Tag Archives: Clémence Rebourg

GUIDELINES

★★★★

New Diorama Theatre

GUIDELINES

New Diorama Theatre

★★★★

“Punchy, pacy and full of bite”

Something sinister lurks beneath social media’s glossy veneer. CONGLOMERATE’s debut show, ‘Guidelines’, is a striking new work fusing nuance, power, levity and darkness into something eerie and exhilarating.

Two sisters in a wood. A dancing man. A frog with eyes in its mouth. Somehow this fractured stream of consciousness coheres as we tumble down a social media rabbit hole with deadly consequences.

Writer Pip Williams, with dramaturg Louise Orwin, delivers a tight two-hander that nails the absurdist contradictions of social media, capturing familiar online habits with subtlety and bite. The opening voicemail sets an ominous tone even if it feels a touch poetic, before a sudden shift to pulsing rhythm tips us off balance. Recurring lines create a doom-scrolled tangle, with sharp humour cutting through at just the right moments. Momentum gathers promisingly, though the final third loses steam: the forest climax could push further, and the closing scene takes time to land an under powered point despite the bold pivot. Still, ‘Guidelines’ feels on the cusp of something genuinely exciting.

James Nash’s direction is slick and assured, capturing the slow burning menace with precision. The pacing is finely tuned, adding irony or resonance with flair. The use of space and roaming stand mics is particularly striking, shifting between prowling movement and considered stillness to create a restless, caged energy. Transitions are generally seamless and the use of darkness deepens the nightmarish mood. It’s a shame the momentum softens in the final scene, but overall it’s an expertly crafted piece.

Movement director Ken Nakajima’s work really elevates the piece, drawing sharp contrasts between naturalistic gestures and algorithm ready moves. The jarring kill sequences are a crisply executed standout.

The music – including AJ Turner’s opening composition and vocals – brings a distinctive, electronic edge to the production. Pulses of suitably dystopian drum and bass convey hidden dangers, and the burst of influencer era pop cleverly masks dark lyrics.

The design is powerful. Jida Akil’s minimal set makes a bold impression, the gorgeous gold banners transforming with deft lighting changes, and the gentle sway of hanging ropes unexpectedly evoking tree limbs. Adi Currie’s lighting is beautifully judged, moving between subtle washes and sudden shocks. The fades rendering the actors momentarily faceless are especially striking, offering a sharp counterpoint to more realistic sequences. Patch Middleton’s sound design is equally strong, with clever use of volume, impeccably timed cues, and a clean overall balance, though the actors could project more when they’re away from the stand mics. Akil’s costumes contrast corporate crispness with casual teen-wear, though the sudden shift to Puritan garb is initially puzzling.

Rachel Leah Hosker and Alex McCauley make an exceptional duo – fully immersed, sharply paced and completely in sync, moving between corporate performativity, teen innocence and raw fear in a heartbeat. They build easy audience rapport, land the comic beats with precision, and handle movement work with authority. It’s compelling, nuanced acting that leaves a real impression.

Punchy, pacy and full of bite, ‘Guidelines’ delivers a clear eyed critique of our unregulated social media age. With a little tightening, it could go far – so catch it while it’s still up close.



GUIDELINES

New Diorama Theatre

Reviewed on 5th February 2026

by Hannah Bothelton

Photography by Clémence Rebourg


 

 

 

 

GUIDELINES

GUIDELINES

GUIDELINES

UGLY SISTERS

★★★★

Edinburgh Festival Fringe

UGLY SISTERS at the Edinburgh Festival Fringe

★★★★

“It’s messy, muddy, beautifully chaotic but in a way which feels totally composed and in control”

On the day that The Female Eunuch was released in America in 1970, a transgender woman ran up to its author and one of the key voices in the second wave feminist movement, Germaine Greer, took her hand and thanked her for everything she’d done for women. In 1989, Greer wrote an article in The Independent, expressing deeply transphobic views, entitled ‘On Why Sex Change is a Lie’. Ugly Sisters examines this relationship, that between transgender women and someone who at one point might’ve been considered a progressive icon, in a show whose tone reads not as pure anger but rather crushing disappointment.

Early on, audience volunteers are encouraged to bury Greer’s body, after one of the performers Laurie Ward kills her. There’s a burial. The body is carried to the grave and ritually covered in handfuls of soil. But burial isn’t always a bad thing, as we’re informed ‘burial can nurture’. At other moments in the show, there’s dance, an interview, a sequence where they drink and spit out water at each other, scenes where they give Greer a very respected amount of patience and opportunity to correct her words. Obviously she doesn’t. And they’re just left feeling disappointed. In another moment, probably the most touching in the whole show, the other performer Charli Cowgill invites another volunteer to plait her hair. It takes about five minutes. It’s a beautiful, wholesome moment. Finding these moments of real humanity, of human connection, of strangers just caring for and looking after each other because it’s the genuinely good thing to do, is a real delight in a show which could so easily be just about visceral hate.

There are some great, often funny, often darkly-funny interactions with the show’s Stage Manager, Daze Corder. An electric sound design pulses and pulsates, as the performers thrash or jump or swing their bodies; one of Ward’s costumes, a cage hoop skirt, moves elegantly with her. This is a common theme in the piece, moments of tenderness and beauty juxtaposed with small acts of violence of physical discomfort. It’s visually intriguing.

Beyond the visuals, the content is rich and intellectually layered. Ward and Cowgill take it in turns taking on the role of Greer in a piece which feels like some sort of therapeutic ritual at times. It’s messy, muddy, beautifully chaotic but in a way which feels totally composed and in control; one of those shows that you can spend just as much time thinking and talking about afterwards, and which you may very well want to then go and watch again.


UGLY SISTERS at the Edinburgh Festival Fringe – Underbelly, Cowgate – Big Belly

Reviewed on 13th August 2024

by Joseph Dunitz

Photography by Clémence Rebourg

 

 


UGLY SISTERS

UGLY SISTERS

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