Tag Archives: EFR25

DANCE DANCE INVOLUTION

★★★★

Edinburgh Festival Fringe

DANCE DANCE INVOLUTION

Edinburgh Festival Fringe

★★★★

“brims with originality and creative flair”

Dance Dance Involution truly embodies the word “unique”. And that’s not a backhanded compliment. It’s truly original; the personalities and talents of its three creator-performers are so immediate and vibrant, grounding their theatricality in familiar childhood and adolescent lived experience.

The show opens with a rest; all three of the performers lie lethargically on top of each other, musing on whether there’s any purpose in continuing. Eventually, they decide, for the audience’s sake, they should probably do something. I’m very grateful they do. What follows is a series of sort-of skits placing the central question of the show – whether meritocracy remotely exists anymore in an economic context seemingly uninterested in fulfilling its end of the social contract to its youth – in tik-tok dances, school debating competitions and speech showcases. Involution is their target; the excessive pursuit of productivity which begats an exhausted, uninspired work force who ironically are far less productive and miserable on top of that.

The play is not absurdist as such, but it does highlight incredibly well the absurd facets of many contemporary societal occurrences, entrenched both here and in Hong Kong. With wonderful camp flare, a particular highlight is the introduction of the school debate in a style reminiscent of a boxing match, with both ‘fighters’ screaming to hype themselves up and stink eyeing their opponent from the other end of the ring. This exaggerated theatricality highlights how strange it is how children are pushed immediately into seeing so much in the world, from poetry to dancing, as a competition, when the adult world, to reach its maximum productivity, needs far more collaboration. Their motif of highlighting absurdity through theatrical exploration extends to the digital world, too; a great audience interaction section (one of many) encourages an audience member to, with a comical large hand on a stick, swipe every time they lose interest, forcing the trio to perpetually change in the middle of sections, displaying how strange it really is; the habit of quitting on art (which such technology encourages). Within the often very funny exchanges and physical sequences, poignant observations abound.

The show’s main flaw, in my view, is lingering too long on these observations rather than allowing the implication to grow through further theatrical ‘showing’ and within the audience’s minds. A few times, points felt excessively didactic, which made the watching experience less engaging, because it no longer felt participatory; we become passive recipients of ideas, rather than fellow analysts and inventors.

Nevertheless, DDI simply brims with originality and creative flair, and one remains very engaged despite the sections which need a little tightening. I am biased in that I too am part of the entry level generation and thus related to many of their ideas and expressions, but even if one can’t, their unique style of presentation, charming humanity and intelligent critiques will nevertheless prove as insightful as they are entertaining.



DANCE DANCE INVOLUTION

Edinburgh Festival Fringe

Reviewed on 15th August 2025 at Studio at theSpace @ Niddry St

by Horatio Holloway

 

 

 

 

 

DANCE DANCE INVOLUTION

DANCE DANCE INVOLUTION

DANCE DANCE INVOLUTION

HOW TO WIN AGAINST HISTORY

★★★★

Edinburgh Festival Fringe

HOW TO WIN AGAINST HISTORY

Edinburgh Festival Fringe

★★★★

“an hour-and-a-half whirlwind of a spectacle”

Henry Cyril Paget, the 5th Marquess of Anglesey, converted his family’s ancient chapel into a theatre and quickly squandered his entire family fortune, only to die at the age of 29. His kin then attempted to erase him from the historical record by burning all his letters, after which one historian summarised his life as ‘in vain’. ‘How to Win Against History’ (ably directed by Lisa Spirling) takes the audience on a romp through Paget’s short life in the late 1800s: witty, ridiculous, upbeat, and fabulous, you quickly forget just how sad the premise is.

Seiriol Davies (who also wrote the book. music and lyrics for the show), dressed in increasingly outrageous glittery dresses (designed by Ryan Dawson Laight), plays the Marquess with complete conviction. Hayley Grindle’s exquisite set adds to the spectacle and is further enhanced by Robbie Butler’s glorious lighting. This is not an uncomplicated celebration of Paget: taught ‘dressage, oppression, oppressage’ at the ‘Eton School for Posh Boys’, the musical acknowledges that Paget’s extravagance is paired with little concern for the less fortunate or even the people around him. In Davies’ depiction, Paget’s naivety and ignorance become endearingly otherworldly, though his stylised performance leaves the ‘real’ Paget feeling elusive. To me, Matthew Blake steals the show, playing an impressive variety of characters, from Paget’s bisexual wife Lillian to an unforgiving Eton schoolmaster and a Daily Mail journalist a.k.a the Devil himself. While none of these characters are fleshed out in the script, Blake’s performance makes them instantly entertaining.

Davies and Blake are not the only actors on stage: the five-head band (musical director Dylan Townley) is perfectly choreographed and clearly engaged in the story, whether they are playing or not. Their instrumentals are sleek and upbeat, and their unfailing energy carries the show. Not all the songs in the show are memorable but ‘Mainstream Entertainment’ was an instant hit with the audience and is still stuck in my head the next day.

The show tells Paget’s life story in a clear-cut chronological order, though we are given a summary of what happens to him in the opening song. This rendered the story’s trajectory rather predictable, and leaving just a little bit more to the audience to discover themselves would have easily remedied this.

Viewers should not expect a careful examination of late Victorian England or a close look at the ‘real’ Marquess. Instead, strap in for an hour-and-a-half whirlwind of a spectacle, almost as over-the-top as Henry Cyril Paget himself.



HOW TO WIN AGAINST HISTORY

Edinburgh Festival Fringe

Reviewed on 14th AUgust 2025 at Udderbelly at Underbelly, George Square

by Lola Stakenburg

Photography by Pamela Raith

 

 

 

 

 

HOW TO WIN AGAINST HISTORY

HOW TO WIN AGAINST HISTORY

HOW TO WIN AGAINST HISTORY