Tag Archives: The Place

STUNTMAN

★★★★

UK Tour

STUNTMAN

The Place

★★★★

“opens with swagger and closes with vulnerability”

Many a young boy dreams of being a stuntman – until reality throws the first punch. ‘Stuntman’ is a tough yet tender take on violence and masculinity, examining what it means to be male in modern society through a compelling mix of physicality, dance, speech and sign language. It swings with force and feeling and would be a knockout save for an unusual structure.

Presented by the Scottish company, SUPERFAN, and based on true events, we meet Sadiq and Fox executing violent stunts while exploring how they got into stunt performance. Scenes which start off playful and stylised become more extreme and realistic. The intervening stories dig deeper, deconstructing masculinity with fierce vulnerability. By the end, you’ll question your own conception of manhood and wonder who really benefits from society’s expectations.

Co-devised by Pete Lannon, Fox Banks and Sadiq Ali, ‘Stuntman’ has a loose narrative, feeling like a series of chapters linked by a common thread. Each section explores male-on-male violence, culminating in a heartbreaking reflection on male self-expression and disconnection. The final sequence of a distressed Fox and Sadiq repeatedly leaning on one another before pushing the other away shows this with devastating clarity. It’s a timely, powerful piece. That said, there’s far more movement than speech, with the almost endless murder scenes (each repeating “See you in hell motherf*****!”) starting to feel superfluous. I long for more dialogue to really dissect the emotional core, especially Sadiq’s perspective which is relatively underexplored. Though perhaps that’s the point: all too often, men are socialised to lack the vocabulary.

A devised piece directed by Lannon, ‘Stuntman’ has an autobiographical, immersive quality: we find our seats while the men laddishly fool around; we are addressed directly and even ‘shot at’ at points (don’t worry, there are no weapons). There are clever contrasts between Fox’s two fight monologues, one as glorified and stylised as a movie scene, the other starker and more honest. The river scene hits hard, as Fox and Sadiq hauntingly repeat ‘I didn’t know what to do’ while apologising to each other – heart wrenchingly beautiful. The pacing could be tightened, with some overly long pauses losing momentum at points.

The choreography (Lucy Ireland) steps in when words fail, sweeping, striking and reaching for an elusive form of expression and cleverly incorporating BSL interpreter, Iain Hodgetts. The score (Richy Carey) mixes music with fight effects and ambient sounds, layering reality upon the otherwise abstract scenography (Rachel O’Neill) and transforming movement into a tightly executed dance. O’Neill’s set evokes a boxing ring, complete with canvas. The lighting design (Michaella Fee) mixes brash bulbs with a suffusive tonal palette. The costumes build up and then strip away the machismo.

Fox Banks and Sadiq Ali are totally in sync throughout, giving each other a quick nod before launching into the next section. Ali is a beautiful dancer, deftly executing impressively acrobatic and subtly nuanced moves. Banks demonstrates power and perseverance, especially when repeatedly hitting the deck at the end of a rope. Both deliver earnest and moving monologues, pushing the boundaries before straining at the limits of society’s expectations.

‘Stuntman’ opens with swagger and closes with vulnerability – a brave, bare-knuckle dive into modern masculinity. Don’t miss it, even if I’d swap some combat for more connection.



STUNTMAN

The Place

Reviewed on 4th October 2025

by Hannah Bothelton

Photography by Brian Hartley


 

Previously reviewed at this venue:

JAZZ CONVERSATIONS | ★★★★★ | September 2024

 

 

STUNTMAN

STUNTMAN

STUNTMAN

DETENTION

★★★½

UK Tour

DETENTION

Northern Stage

★★★½

“touching and urgent”

Setting the stage with a deep abyss-like space looming behind a protest banner which stitches together protest messaging now richly associated with the 1980s LGBTQ+ rights movement, from the start, ‘Detention’ by Gary Clarke looks to be an urgent call to action which negotiates an eerily close then and now of queer liberation. What unravels is a dance-led retelling of haunting stories of working-class queer folks’ experiences fighting against, and ultimately living under, Section 28.

The piece is set to cerebral and heart-pounding soundscapes and voice overs which collide with the Narrator, played by Lewey Hellewell, who provides context, facts, and rallying cries to different sequences. The narration mostly provides a necessary emotional and informative thread between the chronology of events and the evocative stories the piece uncovers, but at times feels very on the nose. Largely projected words reading ‘Aids’, as well as various slurs and phrases, also lack subtly across mostly mesmerising choreographic episodes. These heavy-handed projected words take the audience out of the emotion and spoon-feed what they most likely can deduce from the intricate movement and staging of the overall performance. Film projections of a juddery and vexed Thatcher, played by El Perry, and a heart-to-heart from a teacher (Sarah Squires) afraid of what coming out at work might result in, work for much more thought-through audio-visual aids. More integration of film, multi-media, and historical materials like newspaper headlines, banners, and photographs, could make for a much rawer patchwork of theatre seeking to tell queer histories. This, coupled with Nia Wood, Chris Copland, and Keir Martin’s excellent execution of sound and lighting design, would make for a much more serious tone.

Though powerful and emotional messages of resistance and struggle cut through the noise, unfortunately ‘Detention’ somewhat faulters at delivering the urgence and importance of spotlighting the community it is voicing. The gorgeously designed blue costuming (by Hannah Boothman) of the House of Lords sequence, combined with electrifyingly slick choreography performed by Alexandra Bierlaire, Gavin Coward, Mayowa Ogunnaike, Alex Gosmere, and Imogen Wright, and underscored by Hellewell’s chilling delivery of anti-LGBTQ+ rhetoric, highlights the real triumphs of what this piece can achieve. Furthermore, the almost teasing portrayal of demonised gay friendly children’s books also gave a fascinating angle to this part of Section 28’s harmful effects.

‘Detention’ does well to integrate LGBTQ+ Switchboard logbook stories into its narrative, carefully weaving the isolated, scared, and angry words of callers against a backdrop of tortured solo physical theatre. One drawback to these moments is the unwavering silence which each caller is met with, which perhaps draws a false message of inaction against vital listening and advice services. Further dialogue between or with call-handlers would provide a richer insight into the service’s history. It is also unfortunate that it seemed the only queer woman’s story represented through the Switchboard segments centred around motherhood and child custody. Enlightening further aspects of queer women’s struggles through Section 28, besides those relating to motherhood, would further enhance the show’s vision to tell an authentic story of a benchmark in queer British history.

Lastly, the inclusion of a local community cast affected by Section 28 in each place the piece is performed in is a beautiful aspect of ‘Detention’s’ mission. Community actors Steve Boodhun, Hedley Sugar-Wells, Tony Chapman-Wilson, Lindsay Nicholson, and Gary Short integrate brilliantly into the cast. The sincerity of stories and collaboration between the dancers and the community actors creates a touching and urgent driving home of the piece’s natural unifying message.



DETENTION

Northern Stage

Reviewed on 16th September 2025

by Molly Knox

Photography by Joe Armitage


 

Previously reviewed by Molly:

BECAUSE YOU NEVER ASKED | ★★★ | EDINBURGH FESTIVAL FRINGE | August 2025
CREEPY BOYS: SLUGS | ★★★★★ | EDINBURGH FESTIVAL FRINGE | August 2025
THE CITY FOR INCURABLE WOMEN | ★★★★ | EDINBURGH FESTIVAL FRINGE | August 2025
DOGS ON THE METRO | ★★★★★ | LIVE THEATRE | May 2025
HEAVEN | ★★★★ | TRAVERSE THEATRE | February 2025
PRESENT | ★★★★ | LIVE THEATRE | December 2024
GWYNETH GOES SKIING | ★★★★ | LIVE THEATRE | November 2024
ST MAUD | ★★★ | LIVE THEATRE | October 2024

 

 

DETENTION

DETENTION

DETENTION