In September 2004, a group of terrorists stormed School Number One in Beslan, Russia, taking hundreds of children, their parents and teachers hostage. The ensuing siege lasted three days and left many dead.
"Startling powerful... the playfulness has a terrible poignancy... a remarkable, harrowing piece of theatre."
Independent
"While this is an unflinching show, it draws its vitality from curious details rather than graphic confrontation... an intriguing, offbeat look at how young people deal with trauma."
Evening Standard
"Becomes progressively more heart-rending... makes a deep and moving comment about our reductive assumptions regarding childhood innocence."
Financial Times
"In its intricate weave of frontline semi-reportage and slyly subversive comedy, writer-director Carly Wijs allows a sense of play to inform at every turn... a shape-shifting, even ticklish piece that suggests what trauma might look like as it is both experienced and recollected from the inside looking out."
The Arts Desk
"Funny, devastating... a heartbreaking story about the indomitability of childhood spirit."
Time Out
"An extraordinary thoughtful and compassionate play about the way in which the young process trauma and the different filters that children and adults place over the truth... shimmers with a strange double emotional reality, which makes it very funny at times -- and awfully painful at others."
Exeunt Magazine
"A remarkable piece of theatre -- playful, surprisingly and painfully funny as well as moving."
The Guardian
"A truly outstanding piece of theatre for all ages... [makes] an inhuman ordeal somehow understandable, filtered through this very modern, accessible retelling."
The Stage
"Haunting, unforgettable... the highlight of the Fringe."
Telegraph
"Dazzlingly confident and utterly absorbing... presents [its] story masterfully."
Scotsman
"An innovative piece of theatrical storytelling... the bare facts of this terrible episode are well known, but the story is given such bold, off-centre treatment in [Us/Them] that it inspires a much deeper consideration of the massacre, its context and implications, than a simple dramatisation could hope to achieve."
The Times
"Remarkable -- powerful and quietly shocking, certainly, but also one that dares to be entertaining and absurd, even playful."
The List
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In September 2004, a group of terrorists stormed School Number One in Beslan, Russia, taking hundreds of children, their parents and teachers hostage. The ensuing siege lasted three days and left many dead. |
$24.95 |