It'll Be Alt Right on the Night review – punk, trumpets and far right friends
almost 6 years in The guardian
Pleasance Courtyard, EdinburghMatthew Greenhough’s buzzy one-man show clashes comedy, factionalism and jazz trumpet into a plea for tolerance between the echo chambers
Are we “trapped in separate echo chambers” and can the divides be bridged? Matthew Greenhough’s (almost) new solo show for Wound Up Theatre asks that question through the tale of two working-class Sheffield school friends growing up and apart. Greeny (a name that hints at autobiography) migrates to London and works in the media. Stevo stays home, marooned in the cognitive dissonance between his dead-end life and the phrase “white privilege”, prey to Tommy Robinson’s opinions about the world.
Greenhough hops back and forth through time as he narrates their stories, from the occasion they nicked a Dead Kennedys LP from the record shop, to their punk tour of Europe, to the day that – now drifting apart – Stevo visits Greeny in London for reasons he has cause to conceal. Greenhough’s script is full of blunt, bathetic northern comedy, and he performs it as if he’s plugged into the mains. Steven Wright on trumpet punctuates with punk tracks given a jazz makeover. Continue reading...