It’s the neon mesh dress you bought on ASOS for a fiver and puked on at the club. It’s the crop top you bought on a whim from Zara and promptly relocated to the depths of your wardrobe after it destroyed your armpit skin on holiday. It’s the wearable equivalent to a boy that sends you 3am ‘you up?’ texts. We need to break up with fast fashion, Bravo says – and I tell you what, I’m ready to do some dumping.
Read MoreThis is an improvised love story; the two main protagonists, Caitlin Campbell (who plays Holly) and Dan South (who plays Ben) just don’t know it. In a rigged drawing of straws 10 minutes before the show, the rest of the cast act surprised as Caitlian and Dan are chosen as the protagonists. It’s now up to Sam (who plays Pete) and Andy (who plays Olly) to turn this into a love story.
Read MoreThe shorts are intelligent and go beyond the acknowledgement of our lack of representation, asking participants key questions to delve into the complexities of the black British identity in the media beyond misrepresentation.
Read MoreAs we lurch towards 2020, it seems that if aliens do indeed invade, there are far worse things on the horizon that should be feared. That is, of course, if that horizon isn’t already underwater. As the devil says in Angel Heart, ‘the future is not what it used to be’. We have exchanged one possible future for another, and this time there is a strictly no-returns policy.
Read MoreIf one puts aside the pessimistic assumption that writers for that publication seek only to deliver affront rather than genuine critique, it is nearly impossible to understand how and why Marmion reached such a dismal conclusion regarding this play.
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