Category Archives: Reviews

My Son's a Queer

My Son’s A Queer (But What Can You Do)

★★★★★

Edinburgh Festival Fringe

MY SON’S A QUEER (BUT WHAT CAN YOU DO) at Edinburgh Festival Fringe

★★★★★

 

My Sons A Queer

 

“there’s lots, and I mean LOTS, of camp queer joy and comedy in the show”

 

Not to sound like a complete weirdo, but I’ve been following Rob Madge’s career for quite some time. I think my first encounter might’ve been a performance of them playing the Artful Dodger in a telly promo performance of Oliver! And then (or it might’ve been before) as Gavroche in the 25th anniversary concert of Les Mis. I think I shared with many others in the delight of seeing their old VHS tapes pop up on Twitter a couple of years ago of them performing as a kid in their living room. So I’m definitely a fan. I was very much also that kid who played dress-up instead of football and used to make my parents watch me “perform” (I use the term loosely) to a CD soundtrack of Disney’s biggest movie hits. Unfortunately, unlike Rob, my parents weren’t that into it and didn’t really know how to work a camcorder. But it did make this show incredibly relatable.

At the setup, we’re welcomed into Rob’s living room where they’ve been practising for their next show. We’re invited into the tech rehearsal. The stage is warm and cosy: an armchair, some drawers, and a small cabinet with family photos atop. The instrumental to zip-a-dee-doo-dah is playing as we take our seats. The show is a mix of original songs and stories from Rob about their stagey childhood, difficult times at school, and queer awakenings, broken up with a fabulous selection of family videos from the old camcorder. The opening song includes the line ‘even though the stage is small’, which might’ve been the case when this show first premiered, but it’s actually on a pretty big stage now in Edinburgh, and deservedly so! But it’s nice to get a sense that Rob’s ambitions are still even bigger.

Besides just being an incredibly talented performer and singer, Rob is also wonderfully charming. They are so easy to watch, and even easier to root for. The humour is on point, and I personally adored the very niche musical theatre references to the likes of Connie Fisher (the winner of BBC One’s talent competition to find the next Maria) and the seventh of Henry VIII’s wives… the swing in Six the Musical! I think every queer adult in the audience could relate to Rob’s first teenage crush on the Pied Piper of Hamelin. We all had our own Pied Piper, I’m sure.

Though there’s lots, and I mean LOTS, of camp queer joy and comedy in My Son’s A Queer, there’s also certainly moments of poignancy; as Rob’s school teacher knocks their confidence, and basically tells them they need to fit into a box that they don’t feel like they belong in. Rob is very grateful for their family, and acknowledges how lucky they are to have them; their dad lifting them up to help them fly, and reading in for all the other parts (sometimes even getting the lines right); their grandad who built them their very own little theatre, and their grandma who was quite happy being spun around on an office chair to replicate the tea cups at Disneyland. But they also acknowledge that not everyone is so lucky. And a message from their dad about parenting really sums up what it should be all about. I look around towards the end of the show to find it’s not just me wiping away the tears… it’s quite a lot of us. The show and Rob’s performance is incredibly touching. For some of us, perhaps there’s a sense of grief for the queer childhood we weren’t able to have. And for others, maybe some hope for the current and future generations of queer young people, who might just be lucky enough to have a family like Rob’s. It’s a rollercoaster of emotions for sure, performed with flair, talent, and total commitment to the camp theatricality of it all. My Son’s A Queer is a brilliant show. It deserves full houses, and I hope it gets them.

 

Reviewed 12th August 2022

by Joseph Winer

Photography by Mark Senior

 

 

 

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The Anniversary

The Anniversary

★★★★★

Edinburgh Festival Fringe

THE ANNIVERSARY at Edinburgh Festival Fringe

★★★★★

 

The Anniversary

 

“what starts out as gentle clowning eventually descends into a surreal experience of maniacal energy”

 

The Australian company Salvador Dinosaur is visiting the Edinburgh Fringe this year, and how lucky we are that it is. Performers Clare Bartholomew and Daniel Tobias are Jim and Barb in The Anniversary. An elderly couple celebrating their 50th anniversary, you think, throwing a big party to celebrate the event. How sweet. But what starts out as gentle clowning eventually descends into a surreal experience of maniacal energy, which the audience is drawn into—whether they like it or not. Salvador Dinosaur don’t hesitate to go for broke in this show. In fact, everything gets broken by the end, and the weather plays its part. With climate change a big theme at the Edinburgh Fringe this year—that’s just one more reason to go soak up the mad Aussie humour in The Anniversary.

Once The Anniversary begins—and it is a slow beginning—we meet the lucky couple at home, getting ready for their big day. They’re cooking, setting the tables, and putting up balloons. There is even a box of fireworks. Of course this is all foreshadowing, and at some point, we just know something bad is going to go down. Jim and Barb have some issues, it is true, but they’re working through them, the way people who’ve lived together a long time tend to do. They manage each other’s health problems, help out with domestic duties, and even tolerate pets that they’re not that into. Bartholomew and Tobias don’t say any of this. Their performances are a combination of physical action, and inarticulate mutterings punctuated by “Oh Jim” a lot. And reference to their beloved pets, a cat and a bunny. But for every moment of domestic familiarity, or recognizable moments, something rather disturbing is emerging. Jim and Barb run in and out of doorways, carrying party items. But other, more ominous things. Maybe it’s the rat trap, or Jim’s wild and undisciplined energy with a staple gun, or Barb’s pill popping habit when she begins to feel stressed. Maybe it’s the creepy bird noises that Jim hears when he goes outside to rescue kitty from the rain and thunder. It all comes together in an inspired showdown featuring storm and stress, barbecued rats and yes, nudity. And that is just the build up the stunning ending that this dazzling duo somehow manage to pull off in such a small space.

Go see The Anniversary. It’s inspired silliness performed by two brilliant actors. I can’t wait to see what they dream up next.

 

 

Reviewed 7th August 2022

by Dominica Plummer

 

Photography by Embellysh

 

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