Tag Archives: EFR25

GISELLE: REMIX

★★★★

Edinburgh Festival Fringe

GISELLE: REMIX

Edinburgh Festival Fringe

★★★★

“The choreography is impeccable, the performances magnetic, and the shifts in tone handled with total control”

Jack Sears’ Giselle: Remix takes the bones of the classic ballet and explodes them into something gloriously queer, irreverent, and intoxicating. Part ballet, part lip-sync cabaret, part queer coming-of-age story, this is an ode to love, lust, sex, joy, and the mess of queer intimacy.

On the day I attended, guest artist Johnny Woo opened the show in a shimmering gown, delivering a lip-sync that was stylish and glamourous. Sears and the company then appear in flowing gauzy dresses, pastel-toned and almost translucent, dancing to Carpenters’ “Crystal Lullaby”. The movement is technically exquisite, ballet-trained bodies gliding across a pale lino floor, but threaded with flashes of humour and character.

The narrative, though abstract, traces a queer coming-of-age: from childhood games of kiss chase (without ever being kissed) to sexual awakening, romantic ideals shaped by 90s rom-coms, and the jolting realities of intimacy. Sears’ love for Julia Roberts, Drew Barrymore, and the cinematic happily-ever-after surfaces in playful fragments, often subverted by sharp comedic beats. A brilliantly silly sequence involving overheard sex, chopped up with snippets of rom-com dialogue in the sound design, is very funny.

As the show progresses, light and costume shift the tone from airy romance to something darker and kinkier. Black and midnight-blue outfits, harsh alarm sounds, and sudden slices of light turn the dancers into something monstrous. A red velvet cape swirls like a villain’s entrance; later, Sears appears in black latex with glossy red lips, the choreography channelling erotic menace. It’s as much about the joy of sex as it is about the neuroses, fears, and regrets that can accompany it.

Throughout, the work nods to queer ancestry and community, in one section folding in the voices of Judy Garland, Julian Clary, Paul O’Grady, Miriam Margolyes, and James Baldwin. There’s a richness to these choices, a layering of history and cultural reference that adds depth without ever slowing the show’s momentum.

One of the most affecting moments comes late on, when Sears recalls being a closeted schoolboy, quietly looking up to older queer kids – whether or not they were out themselves – and recognising the unspoken passing of a baton between generations. It’s tender, relatable, and beautifully encapsulates the show’s celebration of resilience, inheritance, and connection.

The evening ends with a duet of “Get Happy” between Sears and Johnny Woo, the two beaming at each other, radiating the joy and defiance that have been running through the show all along.

Giselle: Remix is thrilling in its confidence. It knows exactly what it is, balancing the ethereal beauty of classical ballet with finely-tuned storytelling. The choreography is impeccable, the performances magnetic, and the shifts in tone handled with total control. This is a show about queer love in all its contradictions: the innocence and the filth, the fantasy and the fallout. It’s celebratory, sexy, and absolutely worth seeing.



GISELLE: REMIX

Edinburgh Festival Fringe

Reviewed on 10th August 2025 at Forth at Pleasance Courtyard

by Joseph Dunitz

Photography by Ali Wright

 

 

 

 

 

GISELLE

GISELLE

GISELLE

TOM AT THE FARM

★★★★★

Edinburgh Festival Fringe

TOM AT THE FARM

Edinburgh Festival Fringe

★★★★★

“The characters are flawed, magnetic, dangerous to love — yet, by the end, we do”

Federico García Lorca once wrote that duende is “a state of tragedy-inspired ecstasy” — a force that doesn’t live in the mind but in the marrow. It is neither style nor technique, nor even grace; it is the blood crying out through art. It seizes the performer from within and tears the audience open in response. It chills without asking permission, bends your breath, makes you weep or laugh without knowing why. You can’t explain it — you have to feel it.

Tom at the Farm has duende.

We step into the space: black polyethylene sheeting, cracked with dry clay; a single bare bulb swaying like an unblinking eye; fifteen buckets forming a ring around us. Amber light pools in the air like a half-remembered dream. In it, Tom and Agatha stand waiting.

This isn’t “fringe” in the usual, hurried sense. The dialogue is unhurried, Portuguese with supertitles, pared to the bone. The pace forces us to breathe the same air as the characters — and, at times, choke on it.

The design is exact, but never ornamental. It edges towards the expressionistic and feels emotionally surreal. Light and shadow carve out fragments of farm life and quiet decay. Like the bare bulb above, the production is stripped back, exposed, without a hint of flinch.

The story: Tom, a sleek urban advertising man, travels to bury his lover Guillaume in the rural soil that raised him. The family doesn’t know Tom existed, nor that Guillaume was gay. Francis, Guillaume’s brother, forces Tom into silence, protecting their grieving mother, Agatha.

From there, the descent begins: Tom and Francis circling one another in a dance of attraction, revulsion, and dominance. Seduction simmers, restrained but electric. Grief becomes violence; violence becomes intimacy. Both men are dragged under. The farm becomes a crucible, where truth burns and secrets rot like crops left untended too long.

This is theatre of the body as much as the word. Water splashes on plastic; clay turns slick; spit strikes the ground. The stage becomes a soupy mess — and so do we. Earth clings to skin and spirit, reminding us that we are born in mess, live in it, and return to it.

Overhead, the supertitles insist: Here things are real. And they are.

Confessions spill. Questions hang like low clouds: Sell the farm? Put the mother in care? The centrepiece is a dance — half courtship, half combat — closing the space between the men until nothing remains. Symbols surface: the lover’s cologne, eight journals, traces of what’s gone. Then Hellen arrives, bright in yellow and pink, and the balance tilts.

The characters are flawed, magnetic, dangerous to love — yet, by the end, we do. As Lorca might caution, these are the most potent and perilous loves: where pleasure and pain mix until you can’t tell them apart.

Michel Marc Bouchard’s Québécois text finds the pulse of Cena Brasil Internacional under Rodrigo Portella’s direction. Armando Babaioff’s Tom and Iano Salomão’s Francis strike like flint, each clash sparking both sexual tension and menace. Denise Del Vecchio’s Agatha and Camila Nhary’s Hellen stand in the gale of this male world — resilient, though changed by it.

The music doesn’t decorate — it drives, seduces, retreats. At times it leads the heart; at others it drifts faintly, like a radio playing somewhere just out of reach.

And the lighting — sharp, purposeful, never random. It illuminates, reveals, sculpts; it directs our gaze without wasting a beam. Whoever designed it, bravo.

In Lorca’s view, duende arrives when death is close — not literal death, but the risk of something breaking and never returning to what it was. Tom at the Farm lives in that risk. It leaves you emptied and fuller at once, marked and branded.



TOM AT THE FARM

Edinburgh Festival Fringe

Reviewed on 12th August 2025 at Lennox Theatre at Pleasance at EICC

by Louis Kavouras

Photography by Victor Novaes

 

 

 

 

 

TOM AT THE FARM

TOM AT THE FARM

TOM AT THE FARM