Tag Archives: Nick Winston

NERDS

★★★

Edinburgh Festival Fringe

NERDS

Edinburgh Festival Fringe

★★★

“Packed with technology-related puns, the script is generally entertaining”

In ‘Nerds’, Steve Jobs is a hippie-turned-leather-clad bad boy and Bill Gates a traumatised but vindictive incel. In an hour and a half, this musical charts their trajectories from garage-based geeks to some of the richest and most powerful men in the world, paying little mind to fact all the while. Despite the relatively weak script, director Nick Winston has managed to craft a highly entertaining show.

Kane Oliver Parry (as Steve Jobs) and Dan Buckley (as Bill Gates) both deliver stellar performances. Buckley’s treatment of Gates’ evolution from the butt of the joke to jeering bully is particularly satisfying, and his rapping is an unexpected treat. Jobs transforms from an idealistic hippie into a greedy tech bro, but Parry is given much, much less space in the script to flesh out this change. Teleri Hughes gives a particularly strong vocal performance as Myrtle, Gates’ love interest, while Elise Zavou as Jobs’ principled crush contributes a refreshingly critical note. The ensemble works well together and makes the creative choreography look effortless.

The set, designed by Sophia Pardon, consists of a table and a few shelving units, both on wheels, allowing for sleek and satisfying transitions. Paired with gorgeous lighting design by Matt Hockley, the show is a joy to look at. Additionally, the off-stage band, led by Chris Duffy, delivers a pleasing 80s-rock soundtrack that makes the piece feel cohesive where the writing falls short.

Packed with technology-related puns, the script is generally entertaining. However, various plotlines are abandoned as quickly as they are introduced. We hear something about a guy at IMB, a legal battle, intellectual theft, Jobs’ sudden interest in religion, etc, but all are discarded by the end of the relevant song. The ending, in which Jobs and Gates predictably give up their feud, felt unsatisfying.

Created by Jordan Allen-Dutton, Erik Weiner and Hal Goldberg in the 2000s, the tone of the musical is definitely silly, but it is not necessarily satirical. While Gates and Jobs are portrayed as self-centred and greedy, this is presented as a personal rather than a larger structural issue in Silicon Valley, and their flaws are mostly resolved by the end of the musical. The upbeat interpretation feels entirely disengaged from the right-wing, neoliberal thrust of Silicon Valley today, making the script feel rather outdated.

Nerds is not the topical, thought-provoking musical satire I was hoping for, but the talented cast and high production value make this worth a watch.

 



NERDS

Edinburgh Festival Fringe

Reviewed on 15th August 2025 at Cowbarn at Underbelly, Bristo Square

by Lola Stakenburg

Photography by Pamela Raith

 

 

 

 

 

NERDS

NERDS

NERDS

MIDNIGHT COWBOY

★★

Southwark Playhouse Elephant

MIDNIGHT COWBOY

Southwark Playhouse Elephant

★★

“Nick Winston’s staging is slick but lacks pace and energy”

Apparently, John Schlesinger’s 1969 American film “Midnight Cowboy” is the only X-Rated film to win the Best Picture Academy Award. Despite its bleak setting and outlook, the story of an unlikely friendship between two lost souls in New York City has been variously described as one of the greatest films of the sixties, and later deemed ‘culturally, historically and aesthetically significant’. Based on James Leo Herlihy’s novel of the same name, its success – according to the director – was largely down to its brutal exploration of loneliness. Both the film and the novel captured the quality of its time place in American cultural history.

Fast forward half a century and the ground-breaking story washes up in the hands of dramatist Bryony Lavery and songwriter Francis ‘Eg’ White who have shoehorned the bromantic fairy-tale of New York into a two-and-a-half-hour slice of musical theatre. A few years ago, we might have been more surprised, but as we have become acclimatised to outlandish choices for a musical’s subject matter, we have learnt to take this sort of thing in our stride. Claiming to be based on the novel, in reality “Midnight Cowboy – A New Musical” duplicates the film’s narrative by doing away with the central character’s back story and presenting it in disjointed flashbacks which, in this medium, get lost in the mix.

Joe Buck (Paul Jacob French) is a naïve yet damaged individual escaping his dead-end life in Texas by reinventing himself as a cowboy and heading off to New York to become a male prostitute. Success doesn’t come easy, to the point that he even pays his first client instead of the other way around. Hooking up with Rico ‘Ratso’ Rizzo (Max Bowden), he thinks his fortunes are on the rise until he discovers the rat Ratso has taken him for a ride. A mutual dependence grows, however, and after Joe moves into Ratso’s squalid squat, each individual’s isolation finds meaning and connection in a world of hustlers and ne’er-do-wells.

Nick Winston’s staging is slick but lacks pace and energy, and we never feel the full force of the unexpected chemistry between the protagonists. Despite strong performances we remain unconvinced, and neither do we feel their desperation. Similarly, Joe Buck’s encounters steer clear of gritty realism. However, whenever we are drawn in, we are suddenly denied access by a song that comes out of nowhere. Francis ‘Eg’ White has form as a songwriter, and there is no denying that there are a fair few excellent numbers, but the score is too often at odds with the text. There are exceptions. Tori Allen-Martin’s gorgeously smoky voice curls round the sultry, soul-disco chords of ‘Whatever it is You’re Doing’. We are in Serge Gainsbourg territory here, with a soft-porn gloss. Bowden’s ‘Don’t Give Up on Me Now’ has a real Tom Waits quality, reprised later by French who throws in shades of Randy Newman. Elsewhere, however, the songs tend to halt the narrative or simply cloud the intent. ‘Every Inch of this Earth is a Church’ strips away the inherent comedy of the classic scene where Joe Buck mistakes a religious fanatic for a pimp. And blow jobs and ballads have never been known to go well together.

It could be ground-breaking, and there is at times a surreal, cartoon-like quality to the show. But it cannot conceal the tameness of this interpretation. As if sensing the emotional detachment, French cranks up the passion during the closing scene, but we feel that it is unearned and inauthentic. There is poignancy in there somewhere, but like the dreams of the hapless heroes, it remains out of reach.



MIDNIGHT COWBOY

Southwark Playhouse Elephant

Reviewed on 10th April 2025

by Jonathan Evans

Photography by Pamela Raith

 


 

Previously reviewed at this venue:

WILKO | ★★★ | March 2025
SON OF A BITCH | ★★★★ | February 2025
SCISSORHANDZ | ★★★ | January 2025
CANNED GOODS | ★★★ | January 2025
THE MASSIVE TRAGEDY OF MADAME BOVARY | ★★★ | December 2024
THE HAPPIEST MAN ON EARTH | ★★★★★ | November 2024
[TITLE OF SHOW] | ★★★ | November 2024
THE UNGODLY | ★★★ | October 2024
FOREVERLAND | ★★★★ | October 2024
JULIUS CAESAR | ★★★ | September 2024

MIDNIGHT COWBOY

MIDNIGHT COWBOY

MIDNIGHT COWBOY