Tag Archives: Wayne McGregor

PORN PLAY

★★★★★

Royal Court

PORN PLAY

Royal Court

★★★★★

“a magnetic show that goes straight in the deep end”

Pain and pleasure, desire and shame, spot-on comedy and gut-churning uneasiness; you can’t have the one without the other in the world of Porn Play written by Sophia Chetin-Leuner. Debates on sex, porn and John Milton get turned upside down and presented in a way that makes you sit on the edge of your seat from beginning to end.

Ani is an academic and a teacher who just won a prestigious award for her recently published book. Her life seems perfect, with her supportive, though a bit toxic, boyfriend Liam on her side and her career on the rise. Here’s the catch: she’s addicted to violent porn and masturbation. What starts off as a conversation about the double standards between men watching porn and women watching porn, which Liam points out is ‘just different’, transforms into a free fall into shame, self-destruction and an intriguing kind of addiction. As she alienates the people around her and her career gets affected, the question arises: will she snap out of it and take control of her addiction?

The whole cast gives riveting performances. Ani’s Father, played by Asif Khan, is exceptional; he is the figure that grounds her, the one who reminds her that she’s more than her addiction and that her struggles might lead to something beautiful in the end. He has a calm strength in him, with just the right amount of fatherly stubbornness. Lizzy Connolly is a comedic genius, making the audience laugh with her mere presence no matter which character she portrays, from the sympathetic friend to the triggered student and the unbelievably accurate medical professional. Will Close, who also plays various characters, has an impressive range, playing the insecure and soft Liam in one scene and Ani’s student who lets his sexual beast loose when Ani asks him to do what he wants with her in another.

Ambika Mod does an exceptionally delicate job portraying Ani. The self-loathing, confusion and fixation with brutal sexual imagery increases as the play goes on, but in a particularly vulnerable manner. She’s gradually going underwater and by the end, where she delivers a fascinating monologue about John Milton’s poem Lucidas and masturbates in front of her father, she makes your heart break as well as your skin crawl in a disturbing climax.

It always is a burden off a director’s shoulders when the script is strong in itself. But that doesn’t mean that director Josie Rourke needs any less credit for Porn Play. She handles the heavy and uncomfortable topics with a balance between seriousness and humour and the more sexual or aggressive scenes with candour. The transitions between scenes, which were to be honest quite a few, are carried out swiftly and enriched by the mysterious presence of a woman who resembles Eve. This female figure is at times playful while at other times sorrowful, possibly representing Ani’s lust and addiction specifically and the objectification (or maybe the empowerment) of women in general.

Designer Yimei Zhao creates a circular, almost vulva-like, stage with different levels that seem incredibly life-like. It’s soft and beige and under its compartments there is an array of props, pulled out and put back in leaving the stage always pristine and ready for the next scene. Some subtle colourful lights within each circle enhance Mark Henderson’s overall naturalistic lighting design, which alternates between bright, lecture hall-appropriate lighting and slightly darker and more ominous lighting.

Your instinct tells you to look away, but you simply cannot. It’s a magnetic show that goes straight in the deep end to talk about sexual desire and the taboos that come with it. There is no sugarcoating, just a beautifully rounded protagonist who loses control in a world that expects women to be everything; and nothing.



PORN PLAY

Royal Court

Reviewed on 13th November 2025

by Stephanie Christodoulidou

Photography by Helen Murray


 

Previously reviewed at this venue:

COW | DEER | ★★★★★ | September 2025
DEAF REPUBLIC | ★★★★★ | September 2025
AFTER THE ACT | ★★ | May 2025
MANHUNT | ★★★★ | April 2025
A GOOD HOUSE | ★★★★ | January 2025
THE BOUNDS | ★★★ | June 2024
LIE LOW | ★★★★ | May 2024
BLUETS | ★★★ | May 2024

 

 

PORN PLAY

PORN PLAY

PORN PLAY

DEEPSTARIA

★★★★

Sadler’s Wells Theatre

DEEPSTARIA

Sadler’s Wells Theatre

★★★★

“unique, mysterious, dreamlike, ethereal and challenging”

Since the beginning of time humankind has had a fascination with the unknown. Our imaginations and desires have been fired to explore the world, and beyond, to its limits. One of the greatest and simplest discoveries that this quest has revealed is the realisation that deep space and the deep sea are not that different. What is curious, though, is that we spend more time reaching out into space, while much of our own planet – under the sea – remains unexplored. This is the starting point, and the focus, of Sir Wayne McGregor’s latest work, “Deepstaria”.

The title comes from one of the ocean’s more mysterious jellyfish. A fragile, gossamer-thin creature. Ghost like and elusive. Its full name is ‘Deepstaria Enigmatica’, which is apt as McGregor’s dance piece is a very enigmatic affair. Collaborating with Oscar-winning sound designer Nicolas Becker, music producer LEXX and lighting designer Theresa Baumgartner, he has created something quite unique but, like bodies lost in space, we’re never really sure where it is going. There are clear references to the deep sea, and hints of outer space; and the vast unknown is symbolised by being plunged intermittently into a void of darkness. It is through a burst of this episodic blackness (courtesy of something called Vantablack Vision) that we are led into the dance.

Nine dancers inhabit the space. As though underwater their movements are floating. Aqueous and boneless. Sometimes in slow motion, sometimes gathering momentum, reflecting unknown currents that propel them. They emerge from rockpools of light, fluid and agile. McGregor’s choreography is mesmerising and the dancing meticulous. The music throbs, tethered to every sinew in mood and rhythm. But then a jolt severs the connection, and we are left in the void again. It is bewitching and disturbing.

The dancers leave the ocean; we appear to be on a shoreline. The light ebbs and flows like shallow waves. Baumgartner’s design certainly comes to the fore with some breathtaking effects. Slanting beams become fine rain with astonishing realism. Red hot washes alternate with marine blue mists. Through these sequences the performers ripple. Initially near-naked, later evolving into androgynous figures in Ilaria Martello’s diaphanous costumes – the deep-sea references underscored beautifully.

The experience is almost like gazing into a giant aquarium. We are transfixed, yet it is excruciatingly monotonous. Exquisitely so, nevertheless. Our senses are thrilled but the effect never quite reaches our heart. Like the musical soundtrack it scratches at the emotions until we almost feel we have had enough. Yet we never switch off. The balletic quality of the performers repeatedly draws us back into their complex world. It is fathomless and unfathomable. Like its gelatinous namesake, “Deepstaria” is unique, mysterious, dreamlike, ethereal and challenging. Sir Wayne McGregor CBE is a trailblazing choreographer who innovatively dips his toes into other artforms. With this show he dives headfirst into the depths. It is ultimately a thrilling collaboration.



DEEPSTARIA

Sadler’s Wells Theatre

Reviewed on 27th February 2025

by Jonathan Evans

Photography by Ravi Deepres

 


 

Previously reviewed at this venue:

VOLLMOND | ★★★★★ | February 2025
DIMANCHE | ★★★★ | January 2025
SONGS OF THE WAYFARER | ★★★★ | December 2024
NOBODADDY (TRÍD AN BPOLL GAN BUN) | ★★★★ | November 2024
THE SNOWMAN | ★★★★ | November 2024
EXIT ABOVE | ★★★★ | November 2024
ΑΓΡΙΜΙ (FAUVE) | ★★★ | October 2024
STORIES – THE TAP DANCE SENSATION | ★★★★★ | October 2024
FRONTIERS: CHOREOGRAPHERS OF CANADA | ★★★★ | October 2024
TUTU | ★★★ | October 2024
CARMEN | ★★★★ | July 2024
THE OPERA LOCOS | ★★★★ | May 2024

 

DEEPSTARIA

DEEPSTARIA

DEEPSTARIA