Tag Archives: Leigh Douglas

ROTUS: RECEPTIONIST OF THE UNITED STATES

★★★★

Park Theatre

ROTUS: RECEPTIONIST OF THE UNITED STATES

Park Theatre

★★★★

“Leigh’s comedic talent is put to great effect in this short but brilliant work”

Sparkling from a stellar, sold-out run at last year’s Edinburgh Fringe, Leigh Douglas’ avatar, Chastity Quirke, bursts onto the London scene. As ROTUS: Receptionist of the United States, she is a sight to behold and, it has to be said, something of an uplifting tonic on a grey, rainy evening in January. Her shiny-stockinged legs strut about the small stage (bigger than the ‘broom cupboard’ she got at Edinburgh), she throws herself on her White House reception desk, suitably branded (President of the United States, PROTUS – get it?). She poses, primps and preens, she shakes her long blond mane. She flirts and she smiles. Oh what a smile! So much sugar in a twitch of the mouth.

Chastity – it’s all in the name – is the dumb daughter of Mrs America (watch the 2020 miniseries about Phyllis Schlafly and the STOP ERA campaign). She has swallowed the Republican Kool-Aid and is convinced that it is the duty of all female supporters to be pretty and feminine as well as bright, to embody every virtue, to support powerful men who are going to bring back America’s moral ground and, eventually, to become pregnant in order to raise proper American families. This philosophy has served her well – look at the ladder she has climbed: she reports to the Chief of Staff; she is guarding the door to the Oval Office, and if the listening skills her hairdresser mother taught her are being deployed to weed out disloyalty during casual conversations outside that door, so much the better. But Chastity is about to be tested. She is going to realise the real motive behind her recruitment. And her feminism is going to turn feminist.

Writer and performer Leigh Douglas has direct experience of working in these often overlooked administrative roles. She and director Fiona Kingwill have deployed this to create a sharp satire, not so much on Republican power play, as on the women without whom male power withers. Leigh’s comedic talent is put to great effect in this short but brilliant work. Not only does she perform Chastity, but also the host of political characters that surround her, both male and female. As she transitions on the flip of a coin from being the too-clever blond into one or other of her more powerful female role models or the ever-manipulative Chief of Staff, she gives each a unique image and a distinct vocal identity. There is a slight possibility of confusion but it is dealt with effectively.

The production is also lifted by a clever voice-over adding narrative coherency and very effective lighting (Rachel Sampley) as the cracks start to appear in Chastity’s world. In summary, this is a very smart, one-woman show, backed by a talented production team, using laughter to expose the dangers of thinking you have it all figured out. In the world of influencers, information bites and TV Traitors, this delivers a sharp warning – a knife hidden in the midst of our non-stop laughter.



ROTUS: RECEPTIONIST OF THE UNITED STATES

Park Theatre

Reviewed on 21st January 2026

by Louise Sibley

Photography by Damien Robertson


 

 

 

 

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★★★★

Edinburgh Festival Fringe

ROTUS

Edinburgh Festival Fringe

★★★★

“a sharp, biting, and brilliantly political work—a masterful piece of writing”

A small stage. Did I say small? I mean, broom-cupboard small. Just enough room for one desk, a chair, and a few feet to shuffle around. The venue itself is comically cramped, barely a theatre, more an overstuffed waiting room. Yet the performance triumphs.

Enter Chastity Quirk (Leigh Douglas). Yes, Quirk. And yes, she is quirky. Warm, smiley, inviting — but in that sugary, saccharine way that makes your teeth ache. There’s a voice-over. A delightful interplay of switching characters and voiceover with internal monologue. A receptionist becomes the heart of power, the pretty face behind the ugly truths.

Quirk tells us she’s a people person. She makes people comfortable, unthreatened. Her mother was a hairdresser, she says, and taught her the sacred art of listening — learning other people’s secrets while filing them neatly away like highlights and perms.

Chastity is the ROTUS: Receptionist of the United States. But she’s more than that. She’s an administrative assistant, which in political terms means she’s the machine that makes the machine work. The gatherer of information. The oil in the cogs. The one who makes things happen.

She’s giving a tour to her former sorority sisters — Kappa Gamma Zeta — a chapter that adores her. She also happens to have 300,000 followers for her hair tips. An influencer turned political thought leader—a woman who can sell conditioner and foreign policy in the same breath.

“Do you know how hard it is to get a whole sorority chapter of women to love you all at once?” she asks.

Her boss is President Drumph. And the thing about receptionists? People say anything in front of them. She catalogues disloyalty with the precision of MI5. She’s sugary sweet to her sorority sisters, but she’s merciless to the deranged Speaker of the House.

In an hour, we get a fully fleshed-out Ruth Draper-esque portrait. Leigh Douglas gives us a woman painted in bold strokes, the female characters full of colour and voice, the men flatter, thinner, almost ghosted. Douglas as Chastity dominates the space — blonde locks, West Coast vocal fry, and a smile that could topple cabinets.

That said, the transitions need tightening. The quick shifts from one character to another sometimes feel clunky — all noisy heel-strikes on the floor instead of seamless transformation. But there are flashes of physical brilliance: Chastity sprawled across the desk, one leg elegantly extended into the air, a picture of power masquerading as passivity.

Politically, ROTUS lands hard. It shows us that in the Republican world of patriotic patriarchy, women are essential — whether at the podium or the back office, burning secret files. It’s the pretty that powers the ugly machine—the pretty one who does the ugly work. The Go-To Girls who resist looking thirty, resist looking like lesbians, resist looking like Democrats.

By the end, Chastity is caught in the machinery herself. Other women are blamed, shamed, and maimed. She must choose: follow orders or follow conscience. The character named Liberty provides no liberty. The God-and-Party she serves asks if she’ll take the bullet for them. And Chastity — once the girl with all the privilege — realises she never truly had it at all.

Leigh Douglas’s solo written and acted work, ROTUS: Receptionist of the United States, is a sharp, biting, and brilliantly political work—a masterful piece of writing.



ROTUS

Edinburgh Festival Fringe

Reviewed on 21st August 2025 at Snug at Gilded Balloon Patter House

by Louis Kavouras

Photography by Damian Robertson

 

 

 

 

 

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