Kingston University drama students will be launching a “rubbish” play tonight at 7.30pm in the Reg Bailey building as part of a University assessment.
The play, ‘Greydom’, written and performed by six third-year students, is a 30 minute-long piece that follows a young man going through the everyday emotions many students face. The students will use “trash aesthetics” to create the scene and cardboard and general rubbish will be strewn across the stage. Art student and performer, Poppi Holness, said: “It’s about life. He wants to break out of the shadows and be noticed. Welcome to Greydom where everyone thinks they’re special but they’re not.” Greydom is set as a fictional place devoid of colour and spontaneity. Fellow students Makda Yohannese and Lisa Searle explained: “It’s not black, it’s not white, it’s all just grey. "The character feels so boring. He falls asleep and dreams about a colourful imaginative friend who turns against him and tells him to pull himself together.” The actors spend part of the play on chairs as they follow the character’s emotions from feeling small and unnoticed to in love and “on top of the world”. They use large, self-made, cardboard legs and shoes in an abstract attempt to express the character’s growth in confidence. Ms. Holness added: “We’ve all felt small. I remember handing a CV to a prospective employer once and felt tiny as a person. Everyone has stories like that.” The end of the play represents a production line as people are moved along and packaged into boxes. Ms. Holness concluded: “The message is not to conform or be too separate. Everyone wants to feel individual but be comfortable with who you are.” The play will be performed in RB7. Those interested should sign up on the notice board outside and arrive 15 minutes beforehand. Two further plays from Kingston third-year drama groups will be performed Monday-Thursday next week. All plays are free.
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