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LAST AND FIRST MEN

★★½

The Coronet Theatre

LAST AND FIRST MEN

The Coronet Theatre

★★½

“visually arresting and conceptually intriguing”

First and Last Men is a contemporary dance work inspired by Olaf Stapledon’s 1930s science-fiction novel of the same name. The production draws heavily from Jóhann Jóhannsson’s film and score, originally created as a cinematic meditation on the novel. Projected behind the performers are stark black-and-white images of vast concrete monuments and drifting mist, while Tilda Swindon’s measured narration recounts the story of humanity two billion years into the future – the last men attempting to communicate across time at the edge of extinction.

The visual and sonic world is undeniably powerful. The monumental structures – Yugoslav spomeniks filmed like relics of a forgotten civilisation – dominate the stage. They are imposing, beautiful, and melancholic. The score swells with a sense of cosmic inevitability, and Swindon’s voice carries intellectual and emotional weight. In many ways, the film and narration are more compelling than the live performance unfolding in front of them.

Adrienne Hart’s Neon Dance brings the last men to life through dancers Fukiko Takase, Kelvin Kilonzo and Aoi Nakamura. In Stapledon’s vision, these future beings possess telepathic abilities and an evolved consciousness. Onstage, however, they appear less like higher forms of life and more like stylised extensions of the backdrop. The costumes by Mikio Sakabe and Ana Rajcevic are simple yet effective, at times resembling moving monuments themselves – sculptural forms that echo the concrete giants on screen. This visual parallel is striking and arguably one of the production’s strongest theatrical ideas.

Yet the choreography (by Adrienne Hart, Makiko Aoyama and the dancers) does not rise to the same level of invention. The movement is repetitive and often feels empty, circling the same gestures without deepening or expanding the narrative. Instead of embodying the epic scale of extinction and evolution, the dancers frequently seem to fill space rather than transform it. The sense of doomsday is established from the outset and remains static throughout. There is little tonal shift, no development, no contrast – only a continuous atmosphere of solemnity.

Despite the dancers’ technical precision and control, the choreography does not add new layers of meaning; it rarely matches the scale or intelligence of the source material. The most affecting moments occur when the movement stills and the audience can fully absorb the film’s haunting imagery and the gravity of the text.

There is ambition here – a bold attempt to translate speculative philosophy into physical form. What remains, however, is a production in which the cinematic elements overshadow the live performance. The monuments linger in the mind; the choreography feels like carefully composed, yet ultimately empty imagery.

First and Last Men is visually arresting and conceptually intriguing, yet it feels static and underdeveloped. For a work about the end of humanity and the vast arc of time, it paradoxically feels emotionally narrow – a beautiful but monotonous meditation that struggles to justify its choreographic presence.



LAST AND FIRST MEN

The Coronet Theatre

Reviewed on 26th February 2026

by Nasia Ntalla

Photography by Miles Hart


 

 

 

 

LAST AND FIRST MEN

LAST AND FIRST MEN

LAST AND FIRST MEN

JOSH SHARP: TA-DA!

★★★★★

Soho Theatre

JOSH SHARP: TA-DA!

Soho Theatre

★★★★★

“honest, heartfelt and strikingly inventive”

Josh Sharp welcomes us to his one-man show with a cascade of hellos and a vibrant energy that fills the entire theatre. His mission is immediately clear: to create a show in which he can share 2,000 slides in real time. He even proves that he is operating the clicker himself, having memorised every single slide to make this theatrical feat possible. Two thousand slides means delivering one every 2.25 seconds. Maintaining that relentless rhythm — a long PowerPoint presentation projected across a vast screen, with set design by Meredith Ries — while landing moments of absolute truth and joy is no small task. It is a high-wire act of precision and vulnerability.

Directed by Sam Pinkleton, ta-da! is honest, heartfelt and strikingly inventive. You don’t quite know what you’re in for or what the show is truly about until the very end. Yet you are completely held: by the jokes, by the momentum and by flashes of raw truthfulness. Sharp keeps us with him every second, sharing intimate moments from his life: the story of coming out, tender and innocent first encounters with his own body, and wilder, more chaotic intimacies with others.

There is deep playfulness here, but beneath the stories of his gay identity, love and sexual encounters lies an awareness of privilege and self-reflection. The narratives are woven with honesty and immediacy, grounded firmly in the present. Sharp’s London debut speaks vividly of his life in New York, yet it resonates locally, tying into London’s reality and filling the audience with laughter and recognition.

The use of the presentation format is astonishingly inventive. Words generate images; images trigger stories; and every few seconds a new world is built before our eyes. Each slide becomes a fleeting but fully lived moment, shared and appreciated before it vanishes.

As we travel through these 2,000 slides, Sharp, alongside his childhood magician alter ego, repeatedly “tricks” us into his world. Are we listening to the real Josh, the performer or the magician? The line blurs constantly. But we remain captivated, willingly following every twist in his train of thought.

We learn about his family and the forces that shaped him, far beyond his gay identity. We learn who helped him become who he is. The show expands outward from identity into humanity.

It is, ultimately, a journey, much like meeting someone new. You do not know where the encounter will lead. But if you love them, or if they offer themselves with honesty and openness, you follow. You stay. That is what ta-da! does: you fall in love with it and want to follow every beat to the end, even when you don’t fully know where it is taking you.

ta-da! is a genuine piece of theatre that leaves you inspired and filled with joy. Not because it tells a story that has never been told before, but because it tells it with singular humanity. You witness an honest individual doing the best they can with the time they are given. And that, in Sharp’s words, is living. That is “slaying.”

 



JOSH SHARP: TA-DA!

Soho Theatre

Reviewed on 12th February 2026

by Nasia Ntalla

Photography by Emilio Madrid


 

 

 

 

JOSH SHARP

JOSH SHARP

JOSH SHARP