Tag Archives: Louis Kavouras

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

SAME

★★★★

Edinburgh Festival Fringe

SAME

Edinburgh Festival Fringe

★★★★

“honest, powerful, and true — and, perhaps most importantly, hopeful”

Many men carry complicated maps of their fathers in their hearts — some routes well-trodden, others broken off mid-journey. In Same, two best mates, James and Lewis, wrestle with the weight of those inherited paths. Do the sins of the father echo through the son? Can a pattern be broken before it repeats? Are the families we are born into the cards we’re dealt… or the ones we would ever truly choose?

Here we meet four characters, all adrift: fathers who have vanished or moved on, mothers who drown their sorrows in drink and drown their lives in a sea of overdue bills, a letter left unopened — the kind that can change a life, or slip silently into dust. Each of them searches for a way forward, a way out, a way home.

This is a finely wrought work, rooted in a subject that demands to be voiced. It is rare these days to see a story that examines male fragility alongside male resilience, one that does not flinch from the emotional weather of men. But Same does more than stage a drama — it holds up a mirror to its audience. It quietly asks: Are you struggling? Are you okay? Do you need someone to talk to? It is a hand extended, not just a curtain lifted.

The piece is still at the beginning of its journey. It probably will be longer or develop some second half that brings the audience into its script and onto its stage. There is much to cherish: the solid ensemble of Brandon Kimaryo, Jason Avlonitis, Miles Dunkley, and Aimee Samara; the vision of creators Francesca Di Cesare and Aimee Samara; the script by Aimee Samara; and a hauntingly beautiful score by Concerto Main, which shapes the emotional spine of the work. Same is honest, powerful, and true — and, perhaps most importantly, hopeful.

Performed in the Olive Studio at Greenside George Street — an intimate, low-ceilinged space that feels like a warm held breath. The lighting could benefit from a designer’s touch to refocus and illuminate the actors’ faces and the delicate intention of the work. Yet, somehow, the story glows from within, finding its own light.

Same may not be your story. You may not leave feeling the same as your neighbour. But when I saw it, it struck a chord that hummed the same in all who were there — an unspoken recognition, that was the same for all observers, as if we’d all been handed the same letter, and finally decided to read it.



SAME

Edinburgh Festival Fringe

Reviewed on 11th August 2025 at Olive Studio at Greenside @ George Street

by Louis Kavouras

Photography by Bradey Fallon 

 

 

 

 

 

SAME

SAME

SAME