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Topping And Butch Hit Leicester Square 26-27 September 08

You Couldn't Make It Up

Verdict: Powerful exposure of insincerity and truth

Edinburgh - Gilded Balloon - August 02

You Couldn't Make It Up

Gilded Balloon

Here's a diamond of a play: sparkling in every facet - and harder than stone.

Philip's kicking against the pricks (tv producers) to create a truthful account of homosexuality today, but all they want is jolly gays - personified by cartoon character Robot Hard-On From The Planet Spunk. Meanwhile, Max is dying (with witty one-liners) from Aids.

Cue the boys in the band, and a girl. Kevin's displaced at auditions by old school-mate and very pretty boy John who surges to boy-band stardom. John, Bobby and Hal were all at school together with Kevin, and boy, they're ruggedly heterosexual - John's got stunning girlfriend Angel as the living proof. Kevin's a reluctant rent boy. Or so it seems. This is the starting point of an astoundingly powerful piece of writing, vividly brought to life by faultless performances.

The endearing older characters, Philip and Max - and their truthfulness - form the backbone, contrast, and enclosure to the story of the younger ones. Kevin has an appalling secret, kept by the other lads and exploded with devastating effect following what must be the unwisest school reunion in history.

Will Philip find the guts to tell Kevin's story for the screen - and the ability to touch? What's the revelatory power of a good woman's love?

You Couldn't Make It Up starts like a set of sketches, and grabs immediate attention. In minutes, it locks fast into a story that's so tightly woven you daren't look away for a moment. Using movie editing techniques - wipes and cuts for scene changes, fast intercutting of scenes, synchronised sound-track - it belts along, building progressively to its satisfying and remarkable climax.

Andy Killick plays Max with consistent and moving hilarity; Adam Redmayne gives a charming and sensitive rendering of Philip's dogged struggle; Susannah Saary brings strength, beauty, and tenderness to the pivotal character of Angel; Robert Sutton's splendily demonic, weaselly and spineless as Bobby; Theo Van Dort manipulates with eye-catching sincerity as the single-me-minded John; David Paul West focuses attention as he reveals every side of Kevin's hugely complex, decent, and heroic character; Alex Woodhall plays Errol to perfection, and his Robot Hard-On From Spunk stands a dangerous chance of real-life tv fame. Steven Worbey repels splendidly as the repulsive Hal, and also plays the enigmatic Client. Other characters are played by the cast.

Director - Patrick Wilde; Designer - Tracy Waller; Production Manager - Amanda Hughes; Production Assistant - Anders Persson; Lighting Designer - James Hamilton; Photography / Poster Design - Lee Hacker; Original Music and Lyrics - Julian and Stephen Butler; Marketing / Poster Design - Pete Shaw; Press Officer - Luke Healy; Choreography and Fight Arrangement - Alex Woodhall.

Company Credits - World Premiere of 'You Couldn't Make It Up' - Gilded Balloon, Edinburgh, Scotland - 4 August 2002. Dedication: to Ralph LaCock (1954-2002). Produced by - The Wild Justice Company.

END

John Park

reviewed Friday 16 August 02 / Gilded Balloon

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