Thursday, 5 June 2025

Dance: The right to exist

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
 ★★★

Taking on a pivotal moment in UK queer history, this show carries an important kick as it traces events from the 1980s that are still being felt today. It's beautifully choreographed and danced, cleverly incorporating both professional performers and members of the local LGBT+ community, along with skilfully filmed sequences and terrific stagecraft. The dancing is also expressive and impressive, although the literal approach to storytelling weighs things down, oddly watering down several sequences due to the excessive words.

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.

The central tone is one of a group of silenced people standing strong, clinging together amid the storm. Repeating iconography features protest banners, the Aids quilt and most notably the LGBT+ switchboard, one of the only lifelines for queer people during these years. Dazzling performances include gorgeously muscly duets and a number of impassioned solos, plus larger group numbers that ring loudly with ideas from both sides of the issue. One bawdy sequence creates the feeling of a raucous night in a boozy pub. And the most intensely powerful piece depicts an astonishing cycle of school bullying.

Section 28 was finally repealed in 2003, and the show goes on to note how its damage is still being felt throughout society, especially with recent surges in violence and outspoken bigotry. This is an urgent, powerful depiction of this history, and it's vital to remember the truth of these events. So it perhaps doesn't matter that the script here feels overly pointed and descriptive; saying so much limits the audience's ability to engage. Much more important are the staggering moments in this show that express how these events made people feel at the time, while also vividly revealing the emotions that continue to resonate.


For info: DETENTION TOUR > 

portraits by Joe Armitage • 4.Jun.25


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