Overview
Cruel and Tender. "A mordantly knowing modernisation of Sophocles's
Trachiniae...The approach here manages to be at once lethally level and
capable of surges of anguished feeling...Highly recommended."
(Independent). Fewer Emergencies. "A triptych of vicious modern fairy
tales that brings the nightmare right back and stabs you through the
soul." (Guardian). The City. "Although this is the most disquieting play
in London, there is a curious exhilaration about both the performance
and Crimp's confrontation with our perpetual unease." (Guardian).
Definitely the Bahamas. "A summation of a life lived vicariously, at the
margins of other lives, between suffocating suburban walls; and the
play is as unflinching as it is unnerving." (The Times). Play House.
"Play House concerns the volatility and vulnerability of love, as a
young couple, Simon and Katrina set up home...Unusually for Crimp, the
play both begins and ends with moving declarations of love. Suddenly
this usually chilly dramatist seems unexpectedly blessed with a warm
heart." (Daily Telegraph). In the Republic of Happiness.
"Crimp goes so far as to call it "an entertainment in three parts," and
it rocks along like a dystopian vaudeville...The actors are imprisoned
and liberated at once, their strange between-worlds condition a source
of joy, intemperateness and above all a care for our diversion...My
favourite play of the year." (What's on Stage).