Jonah Non Grata
written and performed by Simon Kane
Soho Theatre, London • 21.Jun.25 ★★★★
T H E B L O G
Jonah Non Grata
The 33rd Raindance Film Festival kicked off on Wednesday with the world premiere of the British drama Heavyweight and a properly epic afterparty at with special honours were presented to screen icons Celia Imrie and Jason Isaacs. The festival runs over the next 10 days with a flurry of independent films. I'm trying to limit how many I watch, aiming for one per day. So here are the first two...
Heavyweight
dir-scr Christopher M Anthony; with Jordan Bolger, Nicholas Pinnock 25/UK ****
Unfolding in real time and largely in a single room, like a stage play, this British boxing drama has a propulsive pace as it traces the run-up to a championship bout. Writer-director Christopher Anthony keeps the tension high with edgy dialog, beefy performances, prowling camerawork and a churning underscore. The sheer machismo on display is perhaps a bit exhausting, but it's balanced by a terrific sense of underlying emotion.
A Cell Phone Movie
Full reviews of festival films will be linked here in due course: SHADOWS @ RAINDANCE >
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C R I T I C A L W E E K
BEST OUT THIS WEEK: Red Path • 28 Years Later Love & Rage: Munroe Bergdorf ALL REVIEWS > |
London Clown Festival 2025
BEST OUT THIS WEEK: Tornado Love & Rage: Munroe Bergdorf ALL REVIEWS > |
I also attended the premiere of the third season of Squid Game, which included a terrific on-stage Q&A with stars Lee Jung-Jae, Lee Byung-hun and Park Gyuyoung, plus creator Hwang Dong-hyuk. And the dance show Inside Giovanni's Room, based on the landmark James Baldwin novel, was simply gorgeous at Sadler's Wells East.
This coming week will be rather busy with the Pixar animation Elio, Scarlett Johansson in Jurassic World Rebirth, John Travolta in High Rollers, Harry Melling in Harvest, Naomi Ackie in Sorry Baby, Leonie Benesch in Late Shift and the Tunisian drama Red Path, plus the first week of movies at the 33rd Raindance Film Festival and the annual opening night cabaret for the London Clown Festival.Phoenix Dance Theatre
An American in Paris, David (Teige Bisnought) falls for Hella (Dorna Ashory) even as he's secretly keeping an eye on the men around him. When Hella goes travelling, he meets Giovanni (Dylan Springer) in a dance club, and they zero in on each other amid distractions. As they become inseparable, they keep their relationship hidden in Giovanni's rented room. But Hella's return throws things off balance, and further events push these three people in unexpected directions.
The story opens with a prologue that sets out the story through David's swirling memories, and there are also flashbacks to scenes with his father (Phikolwethu Luke) and aunt (Yasmina Patel) back home. Transitions cleverly create cinematic style editing, using lighting and shadows to shift the viewer's eye around the stage, which is dominated by the cube of Giovanni's room. Performances emerge in solos, duets and eye-catching group numbers, and all of these are infused with enormous passion by the dancers. Bisnought, Springer and Ashory are particularly strong, throwing themselves into demanding roles that require extended stretches, full-bodied shivers and connections that shift from aching desire to warm affection.While the movement is visceral and propulsive, the dancers remain light on their feet. The gravitational pull between them is beautifully rendered, especially as David and Giovanni lift each other in spiralling turns. Their moments of intimacy are both elegant and sweat-inducingly hot. This is accompanied by creative lighting that comes from the sides and above, making each figure glow while casting shadows on the walls. And the room itself undulates in a red wash. Marc Strobel's music often feels more like an eloquent soundscape, with whooshes and beats that resolve into the dance numbers. And then there's Ashory's stunning, completely silent solo.
Throughout all of this, there's an unusually strong sense that each of these complex characters is daring to dream something that might be impossible, going against society's expectations. So when the narrative takes a few very dark turns, the impact is fierce, leading to a climax that is properly wrenching. This is a gorgeous interpretation of a literary classic, and it reminds us that feelings of identity and belonging are universally human. And even if the barriers and obstacles have shifted over the past 70 years, these feelings drive society in ways that have remained eerily unchanged.photos by Drew Forsyth • 11.Jun.25
Plainclothes
The Old Woman With the Knife
Love & Rage: Munroe Bergdorf
Toro
Full reviews are coming, and will be linked to Shadows' SXSW LONDON PAGE >
Gary Clarke Company
Detention
choreography Gary Clarke
narrator Lewey Hellewell
dancers Alexandra Bierlaire, Gavin Coward, Alex Gosmore, Mayowa Ogunnaike, Imogen Wright
community Jonathan Blake, Anna Brown, Bruce Currie, SuMay Hwang, Mike Jackson
music & sound Torben Sylvest
set & costumes Ryan Dawson Laight
The Place, London • 3-7.Jun.25 + national tour ★★★
This is the story of Section 28, a 1988 British law that prohibited local authorities from "promoting homosexuality", specifically in schools. Brought in under Margaret Thatcher's government in an effort to crush the gay rights movement, it silenced people at a time when discourse was badly needed due to the Aids epidemic. The show depicts this beautifully, as five dancers and five members of the community create a variety of scenes on-stage, while narrator Lewey Hellewell adopts a range of attitudes to propel the action forward, sometimes sassy and sometimes sinister.
portraits by Joe Armitage • 4.Jun.25
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C R I T I C A L W E E K
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