Skip to main content
Work with the NEU
Beyond Brecht
ANGUS REID watches two productions at the EIF that deal in different ways with the consequences of war
Adrien Barazzone, Beatriz Brás, Baptiste Coustenoble and Natacha Koutchoumov in As far As Impossible; Kim Kum-mi in The Trojan Women [Andrew Perry/Jess Shurte]

HARD on the heels of the NT show Grenfell: In The Words Of The Survivors comes another astonishing epic of verbatim theatre, As Far As Impossible (★★★★★), Tiago Rodrigues’s rendition of interviews with humanitarian aid workers from the Red Cross and Medecins Sans Frontiers.

Like in Grenfell, actors play multiple interviewees and the result is so urgent and compelling that it is tempting to see this very contemporary convention as heralding a new genre in political theatre and a next step after Brecht.

This theatre has learned from the East German master. The “distance” of actor from role is immediately established, allowing a man to play a woman or, controversially, a white woman to play a black woman. The performance is simply enactment; the words themselves are evidence.

The 95th Anniversary Appeal
Support the Morning Star
You have reached the free limit.
Subscribe to continue reading.
Similar stories
DEFIANT: Dan Daw and Christopher Owen in The Dan Daw Show [Pic: Jess Shurte]
Follow the movement / 5 August 2025
5 August 2025

Given the tawdry push and pull around disability benefits, MATTHEW HAWKINS relishes Dan Daw’s defiant celebration of body and sexuality

4.48
Theatre review / 18 July 2025
18 July 2025

GORDON PARSONS acknowledges the authority with which Sarah Kane’s theatrical justification for suicide has resonance today

Orkney
Music Festival / 28 May 2025
28 May 2025

ANGUS REID recommends a visit to an outstanding gathering of national and international folk musicians in the northern archipelago

UN-NUANCED: Sophie Melville, Leander Deeny, Laura Whitmore i
Theatre Review / 6 April 2025
6 April 2025
MARY CONWAY is disappointed by characters so un-nuanced as to be unreal, a stereotypical plot and a conceptual vampire