Tag Archives: 2024X

🎭 TOP EDINBURGH FRINGE PLAY 2024 🎭

IS THE WI-FI GOOD IN HELL?

★★★★★

Edinburgh Festival Fringe

IS THE WI-FI GOOD IN HELL? at the Edinburgh Festival Fringe

★★★★★

“a personal and gorgeous reflection on queerness, place, and boyhood that will leave you laughing one second and reaching for tissues the very next”

Is The Wi-fi Good in Hell? is a gorgeously flawless meditation on gentrification, platonic love, and on growing up gay in a deprived coastal area. Following the adolescence and youth of Dev, this one-man storytelling masterclass is as creative and engaging as it is hilarious. The audience fall in love with the story from the moment Dev, played and written by Lyndon Chapman, strolls onto the stage dawning an outfit and hat that wouldn’t look too out of place in a MySpace profile photo, and begins to unravel himself and his hometown of Margate.

Acted superbly by Chapman, the piece begins with the tongue-in-cheek humour of 13-year-old Dev struggling to find connection and fit in as a young gay kid from Margate in the late 00s. The writing captures the era gloriously and paints a vivid picture of Dev’s perspective on himself, attitudes, and surroundings. “If they laugh at your jokes, they like you” he hauntingly echoes throughout the piece. He later notes the modelling work of “local creatives”, who Dev bitingly admits are local but definitely did not go to his school.

Directed by Will Armstrong, Chapman transforms subtly and expertly from 13, to his later teens, to his early twenties, keeping a coherence of character that matures in voice and physicality but never looses Dev’s spark. The piece shines with Millennial / Gen Z cusp relatability and presents a new dawn of coming-of-age nostalgia that represents queer working-class experience in a didactic yet humorous way. It is marvellous to see this experience represented so magically on stage.

The piece’s storytelling has a distinctive voice that carries with it waves of professionalism and style. As Dev details his tumultuous experiences fitting in with his surroundings, himself, and others, we are met with Damian Pace’s stylishly technical sound design which compels the audience to hang on the story’s every breath. Characters who Dev encounters like Luke and Ange are also clear and powerful, despite never appearing on stage, and connections between them and Chapman’s protagonist are touchingly quiet and bittersweet.

Chapman’s script earns its tackling of more serious issues. Audiences poignantly wipe tears from their eyes as Chapman lets his roll tragically down his cheeks. Dev is presented with complexity and depth. In particular, the portion surrounding the different switching between his “5 voices” is massively effective and absorbing. Ideas about how queer men feel they must shape themselves and their outward personas, and how that impacts them internally, are well thought through and performed with honesty and careful humour. Is The Wi-Fi explains plainly how Dev feels he must blend throughout his young life to try and reduce homophobia.

The show also twists the supernatural and folkloric into real-life consequences in a mesmerising and beautiful feat of writing and directing. Visceral and otherworldly descriptions of something following Dev are woven interestingly into the story, and Chapman’s horror and confusion quickly becomes palpable for the audience. Is The Wi-Fi Good in Hell? is a masterfully supernatural and touching re-telling of the life of a young gay man growing up and moving away from a decaying coastline; a place soon to be overrun with gentrification. This is a personal and gorgeous reflection on queerness, place, and boyhood that will leave you laughing one second and reaching for tissues the very next.

 


IS THE WI-FI GOOD IN HELL? at the Edinburgh Festival Fringe – Underbelly, Cowgate – Iron Belly

Reviewed on 25th August 2024

by Molly Knox

Photography by Charles Flint

 

 


IS THE WI-FI GOOD IN HELL?

IS THE WI-FI GOOD IN HELL?

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🎭 TOP EDINBURGH FRINGE DANCE 2024 🎭

THE SHOW FOR YOUNG MEN

★★★★★

Edinburgh Festival Fringe

THE SHOW FOR YOUNG MEN at the Edinburgh Festival Fringe

★★★★★

“an innocent, wondrous delight”

The Show for Young Men will not change the world. It doesn’t have an obvious “point”, or “message”, or even structure. But none of that matters. Because in its simplicity and tenderness, it touched my soul more than any other piece I’ve seen at Fringe.

The plot and setting are a singular, sustaining note. A construction worker is toyed by and toys with a young boy who has stumbled upon his site. That’s it. For the whole hour. The set (Rachel O’Neil) itself is simple: three carbon tubes of various lengths (all conspicuously small-child-sized in width), a few moving boards and a retractable ladder. With this starting tool box, the choreographers (lead artist Eoin McKenzie with choreographic support from Aya Kobayashi) concoct a whole world’s worth of playthings. Like a creative child not gifted store-bought toys, they turn their mundane objects into rockets and tanks and slides and every material facet of adventure. A personal high light of this ingenuity comes just after the halfway point. The construction worker, struck into a depression by his conflicted resistance to vulnerability and intimacy, has his pain illuminated by a small light shown through the circular boundary of the industrial tube. He is sung a song by his young counterpart, who it transpires, once the construction worker leaves, is directly in the line of the light. As such, he shines.

Indeed, this shining is accentuated by the wonderful talent and chemistry of the two performers. Robbie Synge plays the construction worker, and brings an evident vulnerability of masculinity desperately scratching to drag down a fundamentally playful, compassionate, wonderful heart. This vulnerability overtakes him sometimes, and the rift between the two this causes is damaging and profound, but it makes the resolution and rekindling all the more wonderful; a rekindling which is already highly rewarding due to the innocent joy that’s sparked between the two. Much of this joy is attributable to Alfie, more or less playing himself, the adorably cheeky but impressively organized 10 year old who sends Robbie into (somewhat voluntary) loops. Their chases around ladders and swings around (and into) industrial tubing bring out the inner child not just in Robbie but in all of us. In an age of cynicism, the overwhelming innocence and friendliness of their interactions are irresistible.

However, it’s after the resolution where the play really enters visionary territory, delving into more exploratory and stylistic sequences which highlight the wonder of shared struggle and the absurdity of bottling it up under the auspice of being ‘a man’. A joy shared is a joy doubled and sorrow shared is a sorrow halved: an idiom this play embodies to its every detail. Indeed, the aforementioned scene where Alfie sings “Half the world away”, a song written by an ex-construction worker as it happens, is massively powerful; an affectionate, calming melancholy that feels like a warm patch of sun striking one’s skin. Indeed, the technical aspects of the play are superb throughout. The lighting (Katharine Williams) is simple and largely diegetic, save for the occasional blackout, but the urban-auburn spotlights that visually reflect that sense of melancholic sunset, and the party lighting which accentuates the high-energy moments of the play, are perfectly executed. The sound design (Greg Sinclair) is perhaps even more creative and effective; a football podcast featuring Lineker, Shearer and Wright sets a day-to-day scene wonderfully, and its shift to pop songs and dance anthems at the bequest of Alfie is hilarious and joyful in equal measure.

The Show for Young Men is an innocent, wondrous delight. It shoves toxic masculinity’s face in the dirt without ever having to explicitly acknowledge it, by playfully illustrating the possibility for healthy, vulnerable, loyal relationships between any kind of man.


THE SHOW FOR YOUNG MEN at the Edinburgh Festival Fringe – Assembly @ Dance Base

Reviewed on 23rd August 2024

by Horatio Holloway

Photography by Andrew Perry

 

 


THE SHOW FOR YOUNG MEN

THE SHOW FOR YOUNG MEN

CLICK HERE TO SEE ALL OUR REVIEWS FROM EDINBURGH 2024