Wild Bore
Ursula Martinez, Zoe Coombs Marr & Adrienne Truscott | 2017

The first rule of making art is don’t respond to your critics.
Soho Theatre, London and Malthouse Theatre, Melbourne bring together three masters of smart, spiky, political performance to form an international supergroup, who prove that they, too, are not afraid to talk out of their arses.
With special surprise performance from Krishna Istha.

★★★★★ The Music
★★★★★ The List
★★★★★ The Guardian
★★★★★ To Do List
★★★★★ Time Out
★★★★ The Herald
★★★★ Beyond The Joke
★★★★ The Skinny
★★★★ Fest Mag
★★★★ What’s On Stage
★★★★ The Stage
★★★★ London Theatre
★★★★ The Evening Standard
★★★★ The Arts Desk
PREVIOUS PERFORMANCES
Skirball Centre, New York
Sophiensæle, Berlin
The Malthouse, Melbourne
The Traverse, Edinburgh
Carriageworks, Sydney Festival
Soho Theatre, London
Three comedians at the top of their game.
Truly, outrageously funny.
★★★★★ The Guardian
… these artists have taken criticism and turned it into dynamic theater. They are engines of remarkable change and I found something inspiring in this reconstruction, repurposing, and reinvention.
Exeunt NYC
This is a smart, confronting, hilarious piece of meta theatre that questions its critics’ biases and then picks apart its own. Yes, even as the show worries about the dominant male critical voice, these three white women step aside for another voice to take the stage. A critique of the critics of the critics. Thank you, Krishna Istha, your voice is very much appreciated.
Theatre First
The show ridicules its own self-indulgence, checks its own privilege and then promptly sticks its head back up its bum.
WhatsOnStage
This is probably the worst show you will see this year.
★ The Londonist
PRESS
THE MUSIC . . .
EXEUNT NYC ….
THEATRE FIRST
THE GUARDIAN
THE STANDARD