Tag Archives: Tim Graves

DADDY’S FIRST GAY DATE

★★★½

Seven Dials Playhouse

DADDY’S FIRST GAY DATE

Seven Dials Playhouse

★★★½

“There are elements of slapstick in the car-crash opening restaurant scene and the tempo rarely slacks”

Is it selfish to leave someone you love to find yourself? This is the central question that underpins Sam Danson’s second play ‘Daddy’s First Gay Date.’ A refreshing and subversive take on the rom-com genre, this two-act play set in the North of England explores bisexual identity and self-acceptance with verve and gusto.

Danson, the playwright and producer, is also a great comic actor. He plays the protagonist Ben – a funny if not somewhat neurotic and nerdy bisexual primary school teacher – with razor sharp wit and great comic timing. The inciting incident which causes the breakup between Ben and his long-term partner Helen (brilliantly played by Megan Edmondson) is also hilarious yet infused with an undertone of pathos; it occurs in a busy restaurant when Helen discovers Ben has engaged in toilet cubicle shenanigans with Tim (exuberantly played by Dior Clarke) a black fem gay man. The stakes of the drama are raised even further as we learn that Helen is not only coping with the fact that her father is suffering from a terminal illness but she is also pregnant. ‘Daddies’ are a recognisable tribe within the LGBTQ+ community but in this instance, Ben is an actual daddy – or at least a daddy- in-waiting.

There are elements of slapstick in the car-crash opening restaurant scene and the tempo rarely slacks. But the play really takes off when Ben and Tim prepare for their Big Night Out. Dressed in a bright, ill-fitted clubbing top and corduroy trousers, Ben cuts an awkward figure on the dance floor whilst Tim, an outwardly proud gay man, struts his stuff with in-yer-face bravado. The dynamic staging of the rave scene and subsequent scenes are down to the artistic vision of award-winning director Rikki Beadle-Blair. His decision to break the fourth wall and have the actors directly engage with members of the audience at key moments in the narrative is also a great one; the audience loved it.

The script also delivers some great caustic one-liners. ‘Who the fuck puts an orgy on Eventbrite’ and ‘Are you sure you’re bisexual? You dress like shit,’ come to mind. However, more attention and consideration could have been given to the set design which was very minimal. And although each character has their own character and narrative arc, I didn’t always buy into the romance between Ben and Tim. I felt some more tender moments between them, and a greater sense of their attraction for each other, would have made the rom part of this rom-com more believable.

That being said, the manner in which the rom-com genre is subverted in the penultimate scene is a stroke of pure genius. And the experience of sexual racism and racism per se that Tim’s character alludes to in the play helps to give greater depth to the piece without overshadowing the comedy.

If you’re looking for a fun night out, ‘Daddy’s First Gay Date’ often hits the mark. And within the wider canon of LGBTQ+ theatre this raucous rom com offers a unique take on one man’s journey of self-acceptance and sexual liberation.



DADDY’S FIRST GAY DATE

Seven Dials Playhouse

Reviewed on 30th October 2025

by Tim Graves

Photography by Jason Locke


 

Previously reviewed at this venue:

MONSTER | ★★★½ | September 2025
STORMS, MAYBE SNOW | | September 2025
BLUE | ★★★★ | March 2024
SUNSETS | ★★ | September 2023
STEVE | ★★★★ | February 2022

 

 

DADDY’S FIRST GAY DATE

DADDY’S FIRST GAY DATE

DADDY’S FIRST GAY DATE

UPROOTED

★★★★

New Diorama Theatre

UPROOTED

New Diorama Theatre

★★★★

“The cast work brilliantly as a collective with vigour, passion and conviction to tell this important story”

‘Uprooted’ is a piece of eco-feminist, political theatre devised by the multi-award-winning Ephemeral Ensemble. Directed by its co-founder – Brazilian theatre maker and director Ramon Ayres, Ephemeral Ensemble’s last show ‘Rewind’ was one of The Guardian’s 10 best theatre shows of 2024. Rest assured, ‘Uprooted’ does not disappoint; it is an emotionally charged and highly visceral, immersive piece of physical theatre with an urgent ecological and political message.

Set in Latin America, ‘Uprooted’ focuses on local and indigenous communities that have been ransacked by extractionist companies. It gives a voice to the powerful women who attempt to defend their native homeland and exposes the devastating human and ecological consequences of late-stage capitalism and the global corporations that are responsible for ecological rape. ‘Uprooted’ does not hold back; the relationship between ecological rape and sexual violence against women is harrowingly depicted when one of the women is forcibly taken by masked invaders and violated by the huge, writhing silver chute they carry and manoeuvre.

Physical theatre is a hallmark of this piece. The cast – Eygló Belafonte, Josephine Tremelling, Louise Wilcox and Vanessa Guevara Flores – work brilliantly as a collective with vigour, passion and conviction to tell this important story. Alex Paton, live instrumentalist, is also the master of this original musical composition; he expertly transports us to the magical beauty of the rainforest but equally, through harsh and discordant sound, into darker territory during scenes of ecological violation and disaster. The live music is a real highlight of the show.

Lighting designer, Josephine Tremelling, and the set designer (who is not explicitly named in the available credits) equally make a massive contribution to the immersive theatricality of the piece – whether it be their miniature homes that glow in significant bright colours, the luminous jungle creatures or the huge shadows cast from the constantly moving lighting poles bedecked with chains which are used to evoke a forest.

Ramon Ayres, the director, has worked tirelessly with the actors to attain a masterful level of physical theatre in each scene. The way that the actors transform object after object into something completely different is a theatrical wonder to behold: a dumpster becomes a house, sheer fabric is used to represent a river, and a giant chute is used to represent the forces of colonialism, capitalism and patriarchy. However, there were some earlier scenes that did not quite hit the mark. They presented the audience with powerful stage images, but I felt the nuanced dynamics that underpinned them could have been dramatically explored further.

The decision to break the fourth wall and engage the audience more directly is a brave one but makes for a more emotionally powerful audience experience – particularly towards the end. As I left the theatre, I was reminded of the visionary, left-wing Brazilian theatre director and dramatist, Augusto Boal, perhaps best knows as the author of the 1974 classic ‘Theatre of the Oppressed.’ As the audience moves from being mere spectators of the unfolding action and towards the status of ‘spect-actor’, the message could not be clearer: this is not just a story pertinent to those living under oppressive conditions in Latin America. We are all interconnected; the choices we make either align us with the oppressed or our oppressors.



UPROOTED

New Diorama Theatre

Reviewed on 30th September 2025

by Tim Graves

Photography by Alex Brenner


 

Previously reviewed at this venue:

THE GLORIOUS FRENCH REVOLUTION | ★★★★ | November 2024
KING TROLL (THE FAWN) | ★★★★★ | October 2024
BRENDA’S GOT A BABY | ★★★ | November 2023
AFTER THE ACT | ★★★★★ | March 2023
PROJECT DICTATOR | ★★½ | April 2022

 

 

UPROOTED

UPROOTED

UPROOTED