FLUSH by April Hope Miller. ★★★★★

Three toilet cubicles sit on stage. As we settle in, we begin to notice the details – each cubicle wall is covered in scribbled messages, ‘Protect the dolls,’ ‘BRAT,’ phone numbers and dates of wild nights out. We’re in a club bathroom in the heart of Shoreditch and more specifically, a women’s bathroom. And as the night…

BRAINSLUTS by Dan Bishop. ★★★★

Ever wondered what it’s like to take part in a clinical research test for a new drug? BRAINSLUTS takes that curiosity and runs with it, placing us right inside a five week trial and as week one begins, four participants are meeting for the first time. Mitch (Dan Bishop), Duggan (Rob Preston), Bathsheba (Kathy Maniura) and Yaz…

HAPPY ENDING STREET by Jenna Stones. ★★★

We open with a song performed by Pearl (Lucia Ireland, who btw has an exceptional voice), setting the tone and introducing us to the world of Happy Ending Street – a brothel in 1890s Edinburgh where we find the women within it on edge. A killer is on the loose, one they later name the ‘hen catcher’…

PALS by Mirren Wilson. ★★★

In PALS (Perfectly Average Lassies of Scotland – their words, not mine!) we meet four pals – Sadie (Olivia McIntosh), Claire (Olivia Caw), Taylor (Amy Glass) and Flo (Shelley Middler). Each of them has their own stuff going on – Sadie’s struggling with her mum’s declining health and wants to relive their old hiking trips, Claire’s processing a…

STANDING IN THE SHADOWS OF GIANTS by Lucie Barât. ★★★★★

Lucie Barât – ‘the sister’, ‘the accessory’, ‘a walking AAA pass’ – as she jokingly calls herself. Yes, she’s the sister of The Libertines rockstar Carl Barât, but in STANDING IN THE SHADOWS OF GIANTS we finally meet her – raw, unfiltered and ready to tell a story that she explains has stayed in the…

ECHO by Susan Eve Haar. ★★★

A couple (Amara Okereke and Kyle Rowe) settle into a hotel room – he pops champagne, she lounges on the fluffy carpet, red roses are in a vase by the bed – they’re here to celebrate their 10 year anniversary. But as they talk, it becomes clear that not everything is as celebratory as it…