Y’MAM
Soho Theatre
Reviewed – 26th May 2022
β β β β
“an astonishing performance, funny and vulnerable, hard-hitting and eloquent”
YβMAM (an acronym for Young Manβs Angry Movements) is in good company, another in a spate of plays about toxic masculinity and its effects on menβs mental health, among them the five-star-reviewed For Black Boys… Of course, itβs no surprise that there is so much recent discussion on the subject, given its relevance and societal urgency. But how is YβMAM supposed to stand out from the crowd?
Writer and performer Luke Jerdy chooses humour. But itβs not just that heβs funny, rather he finds and forces humour even in the darkest moments. Sure, weβre laughing at his impression of his giddy therapist, but weβre still laughing when heβs lighting his 13-year-old classmateβs hair on fire; when, having knocked someone out cold, Jerdyβs run away from the scene, leaving a friend to take the blame. We know itβs not funny, but weβre experiencing it via his own coping mechanisms of minimising and diverting, making it impossible to stare po-faced and earnestly at the problem.
The story keeps a pace with a largely rhyming spoken-word delivery, and if itβs all about to get a bit too self-reflective, Jerdy jumps in with a song and a rap. Itβs a tricky balancing act, because ultimately you donβt want to go so far into light entertainment that the point of the story is lost. But itβs this very fine balance that makes it such an effective story-telling tool. The grim details are all there for us to see, weβre just ingesting them via jokes and songs, uncomfortable as the juxtaposition sometimes is.
Projected photos and clipart-style videos are effective in keeping the audienceβs eye roving just enough that Jerdy doesnβt have to take the entire 80-minute hit. Theyβre a bit basic, and at some points unnecessary, but they hardly take away from the power of the piece.
Wearing a light-coloured tracksuit, you can literally see how hard Jerdy is working on that stage from the sweat pouring through; running laps around the stage, jumping like a gorilla, rapping and dancing and playing every character he encounters with equal verve throughout. Itβs an astonishing performance, funny and vulnerable, hard-hitting and eloquent. An excellent addition to the conversation, and, hopefully, a very liberating and cathartic story for some.
Reviewed by Soho Theatre
Photography by Brian Roberts
Y’MAM
Soho Theatre until 4th June
Show mentioned in review:
For Black Boys β¦ | β β β β β | Royal Court Theatre | April 2022
Previously reviewed at this venue:
An Evening Without Kate Bush | β β β β | February 2022
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