DENNIS BROE finds much to praise in the new South African Netflix series, but wonders why it feels forced to sell out its heroine

Sarah
The Coronet Theatre
ADAPTED from Scott McClanahan’s semi-autobiographical novel this amusingly dark dismantling of the American Dream is brilliantly performed by Jonathan Singer as Scott.
Addressing the audience directly, Scott opens his monologue by boasting that he is a skilled and experienced drunk driver. His description of a close call with a traffic cop veers from amusingly anarchical to childishly destructive, but the humour is undercut when he introduces the potential ramifications of his actions with his distressed children being his forgotten passengers.

SIMON PARSONS is beguiled by a dream-like exploration of the memories of a childhood in Hong Kong

SIMON PARSONS is taken by a thought provoking and intelligent play performed with great sensitivity

SIMON PARSONS is gripped by a psychological thriller that questions the the power of the state over vulnerable individuals

SIMON PARSONS applauds an imaginative and absorbing updating of Strindberg’s classic