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untitled f*ck m*ss s**gon play

untitled f*ck m*ss s**gon play

By Kimber Lee
Series: NHB Modern Play
Imprint: Nick Hern Books
Paperback : 9781839042416, 96 pages, June 2023

Description

Kim is having one of those days. A terrible, very bad, no-good kind of day, and the worst part is… it all feels so familiar. Caught up in a never-ending cycle of events, she looks for the exit but the harder she tries, the worse it gets and she begins to wonder: who's writing this story?

She makes a break for it, smashing through a hundred years of bloody narratives that all end the same way. Can she find a way out before it's too late?

With breathless hilarity, Kimber Lee's untitled f*ck m*ss s**gon play jumps through time, wriggling inside of and then exploding lifetimes of repeating Asian stereotypes, wrestling with history for the right to control your own narrative in a world that thinks it can tell you who you are.

Winner of the International Award for the Bruntwood Prize for Playwriting in 2019, the play was co-produced in 2023 by the Royal Exchange, Factory International for Manchester International Festival, the Young Vic Theatre and Headlong, and directed by Roy Alexander Weise. It was first performed at the Royal Exchange Theatre, Manchester, as part of Manchester International Festival, before transferring to the Young Vic Theatre, London.

Reviews

'An overdue corrective... accurate and needed... This show begins to alter what we see on stage'

- Observer

'Urgent and clever... furious and funny... very clever writing'

- The Stage

'Provocative and very funny... a terrifically spiky send-up of Asian stereotypes'

- Telegraph

'Sharp, intelligent and confrontational... Switching seamlessly between laugh-out-loud humour and poignant, harrowing tragedy... despite its confrontational name, it's a remarkably accessible play'

- Manchester Evening News

'Non-stop funny... both hilarious and strangely moving'

- Reviews Hub

'This punchy, acerbic and acutely observed piece of theatre kicks ass as it highlights the dangers of cultural appropriation and takes an unflinching look at intergenerational trauma... a wickedly funny satire... groundbreaking work that both entertains and informs... f**king great!'

- WhatsOnStage

'Ferociously funny... dissects years of racist, imperialist and misogynistic tropes... Imagine if Caryl Churchill had written Noises Off... punky, polemical and stingingly fresh'

- Guardian