Tag Archives: MimeLondon

GECKO – THE WEDDING

★★★

Sadler’s Wells East

GECKO – THE WEDDING

Sadler’s Wells East

★★★

“An inspiring, well-loved piece of physical theatre”

After an exceptional run at the Barbican in 2022, Gecko’s The Wedding returns to London as part of MimeLondon, a festival that showcases new and exciting physical and visual theatre. Though a slightly re-imagined version, this production of The Wedding, created by Gecko’s artistic director Amit Lahav, stays true to its original exploration of the relationship humans develop with each other and with society itself.

In a dystopian-like reality, human beings come into the world through a slide. They are welcomed by an enthusiastic lady who hands them a beautiful wedding gown and gets them set up for their life as part of a peculiar society. All the members of this society work frantically, party hard and live a life of repetition and contracts, with nothing else on the horizon. Till group of outcasts, in an attempt to improve their lives, decide to slip in and along with a dismayed wedded individual, they bring change and, eventually, revolution.

There is an undeniably raw element in every expression, every move and every word of the ensemble’s performance. All of the performers, without exception, work hard to breathe life in an array of characters, from the obedient receiver of the newcomers to a homeless entertainer and a man who dares to go against the established rules and enquire about divorce. Their energy flows continuously, their precision is impressive and their collective chemistry mind-blowing.

One of Gecko’s characteristics is the use of various languages and the use of breath to add to the soundscape and to the emotional depth of the storytelling. It also works as a reminder that what we see onstage is a collective of humans that live, feel and breathe. However, in this version of the show, it feels like an incessant chattering; always in the background without any room for some quiet or some pause for variation. Instead of pacing out the speaking and breathing parts, there is a constant jabber on top of Dave Price’s beautiful music. But how are we to appreciate the music and the performers’ vulnerable speech when nothing ever stops?

Another distracting element is the inconsistency in the world building and movement development. Especially important in physical theatre is to establish certain patterns to help the audience understand what’s happening. Those patterns can be built, deconstructed and eventually thrown out the window, but they provide a stability and specificity without which the show ends up being vague and unreachable. Executive director Matthew Jones provides snapshots of events and characters that feel incomplete, random and disconnected, though they are powerful and at times land successfully, like when the whole ensemble comes together to celebrate in a wonderful set of circular shapes and motions full of fluidity, harmony and unison.

Regarding the lighting, designed by Joe Hornsby, it creates strictly bounded blocks that enhance the feeling of disconnection and isolation among the wedded individuals. Also, the use of lamps and fairy lights on the stage helps the audience visually navigate a stage that is not always easy to keep up with. The set and costume design, by Rhys Jarman, favours an earthy colour palette and bring us back to earlier times with braces, long skirts and big telephones. This could hint to a theme of breaking free from history and preventing it from repeating itself by disturbing an order placed upon us by a force we don’t even know.

An inspiring, well-loved piece of physical theatre, The Wedding urges us to examine the contracts of our lives and take matters into our own hands in order to determine our happiness.



GECKO – THE WEDDING

Sadler’s Wells East

Reviewed on 21st January 2026

by Stephanie Christodoulidou

Photography by Malachy Luckie


 

 

 

 

GECKO

GECKO

GECKO

TELL ME

★★★★

The Place

TELL ME

The Place

★★★★

“imaginative and full of striking choices”

Forty-five years on from the AIDS crisis, HIV still carries significant stigma despite being fully treatable. Fresh from its 2025 world premiere, ‘Tell Me’ arrives in London determined to challenge outdated misconceptions. Blending circus, dance and theatre, it’s tender yet unflinching, offering hope without compromising honesty. Even in its evolving form, its 2026 tour demands attention – it might just save a life.

It’s 2026 and Grace receives a diagnosis she never imagined – HIV. Through modern eyes, we reach back to those who endured the 1980s AIDS crisis, honouring their legacy while confronting lingering misconceptions and looking towards a more hopeful future.

Produced by Turtle Key Arts, Sadiq Ali Company unveils a new iteration of ‘Tell Me’, devised by Sadiq Ali (the Company’s Artistic Director), Phoebe Knight and Jonah Russell, with dramaturgy by Rishi Trikha and choreography consultancy from Jonathan Lunn and Junior Cunningham. The potent blend of Chinese pole, aerial, dance and theatre feels effortlessly cohesive. Circus elements add real jeopardy: a standout moment involves Ali slipping from a cube with no safety – a gripping image of turmoil and struggle. The sparing use of speech lands with real weight, with cheers, grunts and quiet sobs conveying rare realism for a dance led work. Queer joy sits exactly where it should, celebrating life alongside pain.

That said, the narrative could be clearer. A plastic shroud reads like misinformed 1980s post-mortem practices, making Ali’s later scenes feel like new characters rather a continuous arc. A demonic figure’s surreal demeanour clashes with the otherwise grounded tone. The past–present contrast could go further: the modern day arc feels less defined, and the masked doctor’s blunt delivery of Grace’s diagnosis undercuts the idea of improved care. Overall, though, there’s powerful work here.

Devised by Ali, Knight and Russell, with associate direction from Hauk Pattison, the show is confidently steered. The opening sequence of pulsing, spinning Chinese pole cages lands with real force, immediately establishing a visual language that becomes a character in its own right. The final, gentler montage serves as a homecoming. The storytelling feels authentic (demonic detour aside), and the inventive use of Chinese poles as set and apparatus brings the world to life. That said, a couple of scenes could be tightened, such as Grace’s languid penultimate scene, and one bit of blocking distractingly places Ali and Russell behind moving set. Overall though the direction is imaginative and full of striking choices.

Ali, Knight and Russell deliver emotionally charged performances, moving authentically between joy, anguish and everything in between. Ali is especially magnetic, offering a masterful mix of strength, subtlety and emotional depth. Knight and Russell deliver thoughtful, affecting performances while pulling off impressive physical feats, though a couple of moments could be tightened to maintain the intentionality behind the rawness.

Aslı Özüak’s scenography has a stark, elegant simplicity, letting the Chinese poles command the space as they come to life. The nested cube design is inspired, shifting between set, cage and shelter, and tiny cubes as HIV diagnoses are a brilliant touch. Özüak’s costumes are sharply judged and drive the narrative. The 80s looks are effortlessly chic, and red for the HIV awareness ribbon threads thoughtfully through. The only less assured moment is the overly contrasting devil. Guy Veale’s sound design is potent, creating a sharply attuned and vivid soundscape that balances realism, abstraction, cheekiness and sobriety. A couple of transitions land slightly late, but the overall execution is strong. Jamie Heseltine’s lighting is beautifully judged with a keen instinct for when to let darkness speak. Light searching through shadow is especially evocative, and bold touches – a burst of strobe, a backlit smoke box – add real texture.

Though still evolving, ‘Tell Me’ tackles its subject with a maturity and tenderness that already resonate deeply. I’m excited to see how it develops and highly recommend catching it on tour.

 



TELL ME

The Place

Reviewed on 23rd January 2026

by Hannah Bothelton

Photography by Alberto Santos Bellido


 

 

 

 

TELL ME

TELL ME

TELL ME