Synopsis DV8's Artistic Director Lloyd Newson directs a multi-ethnic cast in a poetic but unflinching exploration of tolerance, intolerance, religion and sexuality. This new show is based on hundreds of hours of audio interviews with people directly affected by these issues. Now in their twentieth year DV8 still refuse to be defined with this production incorporating dance, text, documentary, animation and film. Suitable for ages 16+. Running time approx. 1 hour 20 minutes
This powerful new piece from Lloyd Newson and his DV8 physical theatre company – seven male, two female – combines verbatim documentary with stunning movement and a rich mix of visual and video techniques. The effect, though, is cumulative rather than evolving: in a series of tableaux, stories and testimonies, the lack of a governing narrative line takes its toll.
Still, To Be Straight With You never feels less than white hot, topical and urgently felt. Having set up an opening blast of homophobic dance hall vaporising – boogie on down with bigotry – we are hit with a battery of information in between the cool moves and ingenious cartoon tracery of light and colour.
Many Eastern European countries, including Russia, are resistant to sexual equality. Eighty-five countries, many of them former UK colonies, criminalise homosexuality. Jamaican gay bashing, as revealed on home movie footage, is horrifyingly constant. And moving the polemics of Peter Tatchell and his Outrage! group centre stage, we hear a direct appeal for Muslim gay colleagues to sign up, come out and fight the good fight.
None of this will ruffle feathers in a consensual National Theatre audience, of course; there is an inevitable element, here, of preaching to the choir. But the voice of new Northern Ireland First Minister Peter Robinson’s wife on tape denouncing “unnatural acts” is still shocking. And the renewed worldwide religious fundamentalism is doing untold damage to progress and maturity; we often seem to be plunging backwards to another dark age.
In illustrating this thesis, Newson’s show contains some disturbing social tales, two of them executed by the brilliant Ankur Bahl, first as a non-stop skipping Muslim from Hull who drinks vodka under the stairs with his Mum and becomes “just another stabbing” in a tragic act of domestic violence; then as a dancing gay boy who’s not really gay, and married. There’s also a gay Nigerian pastor and an immigrant Iraqi doctor who finds solace in what he calls Britain’s “healthy system.”
When the company assembles for a seductive sedentary cowboy dance sequence, fleetingly touching on paedophilia, you lament they don’t explode in ensemble purpose more often. The balance between text and dance is a constant challenge to groups like DV8. But in truth there are not that many groups as talented and innovative, even twenty years on.
Not the best DV8 work, but an important subject handled well with some terrific moments. I'd like to have seen movement / dance used as much as they usually do. - Gareth James
22 Nov 08
I know this was to an extent preaching to the choir but I loved this. Clever, thought-provoking and really, really angry. - addicted to theatre
19 Nov 08
Magnificent. A breath of fresh air. - Fred
14 Nov 08
At times a little overwhelming in terms of the content, but a reminder to us all that whilst being gay in a city like London can seem quite normal, the reality even very close to home can be very different!
A very well constructed piece making great use of graphics in its design, superb lighting and above all a group of hugely talented dancers who manage some quite extraordinary dancing whilst speaking to the audience.
A very powerful evening. - Paul Wallis
Whatsonstage.com - Discount London theatre tickets, theatre news and reviews, Theatre videos, Theatre discussion, National Theatre Listings. Covering London's West End, all of Theatreland and all UK theatre. The best
for London Theatre Ticket Discounts.