Category Archives: Reviews

Tropicana

Tropicana

★★★★

Edinburgh Festival Fringe

TROPICANA at Edinburgh Festival Fringe

★★★★

 

Tropicana

 

“Sadler’s stage presence is really engaging”

 

Aidan Sadler’s queer comedy cabaret Tropicana is a lively, wonderfully camp evening of entertainment, as Sadler performs a selection of 80s classics interwoven with stand-up routines (with the occasional story tangent thrown in). Sadler comments on the infamous ‘wanky Wednesday’ audience of the fringe festival but perseveres through a bit of a slow start to get the audience nice and warmed up for what turns out to be a really fun evening.

The dark, wide stage is bare, except for a pale orange dress which hangs up on a stand. Sadler is non-binary and makes a point of telling us they feel outside of the gender binary. A lot of the show talks about deconstructing gender, but it never feels preachy. They check to see who’s in the audience tonight. The straights are welcome, Sadler promises, and they are pretty included on the whole, to be fair. At one point one of them is asked if he’d like to try on a dress. He politely declines the offer, and consent is important after all so Sadler improvises their way to the next bit of the show. It does feel a little uncomfortable, but Sadler’s response puts us all at ease. At another moment they stare intensely at someone in the crowd, but it’s all part of the fun.

Sadler’s vocals are very impressive. They perform Spandau Ballet’s ‘Gold’, with gold confetti flying out of pockets and shoes; the orange dress is manipulated like a puppet to perform part of The Human League’s ‘Don’t You Want Me Baby’; and they manage to get the whole audience joining in for the chorus of ‘Take on Me’. Where the jokes don’t always land, the songs make up for this. Sadler’s stage presence is really engaging, and they just seem totally comfortable during each of the numbers, even when the crowd are playing a little hard to get.

Some of the humour is a little vulgar; something about a cum-stained magazine I didn’t quite catch, and it’s certainly a bit hit and miss with tonight’s crowd. But behind the jokes which often attack heterosexuals or ‘ASOS gays’ is a very honest and open sense of vulnerability from Sadler. We learn about their experiences during lockdown: a mental health crisis which led to the eventual making of the show. The humour we realise is actually very self-deprecating, and the writing of this show is an act of catharsis for Sadler. It might not appear so on the surface, but like many of us, Sadler is filled with anxiety and body confidence issues, which they share very candidly with the audience.

It’s one of those shows that does rely quite heavily on the audience, and I would’ve loved to have seen this with a fuller house. Sadler is an incredibly talented performer, and the show makes for a really fun and queer night out.

 

 

Reviewed 10th August 2022

by Joseph Winer

 

 

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Fabulett 1933

Fabulett 1933

★★★

Edinburgh Festival Fringe

FABULETT 1933 at Edinburgh Festival Fringe

★★★

 

Fabulett 1933

 

“Trauffer’s performance is full of charisma”

 

Our story begins in 1932 in the fabulous Fabulett cabaret club in Berlin. Fascism is on the rise and queer clubs and culture spaces are under attack. Tonight is the last night of club Fabulett before they close their doors for good at 10pm. Looking after us for the evening is our host, Felix, who appears in leather pants and corset, with black gloves, a cape and a cain. He is accompanied by pianist James Hall who plays the tunes in this camptastic musical variety show. Despite this being the place where the first gender-affirming surgery was performed, a country where queerness had the opportunity to flourish, Felix (Michael Trauffer), and his queerness, is not fully embraced by his family. As he uncovers stories from his past, we learn that he moved to Berlin to live his true self, away from his father who thought that fighting in the war would be the thing to make him finally “man up”.

Trauffer’s performance is full of charisma. Whilst telling us the poignant details of his past, of his broken relationship with his family, he’s also able to find lots of humour and a glittery sense of fun, especially with the music numbers. He stands centre stage, performing a number about wanting his queerness to be ‘visible’, a song he reprises a couple of times throughout the show. The musical numbers are a little static. During one of them, Trauffer mounts a suitcase which he begins to whip as he discovers his kinkier side. But a little more choreography could go a long way to let these numbers really shine.

There’s some letter writing to his mother back home, for which Felix decides to hide his threesomes and instead refer to all the new ‘friends and acquaintances’ he’s made. After the death of his mother, he’s told not to come back home by his dad. But he makes it as a big star in the cabaret, despite the nightmares and flashbacks from his war days creeping into his sleep. There are moments of real poignancy, which nicely contrast with the high-energy musical numbers.

At the end of the night, the Fabulett closes, and we’re left with an important message about the rise of fascism. Just as the Nazis closed down the cabaret clubs in the 1930s, the same thing could happen again. With censorship, threats to freedom of speech, and an increase in LGBTQ+ hate-crime on the rise, it could happen under our noses. And any of us could be at risk of losing our freedoms. The story is a little surface level at times, but nevertheless it’s a very entertaining hour of performance, with a captivating performance from Trauffer.

 

Reviewed 10th August 2022

by Joseph Winer

 

Photography by Edwin Louis

 

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