Tag Archives: EFR25

PIGS FLY EASY RYAN

★★★½

Edinburgh Festival Fringe

PIGS FLY EASY RYAN

Edinburgh Festival Fringe

★★★½

“you can’t deny having an absolutely wild time watching the chaos unfold”

A technical hiccup with a set malfunction early on had me genuinely wondering whether it was part of the show… that is very much the territory we’re in here! NONSTOP’s Pigs Fly Easy Ryan, one of the three winners of this year’s prestigious Untapped Award, is messy, chaotic, and unashamedly absurd. Two plane crash fetishists pose as flight attendants to sneak aboard a flight, in a show that’s part physical clowning, part stream-of-consciousness monologue, part performance art fever dream.

There are moments where the chaos really works. As we enter the space, we’re greeted by two very overly-enthusiastic flight attendants, with sunburnt-red faces. What happens next is hard to describe. The two performers (Lou Doyle and Trevor White) crawl around on the floor or at other times leap on each other like overgrown kids in the playground. There are references in the dialogue to consumerism, capitalism and the climate crisis, with specific mentions of Jeff Bezos and Amazon. I can imagine it being a really compelling pitch as part of the Untapped process, if nothing else for its downright absurdity.

But the anarchy isn’t always consistent. Some moments feel undercooked, with one particularly important speech getting lost under music that is just too loud. The humour, too, can be hit-and-miss. When it works, it’s genuinely very funny; when it doesn’t, it feels like watching a work in progress performance still finding its shape.

As the absurdity continues, the audience are genuinely baffled by what we’re all watching. We all get involved as the performers hand out pieces of cloud-like material and ask us to throw it in the air. A little later in the show, they strip down to their underwear and throw themselves down an inflatable slide on repeat. A video montage of various references to pigs in pop culture appears on the backdrop. It feels like it’s trying to tie a bunch of stuff together, but doesn’t fully manage it.

By the end, a couple of final lines stick: “Should we be flying right now?” and “We’ve been dying for a holiday. A break. A breath.” There’s a sharp idea here: weighing our desperation for escape in a modern world full of burnout and overworking against the urgent need for climate responsibility and a wider urgency to be taking action. But the show never quite commits fully to this idea. It feels like it wants to use the unhinged to explore these important points, but it only ever feels half-realised. Still, you can’t deny having an absolutely wild time watching the chaos unfold.

 



PIGS FLY EASY RYAN

Edinburgh Festival Fringe

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

by Joseph Dunitz

Photography by Alex Brenner

 

 

 

 

 

PIGS FLY EASY RYAN

PIGS FLY EASY RYAN

PIGS FLY EASY RYAN

FLICK

★★★★

Edinburgh Festival Fringe

FLICK

Edinburgh Festival Fringe

★★★★

“Nunn’s performance is magnetic; she’s endlessly animated, holding the room as if we’re her closest confidants”

Madelaine Nunn strolls onto the stage in her teal scrubs, beaming like she’s about to let you in on a juicy secret. She’s a palliative care nurse, used to looking after elderly patients, until one day a new admission catches her off-guard. PhD candidate Mark is young, good-looking and, as much as she tries to be professional, she can’t help how attracted she is to him. After doing him a small favour, this quickly escalates into something much darker, and goes to places you probably wouldn’t expect.

It’s a tricky piece to talk about without giving too much away. Nunn’s performance is magnetic; she’s endlessly animated, holding the room as if we’re her closest confidants. Her warmth and wit make it almost impossible not to root for her, even as her actions tilt from questionable to downright alarming. There’s an interesting gender thing at play as well, and it’s hard to believe if the genders were swapped that we’d be viewing any of the character’s decisions in the same light.

The central story is actually quite slim, and could itself be condensed into a much shorter play, but Nunn peppers the journey with tangents about colleagues, other patients, and hospital life. Some of these feel like narrative detours, others lean into moments of image-rich comedy with recurring points.

The tonal shifts are where Flick really thrives. Director Emily O’Brien-Brown balances the humour and menace with care, so when the big twist arrives, it lands with emotional force. A scene lit with soft, warm light gives us a glimpse of the character at her most vulnerable, transforming her from chaotic rule-breaker to someone carrying a grief so heavy it shapes every decision she makes.

Sound designer Christian Biko adds a curious texture to the world, with plucked strings underscoring moments with an off-kilter tension. It’s perhaps the one element of the show which doesn’t necessarily best serve the moments when it appears, but it certainly adds to the unease simmering beneath the comedy.

When the big reveal happens, we suddenly realise that this is an entirely different story to the one we’ve been following. What starts as a fairly light comedy slips into something much darker, and then into something incredibly sad. That Nunn is able to keep us on side throughout all of this, and play the weight of the underlying grief as effortlessly as she does the humour in the build-up, is a real credit to her as a performer.

Flick does that brilliant thing of taking a really sad and serious theme and finding a way of turning it into a story filled with chaos and humour. It’s a clever vehicle, and makes for a really entertaining hour of storytelling.



FLICK

Edinburgh Festival Fringe

Reviewed on 9th August 2025 at Red Lecture Theatre at Summerhall

by Joseph Dunitz

Photography by Darren Gill

 

 

 

 

 

FLICK

FLICK

FLICK