FULL LENGTH PLAYS
NUNS
Bongs, chain smoking, liquor, sex tapes, blackmail, and a desire to change the system. No, it’s not college, it’s a convent! Three corrupt nuns use blackmail and foul play in an effort to change the patriarchy to which they have devoted their lives. With the use of an illicit sex tape starring none other than Mother Superior herself, the kinked chain of events begins to unfold. When you deal with the devil, be prepared to get burnt in this satirical comedy screenplay about nuns.
Nuns is a two act play about three rebellious Nuns and how they plot to overthrow the mother superior in order to establish smoking rights for themselves. The youngest, Sister Bernadette is being seduced into the cause by Sister Catharine and Sister Roza during one of their secret smoking sessions. They have a secret that they believe will bring the Mother superior to her knees.
Cast
Mother superior - Stace Crawley,Sister Katherine - Anna Dannielson,Sister Kimberly - Brittany Engler,Sister Burnadette - Kara Beth Karstedt
Produced & Directed by Kortney Simpson.
Venue:Gorilla Tango Theatre 1919 N Milwaukee Ave. July 7, 2010-July 28, 2010 Wednesday 7:30pm
FEEDBACK:
Re: "Nuns"
Its called suspended disbelief. Yes, the nuns could just quit the convent, but at the same time we don't know how they got there in the first place and therefore cannot question their motives for staying. Lots of people find themselves in vocations and living situations that they are horribly suited for but they cannot just get up and leave. Regardless, the show displays outstanding performances that overshadow the production's occassional...quirkinesses (and it is hard to stand out when you have limited sets/props, one costume, and you are not a dance team). My only criticism is the odd choice of random music during scene changes: there is no indication in the tune or lyrics that they have anything to do with the previous or pending action, and therefore it just takes you out of the play. Veto!
Posted by jellyroll on July 14, 2010 at 9:34 AM |
Re: "Nuns"
So I guess I CAN"T swear, but review dude can. the show was f****-ing hilarious. Nuff said. Hot chics, now nuff said.
Posted by briyun on July 13, 2010 at 1:26 PM |
Re: "Nuns"
Hot chics in this & it was fucking hilarious. Sorry reviewer dude but nuns drinking & fucking priests has it's place in comedy. Don't listen to this guy, shows worth the 12 bucks for sure
Posted by briyun on July 13, 2010 at 1:21 PM |
Re: "Nuns"
I thought the show was hilarious...sounds to me like Tony Adler who reviewed this is just offended because it goes after the church; and sure it's not Hamlet, but it was funny, the acting was great & that's really all I cared about!
Posted by Slkrick on July 13, 2010 at 9:39 AM
August 2016 Perform & Give
Cast and Crew
Production Management: Jamie Victor Hamilton Billy Bristol, Ricky Knight Director: Edwina Strobl
Cast:
Mother Superior - Michèle Belgrand-Hodgson,
Sister Catherine -Sarah Malcolm
Sister Bernadette - Kesia Harriet Guillery,
Sister Roza -Mia Hall
Set Design: Reiko Tanaka
Head of Sound: Fintan Davies
Head of Lighting: Sam Killingback
Costume: Alexandra Kapsala Greenwood, Felicity Wood
Hosting Management: Tom Palmer
Charity Operations Lead: Nicola Elaine Claire Smith-Goodfellow
Perform and Give Trustee: Demetri Turin
Nuns is about sinful Catholic sisters. It is a truly entertaining performance despite the minor lighting glitches. Sex, drugs and rock’n’roll in a convent—it feels like a call to the Catholic Church to reform the system in a humorous way. Sex tapes, vodka, fetishes…this performance has it all but, thankfully, it is not as crude as one would expect. It does have erotic jokes and some form of innuendo, but it comes off as rather playful. For those who cannot bear the idea of sensuality on stage, this is not a show to see. The cast has great chemistry and a lot of fun on stage. Spectators can sense this. At the start, it seems like some bizarre fringe play with mediocre actors and poor mise en scène. This does not last long, and pretty soon everyone is chuckling. Nuns
EtceteraTheatre
27th August 2016★★★☆☆
People often say to write what you know, but unless there's something playwright Robert Luxford isn't telling us, Nuns isn't based on any real life experiences. Which is probably a good thing for the Church's reputation given the behaviour of Luxford's four wild protagonists. Set outside a convent, we witness Sister Catherine (Sarah Malcolm), Sister Roza (Mia Hall) and Sister Bernadette (Kesia Guillery) meeting to indulge in some illicit smoking. As Catherine and Roza explain, alcohol and sex are all okay as long as you're discreet about it. Smoking for some reason though is treated as a far more serious vice by the Mother Superior (Michèle Belgrade), so the sisters hatch a plan to blackmail her. Bernadette finds herself pulled in different directions by the two women she attempts to befriend and by her convent's matriarch, which all culminates in tragedy.Or starts in tragedy, depending on how you look at it. We begin at the end of the story and work our way back, with director Edwina Strobl rewinding the action in some fun sequences with plenty of light and colour from Sam Killingback and Fintan Davies. Although Reiko Tanaka's imposing set design with the grandiose pillars installed onstage creates an sense of tradition, Alexandra Kapsala and Felicity Wood's costume are allowed to be more inventive with their design than you would think. Yes, the protagonists are all dressed in drab habits, but underneath the black and white are 50 shades of corsets, negligees and fishnet stockings. This is an irreverent, daft piece of fun, reflected in all the different design elements.Give Nuns is obviously not intended to be a realistic depiction of life in nunnery, you have to suspend belief and let a lot of things slide, which is fine. It's primary a comedy, after all. However, the sudden shift where Bernadette stands up for herself seems unnatural, even within the loose limits of what goes for normal in this play and it's a shame that this turning point isn't handled more credibly. When the nuns are laughing and joking and playing around, there's a strong dynamic that works well, however scenes involving a bit more emotional depth aren't as successful, with the exception perhaps of Catherine's remorse. Malcolm's portrayal is the most rounded.The style of humour through is very much crude and basic, with the laughs derived from the notion that it must be hilarious for nuns to have any kind of desires or personal agendas, but this all follows from the writing. Strobl draws out the comedic elements and with a full house and plenty of laughter, it's evident that there is an appeal.Amongst all the madness, there are some interesting comments on religion, with the hypocrisy in condemning only certain vices and accepting others the loudest message in this play. The start is admittedly a little ropey and those who don't take issue with the holes in the plot may instead take issue with the blasphemy, however have a little faith, it does develop into something quite watchable and light-hearted. Profits are to be donated to Smart Works, a charity supporting women into employment and financial independence, which makes it hard not to forgive any lack of respect. The company's mission to perform and then give is an admirable one and I'm intrigued to see their future work.Nuns opened on 25th August and runs until 28th August 2016 at the Etcetera Theatre, as part of the Camden Fringe.Nearest tube station: Camden Town (Northern)
The Balcony : August 27, 2016 · 8:53 pm
It’s such a shame that the production of NUNS by Perform and Give, a theatre production company that donates all its ticket earnings to charity, was only on for four days this week during Camden Fringe. The hard work put in by the actresses, lighting and stage design and director should not go unnoticed.
Robert Luxford’s play introduces us to 3 nuns and their Mother Superior, all of whom should certainly not be judged by their habit. Indeed, we first meet Sister Catherine (Sarah Malcolm) and Sister Roza (Mia Hall) smoking behind the church and telling prim Sister Bernadette (Kesia Guillery) about their recent sexcapades with certain priests. While Mother Superior (Michèle Belgrand) seems to be trying to control the sisters to maintain tradition and order in the convent, we learn she also has quite some secrets to hide.
This is a really fun play. When you think about it, nuns are some of the most mysterious creatures. Is there ever rule bending? Do they even want to bend rules? With so much negative emphasis on male members of the Church in recent years, it’s great to watch a completely female story and hear these characters express their desires to become bishops and popes.
The production design was certainly memorable: set designer Reiko Tanaka put the small space to very good use, making certain props easily available on a table which was also serving as a private room for nuns to enjoy erotic literature. Sam Killingback’s lighting and Fintan Davies’s sound went hand in hand to create time jumps and a rock n’ roll feel. Finally, the costumes by Alexandra Kapsala and Felicity Wood gave each nun their own personal style and edge – either through their shoes when they were in their habit, or through their choice of underwear when they were undressed.
Finally, Edwina Strobl succeeded in giving history and detail to these nuns’ lives, as well as an intimacy between them. The four talented actresses completed each other very well, from Malcolm’s provocative and fun-loving character and Hall’s never ending curiosity as her sidekick to Guillery’s sweet innocence so easily picked on and Belgrand’s hilarious coolness – who knew such a strict nun would be the one recommending marijuana?
All I can say is this has certainly made me want to see more pub theatre! Congratulations to Perform and Give!
Imperial Hotel Production
CAST
Sister Cathrine - Naomi Parszos
Sister Bernadette - Kit Bennett
Sister Roza - Kim-Cuong Do
Mother Superior - Fabiola Meza
Written & produced by Robert Luxford
Directed by Uma kali Shakti
Venue: Imperial Hotel March 22nd, 24th 25th. 2012
DUTCH DAME PRODUCTIONS
Sisters with bad habits
Bongs, chain smoking, liquor, sex tapes, blackmail and a
desire to change the the system. No, it's not a college, it's a convent!
Three corrupt nuns use blackmail and foul play in an effort
to change the patriarchy to which they have devoted their lives. With the use
of an illicit sex tape starring none other than Mother Superior herself, the
kinked chain of events begins to unfold.
Who we are
Passionate thespians bringing projects that we love to life.
NUNS covers themes of rebellion, patriarchy, defiance and
sisterhood; subjects that are extremely relevant with the current climate that
we are living with in terms of the Me Too movement, the discussion of equal pay
for women and the rise of healthy feminism.
Credits & Cast
Director: Charlotte Marie Everest
Producer: Valerie Isaiah Sadoh
Executive Producers: Cecile Sinclair & Natalya
Wolter-Ferguson
Cast
Sister Catherine: Natalya Wolter-Ferguson
Sister Bernadette: Cecile Sinclair
Sister Rozza: Rebecca Wilson
Mother Superior: Gillian Broderick
https://dutchdameproduction.com/
REVIEWS
https://theatreweekly.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/01/New-3star.jpg
Robert Luxford’s Nuns takes a less than ecclesiastical look
at life inside the convent, or rather an alternative view of the daily lives of
three Sisters and their Mother Superior, because for the sake of the Church we
have to believe this is pure fiction. A satirical comedy in fact, presented by
She’s Diverse and Dutch Dame productions, and directed by Charlotte Everest,
which the all-female creative team have called a passion project.
The premise is that things have loosened up a bit for nuns,
having been awarded more freedoms, a blind eye is turned to things like alcohol
and sex, as long as everyone is discreet about it. Smoking, however remains
taboo given the political links between Church, State and global corporations.
But there’s a revolution on the horizon, led by Sister Catherine (Natalya
Wolter-Ferguson) and Sister Rozza (Rebecca Wilson) who have discovered the power
of leverage. The existence of a sex tape featuring Mother Superior (Gillian
Broderick) initially gives them the upper hand in what becomes a complex power
struggle.
The deviant sisters entangle Sister Bernadette, or ‘Bambi’
in to their increasingly outlandish plots, and it’s Cecile Sinclair in this
role who grabs the audiences’ attention with excellent comic timing. There’s
some interesting commentary on the politics of religion, and the misogyny of
the Church, but the comedy plays on the obvious laughs that can be garnered
when a nun in full habit lights up a cigarette, flashes a bit of skin or talks
about sex.
But while you could overlook the predictability of the gags,
there are some problems with the staging, and the pacing in particular. In a
scene, which should have been one of the funniest, the nuns are having an
alcohol and drug fuelled party, the story of the night is told in a series of
flash frames, except each one lingers on far too long making it look a bit
awkward. And it’s an issue throughout, particularly between scenes where the
characters depart and re-enter whether they need to or not.
Tara Usher’s set design looks nice, the idea that holy life
is a little more relaxed is brought to life in the furnishings of the convent
dormitory while neon lights highlight specific areas. There’s an over reliance
on music to supplement the comedy, blasts of ‘The Sound of Music’ and Madonna’s
‘Like a Virgin’ kind of make sense, but start and end abruptly, jarring with
the more slowly paced production.
It is evident that the creative team have worked hard to
bring this production to life, and the fact that they have self-funded
demonstrates a sense of determination that definitely comes across to the
audience. This production of Nuns has a great deal of potential lurking just
below the surface, but you wouldn’t need to visit the confessional to admit
that it still needs a bit of work before it can be considered sacrosanct.
Summary
Reviewer Greg Stewart Review Date 2019-01-17Reviewed Item
Nuns at Tristan Bates Theatre .
Nuns
Tristan Bates Theatre
Reviewed – 17th January 2019
***
"this play, written for a stonking all-female cast,
perhaps needed a bit more darkness, a bit more bite”
This all-female cast and crew production is fun, dynamic and
crowd-pleasing. A strong cast of four, directed by Charlotte Everest, brought
Robert Luxford’s sometimes witty, energetic script to life, making some bold
and engaging staging and performance choices. But a truncated flow in stage
action and occasionally restrictive episodic structure mean it sacrifices
humorous depth for giggling shallows.
Natalya Wolter-Ferguson, Cecile Sinclair and Rebecca Wilson
are a terrific trio: perfectly balanced, wonderfully varied and each with their
own outrageous showcase moment, they were a joy to watch. I found their
commitment and passion exciting, and their clear support of one another
inspiring. All embraced the challenges which their parts required, and the
result was three female performers being free, uninhibited and brave onstage.
Gillian Broderick joins the action later, but her reputation precedes her as
the infamous Mother Superior, who turns out not to be so superior after all.
Broderick adds a new flavour to the plot, and she played the inscrutable, but
ultimately liberally persuadable, nun with growing conviction and nuance as the
play progressed. The cast enjoyed themselves, which was reflected back at them
in the auditorium.
Luxford’s script has clear intentions, which you can read
immediately in the show’s aesthetic, and the performers’ characterisation:
camp, mellow shock, sex and silliness – all habit-forming stuff. But each scene
is so contained that the narrative never quite moved beyond stereotype. I was
particularly frustrated by Mother Superior’s rousing speech about the church’s
misogyny, in which the first example she used was that make-up is perceived as
problematic. This dissection never quite unravelled and complexified to such an
extent that the little shocks of the show amounted to the feeling of anything
beyond being tickled. Being tickled is fine, but this play, written for a
stonking all-female cast, perhaps needed a bit more darkness, a bit more bite.
Tara Usher’s set design is excellent. It perfectly frames,
frills and sasses up the Tristan Bates space, with a gloriously kitsch combo of
electric neon, which accents model angel wings and a garish central cross, and
baby pink and blue velvet bedsheets, adorned with simpering Christs. It creates
the perfect realm for playful debauchery, and Everest’s direction comes to its
own when she incorporates the bed as the centrepiece of the Sisters’ lusty
confusion. Sally McCulloch’s lighting design, using torches and creating
different moods and textures with isolated neon lights, is inventive and
thoughtful. However, much as I thought the sound choices were second to nun
(not a typo; what a playlist), a couple of the tracks could have been cut, to
let the dialogue and performances speak. Recorded voices illuminating context
and offering different perspectives on nuns within the church were a nice
touch, but used a little too frequently: pairing them with blackouts at points
furthered the script’s feeling of incompleteness.
Nuns was met with a warm audience reception. The production
team have made a production which is worth seeing, for its creative vivacity
and committed performances.
Reviewed by Eloïse Poulton
Review: Nuns, Tristan Bates Theatre
3.0 Overall Score
With the promise of delinquency, sin and smoking, I was
anticipating a hot and dangerous exploration of religious rebellion as I sat
down to watch Nuns. If the all-female production (both cast and crew) isn’t
enough to get you excited, then perhaps the declaration of their "desire
to change the system” will intrigue you – it certainly did me. We are given
insight into the current state of the Church through a satirical comedy where
the relaxed lives of nuns are explored through sex, drugs and alcohol. However,
smoking is still prohibited due to the surprisingly well explained entangled
relationship between Church and State. While Nuns does deliver a show of
exaggerated insurgence within the Church, its lack of comedic timing alongside
a slightly stumbling plot leaves me wondering whether the discussion of nunnery
is best left to horror.
The performance stands out in terms of sight and sound.
Between each scene a phonograph audio clip is played on to darkness, recalling
old instances of nun rebellion, a typical day for the Church and other comical
recollections. It broadcasts an eerily historical presence. This old-fashioned
approach is in direct contrast to the neon crosses and confessional booths,
which not only install a sense of irony, but warp any expectation of time. The
light, including a funny, if not slightly too long cut scene of character
freeze frames, brings the play into the 21st Century, finding an unlikely
harmony between the senses. Sally McColloch, in charge of sight and sound,
takes this performance home.
On stage the cast create an uneasy ensemble. Although
obviously comfortable with each other and holding real love for this ambitious
passion project, their inability to make comedic references repeatedly land
leaves me feeling disappointed. The play’s evident potential for mastery isn’t
quite delivered, though that’s not to say that I wasn’t amused.
Nuns smoking bongs, cigarettes and discussing their various
sexcapades with numerous vicars delights the audience and is a refreshing
diversion from traditional religious discussion. There is no real blasphemy to
be found here, the performance is far too silly to provoke any serious thought
upon the current state of the Church. Indeed, even Mother Superior, played by
the subtly unserious Gillian Broderick, turns into a panda and unapologetically
dances around. It is easy to see the appeal Nuns holds. Delinquency in the
Church alongside an explicit discussion of sex (including a comedic obsession
with half dressed women in crochet) are a match made in hell. Nuns does manage
to hit some sweet spots; Sister Bernadette played by the innocent Cecile
Sinclair really comes into her own as the play progresses.
However, the power struggle between Mother Superior and the
nuns becomes lost. It leaves behind any ambition to change the system and
instead becomes swept up in a need to find an ending. There is more work to be
done in order to achieve any real feeling of devilish satisfaction.
NUNS: Blackmail and Blasphemy
January 20, 2019
Tijana Tamburic
*****
A 5-star Review
I wouldn't have previously associated a convent with comedy,
or nuns with lap dances or the prayer pews with The Streets and Notorious
B.I.G. songs, but now I do. All thanks to the play NUNS.
They play, written by Robert Luxford and adapted by the
all-female crew of Dame Dutch Productions and She's Diverse and entirely
self-funded, is a hilarious and totally modern story that runs back and forth,
with the agility and speed of a relay race, between the blackmail attempts of
four nuns.
Between scenes there are various recordings of what sounds
like news updates through the decades and 'how to be a good nun' advice that
either informs or juxtaposes the scene at hand. It's not all laughs though,
there are moments when the nuns discuss the position of the Church in today's
socio-political landscape, along with its hypocrisies and dirty secrets (which
are fine so long as 'no one finds out') that acts as a mirror for the rest of
our society. If in this place, which is supposed to go by the rules of what is
just, what is true, what is holy, sin proliferates, what does it say for the
rest of society?
There is one voice recording that stands out for me; it
speaks about the rise of 'feminism' in the Church. It makes us wonder if these
women will break free, with their new information, and expose the Church for
what it really is. There are several moments where we think this might happen
but, alas, it doesn't. Which makes me wonder: is feminism still at the stage of
bickering women, trying to one-up each other? Speaking confidently of change
without any real progress. Being liberated with their bodies, still somehow at
the benefit of men. When will we shelve our personal problems and speak out to
take down the patriarchy, and the clergy? And... when will other women and men
support us in a united way?
Dr Christine Blasey Ford went forth last year to speak up
for who should and shouldn't sit in the seat of Supreme Court Justice, but the
amount of women who took her down and attacked her is shocking. The amount of
women supporting her who were attacked on social media, is shocking. I wonder
if the nuns had come forward with their tapes, how much change it would have
really made in our current climate? Would it be swept under the rug, or
released and then be old news in two days, or even 'fake news', or would it
spur a real, united feminist push for change?
A lot of doors are opened up by this seemingly light-hearted
comedy, but not wide open - just ajar like the door to a confessional that you
have to decide whether or not to enter...
The play is on for another week at the Tristan Bates
Theatres in Covent Garden.
Get your tickets here
The play features FN girl Cecile Sinclair
LIVE LONDON POST **** Four stars
review by Andreea Helen David.
Nuns is a fantastic satirical comedy that pokes fun at the
religious system.
The play, based on a book by Robert Luxford (the only man
involved in the show) is set in a convent and presents us with 4 nuns, all
devout catholics of course, that sometimes smoke weed and have sex .
We have Sister Bernedette (Cecile Sinclair) the innocent and
easily played Bambi as Sister Catherine (Natalya Wolter Ferguson) calls her,
that gets mixed up in a rather unpleasant business with the Sisters Cathrine
and Rozza, the terrible duo.
The rebellious Sisters, Catherine and Rozza are trying to
blackmail Mother Superior (Gillian Broderick) in order to be allowed to smoke,
with a secret of a not very a cumenical activity. Because Bambi is involved,
things get tangled revealing a need for change of the patriarchal rules and
female equality in convents and churches and everywhere else.
Herein lies the beauty and brain of this show. The play
entertains and opens up the door to a world less known to us but it proves
change is mandatory for everyone. A feminist call that should lead to equality
in sexes and roles. What a prfect way to start 2019 for Dutch Dame Productions!
An all female cast and production team this fun, spunky show
is so smart and creative. Charlotte Everest‘s direction is physical and sexy
allowing the actors to be free and improvise. Claire Sinclair is sublime as
Sister Bernadette. Natalya Wolter Ferguson gives her character very different
and very surprising layers and Rebecca Wilson as Sister Rozza gives this show
amazing infusions of silliness and energy. Gillian Broderick is scary as Mother
Superior but as she reveals herself and her herbal infusions you like her more
and more until someone dies.
The audience enjoyed themselves tremendously as have I.
Where: Tristan Bates theatre
When: until 26th of January
Link
http://mytheatremates.com/nuns_qacoverage_terri/
.Dinner and a Show – Nuns, the comedy, Robert Luxford
September 8
The Plot:
Nuns is about three rebellious Nuns and how they plot to
overthrow Mother Superior in order to establish smoking rights for themselves.
The youngest, Sister Bernadette is being seduced into the cause by Sister
Catharine and Sister Roza during one of their secret smoking sessions. They
have a secret that they believe will bring the Mother superior to her knees.
Bongs, chain smoking, liquor, sex tapes, blackmail, and a desire to change the
system. No, it’s not college, it’s a convent!
Cast & Credits
Kelsey South - Sister Roza
Joy Uwineza - Sister Bernadette
Savannah Jones - Sister Catherine
Collette Powell - Mother Superior
Directed by Mike Burson.