Reviews of Habibi Funk 031, Kayatibu, and The Good Ones
The fading memory of spitfires and Vera Lynn
		PETER MASON recommends a tentative metaphor of a nation in search of a meaningful destiny beyond the remembrance of conflict
	 
			The Winston Machine 
New Diorama Theatre, London 
 
A ONE-ACT play commissioned from the Kandinsky theatre company, The Winston Machine examines how WWII is, perhaps, ceasing to be a key reference point for many British people.
The inference from events that unfold on stage is that we ought to view this as a good thing: a liberating experience that will release us from some of the knots we’ve tied ourselves in over the past 75 years.
Without deprecating the conflict, or the people who took part in it, The Winston Machine suggests that it’s time to move on, and that we’d all benefit from a bit more forward thinking.
	Similar stories
	 
               ALISTAR FINDLAY is mesmerised by this multiple ‘Visions of Scotland’ assault on the audience’s eyes and senses
    
               PETER MASON applauds a thought-provoking study of the relationship between a grieving woman and her photographer
    
               MARY CONWAY applauds a study of comedians in whose cheap prejudice the tenets of the emerging political right are crystal clear
    
               PETER MASON is moved by a striking production of Noel Streatfeild’s enduringly popular children’s book
   
 
               

