Tag Archives: Edinburgh Festival Fringe

CONSUMED

★★★★

Edinburgh Festival Fringe

CONSUMED

Edinburgh Festival Fringe

★★★★

“a sophisticated and ambitious piece of writing”

Four generations of Northern Irish women gather for their great-grandmother’s 90th birthday: a family kitchen, a table set for dinner, and a tangle of unspoken histories. Over the course of the meal, tensions simmer, humour bubbles, and old wounds begin to show.
Karis Kelly’s Consumed, winner of the Women’s Prize for Playwriting, starts as a sharp and funny domestic drama. There is a clear and believable connection between the four women, with glances, shared gestures, and that mix of affection and irritation that comes from a lifetime under the same family roof. The youngest of the four, Muireann (Muireann Ní Fhaogáin), passionate about climate change, patriarchy and oat milk, clashes with the more traditional views of her elders, while the matriarchal Eileen (Julia Dearden) and her daughter Gilly (Andrea Irvine) bring their own layered history into the room. References to marriage, relationships, and what it means to “wear the trousers” in a partnership give a smart, often funny look at generational shifts and the ways some things have not shifted at all.

The performances are uniformly strong. Dearden brings a magnetic, grounded presence to great-grandmother Eileen, her deep voice and unfiltered honesty contrasting beautifully with Irvine’s effervescent Gilly, who hides her own struggles behind a bubbly façade. Caoimhe Farren has admirable conviction as Jenny and takes her to the extremities of emotion on her journey through the play. Ní Fhaogáin is convincing as the teenager great-granddaughter, although at times could do a little more to ensure she is keeping in tone with the rest of the cast.

Lily Arnold’s set is gorgeous in its detail, from the mould creeping through the wallpaper to the scuffed skirting boards and the cupboard crammed with expired tins and Bags for Life. The latter is a sly nod to the generational gap between caring for the planet and knowing how to go about it in practice. The smell of real cooking drifts into the audience, making the kitchen feel genuinely lived-in. Beth Duke’s sound design, Guy Hoare’s lighting and Karis Kelly’s witty script combine to welcome us fully into this family home.

As the piece moves into its final third, the familiar realism tilts suddenly towards supernatural horror. Flickering lights and rumbling sounds hint at something darker lurking in the house. It is an exciting shift in the writing, but the transition feels abrupt in performance. The tone wavers between psychological horror and heightened dark comedy, leaving some moments caught between the two without committing fully to either. A couple of emotional escalations, such as Jenny’s sudden outburst trashing the room, also jar against the otherwise well-paced dynamics.

Even with those uneven final beats, Consumed is a sophisticated and ambitious piece of writing, rich with ideas about generational trauma, women’s roles, and the histories we carry in our bodies as well as our memories. It is sharply funny, often moving, and brought to life by four captivating performances. With a little more space to breathe into its tonal shift, it could land with even greater impact.



CONSUMED

Edinburgh Festival Fringe

Reviewed on 10th August 2025 at Traverse 1 at Traverse Theatre

by Joseph Dunitz

Photography by Pamela Raith

 

 

 

 

 

CONSUMED

CONSUMED

CONSUMED

KINDER

★★½

Edinburgh Festival Fringe

KINDER

Edinburgh Festival Fringe

★★½

“it could become a sharp, funny and moving piece of political drag theatre”

Ryan Stewart’s KINDER arrives at the Edinburgh Fringe with a concept that is both timely and important. The censorship of LGBTQ+ issues from young people is a growing concern, and placing that conversation inside the heightened, unpredictable world of drag is a brilliant starting point. The idea of a drag-clown accidentally booked for a children’s story hour is ripe for chaos, comedy and political bite. At times, the show offers glimpses of this potential, but this does unfortunately feel like it’s still in work-in-progress stage, rather than having completed its final draft.

Goody Prostate is a fun creation, and when Stewart lands on a line like “being someone’s disappointment hurts”, the show finds genuine poignancy. A tighter structure could allow moments like this to shine more brightly. At present, the piece moves between themes of memory, family, queerness and censorship without always making the connections between them clear. Establishing early on exactly who Goody is speaking to, and by extension who the audience is meant to be within the world of the show, could give the performance a much stronger sense of direction.

The historical material, including the section on Nazi book burnings, is powerful in intention but currently feels more like a statement of facts than genuine emotional exploration from the character. There is an opportunity here to explore these ideas through character, humour, or imagery so that they live and breathe on stage rather than simply being told to us. Similarly, the lip-sync sequences are enjoyable but feel disconnected from the narrative. If they were more clearly motivated by the story, they could become real highlights rather than pleasant diversions.

Stewart brings energy to the performance, but in a one-person drag show consistent stage presence and audience command are essential. I think finding more moments to get the audience on side, and to establish that crucial rapport, would really help the rest of the show. A stronger commitment to the framing device could also help the show build towards a more satisfying conclusion, rather than drifting away from its opening premise in favour of tangential thoughts.

KINDER has an important voice and an urgent message. With a clearer structure, more focused storytelling and a stronger connection between performer and audience, it could become a sharp, funny and moving piece of political drag theatre. The building blocks are already there; they just need to be shaped into something that gives this story the impact it deserves.



KINDER

Edinburgh Festival Fringe

Reviewed on 9th August 2025 at Big Belly at Underbelly, Cowgate

by Joseph Dunitz

Photography by Ejay Freeman

 

 

 

 

 

Kinder

Kinder

Kinder