Tag Archives: Suzanna Rosenthal Productions

MY LIFE WITH KENNETH WILLIAMS

★★★★

UK Tour

MY LIFE WITH KENNETH WILLIAMS

Circle and Star Theatre

★★★★

“an atmosphere of bumbling nostalgia and jolly engagement”

You can still hear it, can’t you? That fantastic nasal twang – like an outraged gale howling through the adenoidal alps.

“Infamy, infamy, they’ve all got it infamy!”

Kenneth Williams’ most famous deprecation was broadly rebutted at the Circle and Star Theatre where the raconteur and actor was revived and lauded, the audience laughing in fond memory of those famous flaring nostrils and Munchian cheeks.

The “Infamy” pun came from Carry On Cleo, in which Williams played Julius Caesar. In this production, he is the centurion as the revival marks the comedian’s 100th birthday on 22nd February 1926.

Williams died in 1988 aged just 62 – possibly by his own hand – but his flaming torch has been carried by David Benson whose impressions and re-creations are impeccable, dark and textured.

Benson burst on to the scene 30 years ago with Think No Evil of Us: My Life With Kenneth Williams and he revisits his legendary portrait in this nationwide tour.

Check the title for an accurate summary of this intriguing, if occasionally unbalanced, show.

It’s My Life With Kenneth Williams. Williams gets second billing. This is especially true of the first act – one for the Boomers as Benson says. He takes us back to the mid-1970s when, as a young lad in Birmingham, he would immerse himself in the stars of the Radio Times. He didn’t want to impersonate them, he wanted to be them – Captain Mainwaring, Eric Morecambe, Peter Sellers, Sergeant Wilson. We get them all, immaculately.

His hero, though, was Spike Milligan. He pored over the scripts of The Goon Show, went to see the great man at the Queen Alexandra Theatre and employed his madcap surrealism to every creative endeavour up to and including his chemistry homework.

The culmination of this fandom was the Milligan-esque story he sent to a Jackanory competition. He won out of 15,000 entries and his entry – about a rag and bone man – was read out by… one Kenneth Williams.

The young Benson was devastated. Williams did the voices wrong, he thought, and, worse, he was so camp. Benson, finally recognising his sexuality, was terrified he would be outed by association.

This extraordinary true tale comes complete with a sing-along school assembly under the direction of irascible Mr Brimley and a genuine recording of Williams reading The Rag and Bone Man. It is played out with great affection by Benson, who creates an atmosphere of bumbling nostalgia and jolly engagement. He is, after all, a writer of pantomimes.

The warmth is in stark contrast to the icy blast that follows.

We have to wait, and wait (perhaps too long) for Kenneth Williams. He arrives in the second act in a few scandalous vignettes that aim to capture not only the star’s vocal range and the endless talking but his unpleasant snobbery and visceral stomach complaints. The logorrhea and diarrhea, one might say.

In this anecdotal show, you come for David Benson and meet, along the way, Kenneth Williams, although perhaps not the Williams you would wish to meet. The former is pleasant company, the other is a self-pitying, self-loathing and casually cruel wretch. Infamy, infamy, Williams might say.

David Benson muses whether his lifelong obsession with Williams is compensation for that first ungrateful reaction. But, he adds, unlike those other 70s heroes, he wouldn’t want to be the troubled, salacious and tortured artist. Not for one minute.

By the end, we understand why. Even Williams couldn’t tolerate himself.

Through all this, Benson is alone and unsupported on the stage except for a chair and a spotlight. And yet one-man show seems too inadequate a description, numerically speaking.



MY LIFE WITH KENNETH WILLIAMS

Circle and Star Theatre then UK Tour continues

Reviewed on 24th January 2026

by Giles Broadbent

Photography by Steve Ullathorne

 

 

 

 

 

 

MY LIFE WITH KENNETH WILLIAMS

MY LIFE WITH KENNETH WILLIAMS

MY LIFE WITH KENNETH WILLIAMS

REALLY GOOD EXPOSURE

★★★★

Soho Theatre

REALLY GOOD EXPOSURE

Soho Theatre

★★★★

“Prescott’s writing is dynamic and light”

In ‘Really Good Exposure’, Megan Prescott charts the fictional Molly Thomas’ evolution from teenage starlet to porn star. Prescott, who appeared as Katie Finch in the hit teen series ‘Skins’ in the 2000s, draws on her own and others’ lived experiences of exploitation and grooming in the entertainment industry to address a plethora of issues: the sexualisation of minors, the financial barriers to the pursuit of a creative career, and women’s (lack of) agency in the commercialisation of their bodies. In doing so, the actor-writer weaves a compelling and intersectional, if somewhat didactic, web.

Prescott delivers a strong and self-assured performance, easily filling the stage at the Soho Theatre all by herself. Her portrayal of Molly Thomas alternatively as a child, a teenager, and a young adult feels sincere and consistent. In this, she is aided by Hattie North’s precise and extensive sound design, particularly the many recorded voices that Molly constantly converses with – her mother, her agent, a casting director. Recordings, of course, inherently don’t really ‘respond’ to a performer like a fellow actor might, underlining the unyielding nature of the characters’ demands of Molly. Additionally, the voices’ incorporeality (if I may) reinforces the central fact that the characters they portray all profit off of Molly’s body, and her body alone. Director Fiona Kingwill dresses Prescott in a bedazzled set of underwear even in the scenes from Molly’s childhood, allowing her to highlight continuities between sex workers’ costumes and what girls wear in dance competitions, for example. It’s touches like these that make the interplay between Prescott’s acting and Kingwill’s staging of the play feel refined.

However, Kingwill’s heavy dependence on tech sometimes takes away from the emotional punches the script delivers, particularly in the latter half of the play. Though Rachel Sampley’s lighting design is beautifully done, the videos she created to be projected to the back of the stage sometimes overpower Prescott, while montages of tweets and newspaper headlines felt unnecessary and teetered on cliché. The overreliance on tech is best illustrated by the effectiveness of a moment in which it is turned down: in a central scene, Molly is essentially forced to strip naked while auditioning to play a stripper. Her anguish comes across very well precisely because there’s no projection and the music is eerily quiet, as if being played in an empty dancing hall. Literally nude on stage, Molly comes across as ‘truly’ naked for the first time because she cannot hide behind loud music, stage lights, or projections.

Prescott’s writing is dynamic and light, though it loses some of its focus towards the end of the play, with the scenes in which Molly partakes in ‘Romance Reef’ (a.k.a. Love Island) feeling rather gimmicky. Additionally, the final monologue takes on an overly didactic tone. As Molly, Prescott essentially tells the audience how the show is meant to be interpreted, spelling out the message that sex work can be about taking control of your body and sexuality. It is a powerful and controversial stance in a world where sex workers are simultaneously portrayed as helpless victims and arbiters of immorality, but I wish Prescott had let her work speak for itself more. A layered piece about a divisive topic, ‘Really Good Exposure’ offers a night of thought-provoking entertainment.

 



REALLY GOOD EXPOSURE

Soho Theatre

Reviewed on 3rd September 2025

by Lola Stakenburg

Photography by Damian Robertson


 

Recently reviewed at Soho Theatre venues:

JUSTIN VIVIAN BOND: SEX WITH STRANGERS | ★★★★★ | July 2025
ALEX KEALY: THE FEAR | ★★★★ | June 2025
KIERAN HODGSON: VOICE OF AMERICA | ★★★★★ | June 2025
HOUSE OF LIFE | ★★★★★ | May 2025
JORDAN GRAY: IS THAT A C*CK IN YOUR POCKET, OR ARE YOU JUST HERE TO KILL ME? | ★★★★★ | May 2025
WHAT IF THEY ATE THE BABY? | ★★★★★ | March 2025

 

 

REALLY GOOD EXPOSURE

REALLY GOOD EXPOSURE

REALLY GOOD EXPOSURE