Tag Archives: Dance

TESTO

★★★

Purcell Room

TESTO

Purcell Room

★★★

“pushes the boundaries, defies expectations and refuses to conform”

Award winning drag artist, Wet Mess, closes the 2025 tour of their first full length solo show, ‘TESTO’, in London. Dismantling the boundaries of gender, transition, performance and more, this surrealist fever dream is as cocky as it is vulnerable. Self-described as “horny for your confusion”, the abstraction and pacing do lose me in places. However, the work remains provocative, inventive and daringly experimental – the kind of theatre we need more of.

Out of a green haze, the words ‘tell us about a dream’ glow red before taking us on an erotic journey involving butter that sets the tone for the evening. ‘TESTO’ explores transmasculinity in a dreamlike structure, weaving searching questions and real life interviews with movement and lip syncs. Themes surface in waves, some provocative, some reflective, others more ordinary. Only it’s not a dream.

Created by Wet Mess and produced by Metal & Water (Nancy May Roberts & Lucia Fortune Ely), ‘TESTO’ is anarchic and affecting. Beneath the swagger and spectacle lies a yearning to be seen, with all the contradictions and mixed emotions visibility entails. The closing sequence cycles the words ‘you are afraid but awake,’ anchoring the surreal in stark reality. Wet Mess also fulfils one interviewee’s wish to be mundane by fashioning a sofa from all that’s been discarded and cracking a beer. That said, it isn’t always layered, such as the giant gender sausages and defiant nude lip sync of Loreen’s ‘Euphoria’. Some of the more surreal sections elude me entirely – I’m looking at you butter bath. The pacing also falters: most sections linger a beat too long and a couple of passages seem to run out of development, creating gaps in momentum.

Wet Mess’ movement is an almost continuous thread, marked by strong shapes, intriguing lines and bursts of frenetic energy. However, it feels surprisingly restrained in places. The surreal butter dream, for instance, doesn’t lead into a dynamic grand entrance but some slightly anticlimactic swaggering. The sequence of jerking and humping risks becoming repetitive after a while. Though perhaps this is a deliberate subversion of expectations.

Wet Mess delivers an arresting performance, brimming with cockiness yet tempered by rawness and vulnerability. It is an assured, literally bare all display marked by precise lip syncs, strong movement and polished delivery. The lip syncing itself is cleverly varied, avoiding predictability, with controversial recordings sharpening the piece’s edge.

Ruta Irbīte’s set design is striking: a vulva like red curtain gives way to a phallic catwalk. Oversized sausages playfully suggest symbols of gender identity.

Baby’s evocative sound design weaves voices, vocalisations, synth and textured noise into a distinctive soundscape that shapes the atmosphere of each section and underscores the deeper messages.

Joshie Harriette’s lighting design conjures dreamlike illusions through deft combinations of smoke and light. Inventive spotlight positioning creates striking contrasts between light and shadow, while bursts of flashing intensify key moments.

Lambdog1066’s costume design is artful and layered, opening with a high fashion boxing cape – reclaiming a traditionally masculine symbol – and closing with a curtain repurposed as a robe – underscoring the interplay between spectacle and intimacy. Ultimately, the stripping away of all clothing functions as a powerful rejection of gender conformity.

‘TESTO’ pushes the boundaries, defies expectations and refuses to conform. But does it work as a cohesive show? I’m less sure. Still, that uncertainty doesn’t diminish its impact and the spectacle is worth witnessing, even if we never get to the bottom of the butter.



TESTO

Purcell Room

Reviewed on 28th November 2025

by Hannah Bothelton

Photography by Lesley Martin


 

Previously reviewed at Southbank Centre venues:

THE BRIDE AND THE GOODNIGHT CINDERELLA | ★★★★ | September 2025
NATURE THEATER OF OKLAHOMA: NO PRESIDENT | ★★★ | July 2025
AN ALPINE SYMPHONY | ★★★★ | February 2025
THE EMPLOYEES | ★★★★★ | January 2025
THE CREAKERS | ★★★★ | December 2024
DUCK POND | ★★★★ | December 2024

 

 

TESTO

TESTO

TESTO

Review of Balletboyz – Fourteen Days – 3.5 Stars

Fourteen

Balletboyz – Fourteen Days

Sadler’s Wells

Reviewed – 14th October 2017

⭐️⭐️⭐️ 1/2

 

“It felt as though we were watching an exploration of trust, love, dependency and a sweet tenderness”

 

BalletBoyz creators Billy Trevitt and Michael Nunn paired four leading choreographers with four composers and tasked them to create a dance piece for the BalletBoyz dancers in just fourteen days. They gave them a theme – balance. It is an ambitious idea but the result is uneven.

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The first piece was ‘The Title is in the Text,’ choreographed by Javier De Frutos and with music by Scott Walker. Some may remember Scott from the 1960s duo The Walker Brothers, and wonder what he is doing writing music for a contemporary dance piece. He is now a respected composer of avant-garde compositions, and had a Prom dedicated to his music this year. His current musical style is miles away from ‘The Sun Ain’t Gonna Shine Anymore,’ and this piece tends more towards the unsettlingly apocalyptic than the sweet. With jarring shrieks and repeated spoken word iterations it works well with De Frutos’ choreography. The dancers work on and around a giant see-saw, taking the theme of balance very literally. The see-saw tips and changes as they shift the balance, sustaining the angle with arabesques, sliding down the board, falling from the highest point into the arms of other dancers. The level of trust between the dancers and their collective strength and lightness turn what could be just a quirky idea into something which is sometimes unsettling, sometimes powerful and occasionally amusing. It is an intriguing piece and it definitely holds the attention.

Next came ‘Human Animal’ which, despite it’s title, had a distinctly equine air. The dancers spent quite a while moving in a circle, pawing the ground like a group of slightly skittish horses. I expected more of choreographer Ivan Perez; his work is often powerful, emotional and intense, but here he seems to have tried a light touch and it doesn’t have much impact. The piece was created in an unusual way, having been choreographed in silence by Perez. The sound of the dancers’ feet was recorded and sent to Joby Talbot, who then composed the music. The second half of the piece has more power, building from the presence of a solo dancer, but overall it isn’t a great success.

If Human Animal lacks humanity the next work, ‘Us’, has it in spades. This is the strongest of the four new pieces, a beautiful exploration of a relationship between two men. It is strong, tender and moving. The dancers are in physical contact almost the whole time and when they do move apart it feels like a disaster. The intimacy is highlighted by intricate shared hand gestures that are almost ritualistic. It felt as though we were watching an exploration of trust, love, dependency and a sweet tenderness. Choreographed by Christopher Whealdon, who is probably best known for the award winning An American in Paris, with music by Keaton Henson, this is the stand out work of the four.

The last piece in the first half was ‘The Indicator Line,’ choreographed by ‘Strictly’ judge Craig Revel Horwood. It is full of energy and has some refreshingly powerful moments but it is stylistically confused and tries too hard to tell a story. Charlotte Harding’s music provides a percussive and vivid environment for the dancers, but are they clog dancing, tapping, Irish dancing or, as an audience member said in the break, is it ‘a little bit West Side Story?’ Horwood based the work on his family history, discovered during filming ‘Who Do You Think You Are?’ for the BBC. He found out that one of his ancestors was a champion clog dancer. The dancers seem to be workers, and at one point an overseer or military man appears on stage in a red coat like a pantomime villain or the traditional baddie in a classical ballet. Despite the unevenness of the piece the dancers tackle it with relish and the strength and power of some of the movements are a delight.

After the interval we were treated to a revival of the award winning ‘Fallen,’ a work that was first performed by the BalletBoyz in 2013. Choreographed by Russell Malifant with music by Armand Amar and highly effective lighting design by Michael Hulls, this is a fluid and athletic piece that perfectly showcases the BalletBoyz ensemble. At first the dancers circle and turn, weaving with sinuous grace. Then the piece develops into an abstract of lifts, throws, falls, rolls and balances that have a sublime grace and strength.

Despite the difference in the quality of the pieces this was a very worthwhile evening at Saddler’s Wells. The BalletBoyz pulled it off.

 

Reviewed by Katre

Photography by Panayiotis Sinnos

 

 

BALLETBOYZ -FOURTEEN DAYS

Click on the link below for details of tour dates

 

 

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