✭

Paul T Davies reviews Jack Holden's play Cruise now playing at the Duchess Theatre as theatre UK wide starts to re-open.

CruiseDuchess TheatreJack HoldenReviews

Paul T Davies reviews Jack Holden's play Cruise now playing at the Duchess Theatre as theatre UK wide starts to re-open.

Photo: Pamela Raith Cruise

Duchess Theatre, London

20/5/21

5 Stars

BOOK TICKETS

It’s been a long wait to sit in an audience and enjoy a collective response to theatre, a wait made even longer by the late start to the press performance. But it was worth it for Jack Holden’s heartfelt, passionate and moving Cruise. Created from his personal experience of working on Switchboard, the LGBTQ+ helpline, (who are partners of this production), when he took a phone call that led to an account of life in Soho in the 1980s, the play is a pertinent look at viruses, community, love and, above all, hope.

One of the main reasons the play works so well is Holden’s superb research and knowledge of the period, his respect for what now can be called “gay veterans”, and his superb performance, playing a range of vivid characters. Set in contemporary times, when Michael calls and wishes to talk to an older volunteer, Jack doesn’t respond as he has been trained to do. Realising Jack has had a night out, Michael tells him his story of his best night out ever, which he believed would be his last night alive, in 1988. Although the structure of the phone call seems unlikely, the device works really well in leading us into the past. Holden takes us on the journey with energy and empathy, we meet a host of characters from a Soho that no longer exists, Polari Gordon, Jacky Shit, the acidly jaded drag queen, who delivers a stunning version of “Is That All There Is?”, and Slutty Dave, who, despite the nickname, is Michael’s lover and who he loses to AIDS. You care deeply about them all, and Holden commands the stage with an exuberant, confident, storytelling. There are audacious sequences, particularly cutting Top Gun in with Slutty Dave’s death.

Photo: Pamela Raith

This is not a one man show, composer John Elliott is on stage throughout, partnering Holden in a terrific soundtrack, the beats and moves and musical soaring of a lost generation. As Michael/Holden dances his dance of death, ( so he believes), the music pounds to an overwhelming, moving crescendo. (I had to write this review to a background of 80’s 12” Remixes, the music got into my ears so much!) But, of course, Michael survives, and one of the best things about the show is that the trope of the tragic, lonely, doomed gay man (see Netflix’s Halston), is challenged and taken part. Written during the pandemic of 2020, the clear, shining message is that we survive. We carry on. It’s a joyous, funny, moving piece and I urge you to see it.

Many thanks to the Duchess Theatre management and the front of house team for ensuring we could all see the play safely.

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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