Jonny Woo and Alexis Gregory on queer theatre, injecting comedy into murder and their intense play Sex/Crime
Strung up in a dank basement, a leather mask clamped to his face, a man known only as ‘B’ waits for his orders.
He has paid ‘A’ to play the role of a ‘gay serial killer’. With the right money, A will push a client to the brink of their borderlines.
But B proves to be a challenging client, after booking a slot with his temporary master only for it to fall short of murder
PinkNews sat down with playwright and actor Alexis Gregory (B) about his play Sex/Crime, as well as Jonny Woo, the show’s co-star (A).
First developed at Woo’s pub The Glory in 2018, the critically-acclaimed queer play transfers to Soho Theatre next week for ten nights, directed by Robert Chevara.
Why did you choose crime as a subject matter for this play? Do you think true crime is a popular focal point for works of art nowadays and why?Ā
Alexis: Crime and police fiction, specially with TV series, are having a peak moment, yes, and I think the psychological aspect of a crime dramas is appealingĀ to people.
The play Sex/Crime opens up a further human discussion – it’s a useful device.
I did actually want to be aĀ police officer when I was a kid. I was obsessed TV cop dramas ā and cops!
Why did you decide to explore murder in a queer context?Ā
Alexis: I wanted to āqueerā the thriller and make it our own.
This is a very queer play is in terms ofĀ themes, context and style; explicitly so, but it’s also universal.
Setting a crime in an underworld is of course a perfect setting for a dark andĀ challenging exploration of hidden lives,Ā and most of my plays ā like ‘Slap’, and ‘Safe’ ā focus on unheard stories.
Have you developed a unique process for working together as a duo on this?
Jonny: We definitely work well together. I’m not sure it’s a unique process, we are both very determined, we get it on its feet and we do it.
We had never worked before together and when Alexis showed me the play, and we decided we should be the characters, it just made sense.
We have fun and working with Robert Chevara who is just amazing. I suppose it’s unique in that it’s been a new collaboration, this. And we really go for it!
Alexis: In rehearsals and in the performance, Jonny and I are are definitely in tune with each other. I think we work great together ā there is a very good stage chemistry between Jonny and me. But donāt take my word for it. Come and decide for yourself.
You’ve both had success on your own, is it easier to work with a partner compared to working solo?
Jonny: Oh my God, I love collaborating.
Solo work while rewarding and challenging can be lonely stuff. I’ve toured on my own and I much prefer working with other people now, whether on group shows, or projects like this.
Most of my “Jonny” ventures are collaborations now ā like A Night At The Musicals, All Star Brexit and Transformer. You get something special out of it and audiences enjoy the energy that comes off that.
Alexis: As an actor, Iām used to working with cast-mates.
Riot Act, my first time doing a soloĀ show, and that was very intense, not justĀ because of theĀ material but because itās just you up there on that stage.
Acting in Sex/Crime is very intense in its own different way, the script is very challenging and a two-hander isĀ demanding.
What do the victims of the playās killers represent? Is it a manifestation of the two menās loneliness?
Alexis: The unseen killer, whom Jonny and my character obsess over, does definitely represent part ofĀ bothĀ of our characters, yes.
The idea of fetishising and obsessing over such heinous crimes is used to highlight whatĀ happens in a society that has a lackĀ of boundaries; with one lineĀ crossed after the next.
What was the reasoning behind deliberately leaving the two characters unnamed and instead having ‘A’ and ‘B’?
Alexis: To establish them as anonymous I think, and interchangeable.
It keeps the characters ābusinesslikeā; in the way they interact with each other; both sexually and in regards to the violence and also the way they negotiate much of the action as mere ātransactionsā.
How does this ādarkerā show compare to your previous work?Ā
Jonny: Hmmm, I’m always drawn to darker subjects. I’m not easy to shock really, so I relish the darkness of this piece.
My early cabaret work was often dark and challenging and I think Sex/Crime is pretty much inline with other work I’ve done.
We did a modern adaptation of Edgar Allen Poe’s Tell Tale Heart at The Glory, and the director Giorgio Spigelfeld made it into an East London drug addict’s gothic nightmare, so this is pretty much inline with all that.
Of course, many of my drag appearances, out and about, and on festival stages, can be more sparkly and cheeky – people like their drag with a drink and a wink, but deep down I’ve always loved darker subjects – my early drag looks had lots of nudity and were often quite scary, and still can be!
As an āalternative drag legendā, is it a drastic change to be on stage but out of drag? What are the differences and is one preferable?
Jonny: Aww thats nice to be called a legend. You know what ā it’s a relief to be in flats! I think the main difference here is that I’m working with a script and a rehearsal process, so I don’t need to rely on the tropes of drag and cabaret.
Cabaret is very in the moment and the ‘drag’ styling if you like helps me access a personae that works in that setting, that lends itself to improv ā you bounce off the audiences and after twenty years you get quite good at that.
But with a proper play like Sex/Crime I like performing with a tight script and direction ā it help me access other skills and the performance can become really heightened, Sex/Crime packs a big punch!
Sex/Crime is a scary play about murder but it also makes audiences laugh, how do you inject the comedy into it?
Alexis: I love writing and performing comedy. Being able to make audiences laugh feels like such aĀ gift.
All of my shows, howeverĀ hard-hitting, involve humour and the humour in Sex/Crime is totallyĀ outrageous. Itās also used to draw the audience in, flirt with them, and keep themĀ on their toes.
It challenges them and makes them question their responses. I’m old school thought ā I love a good one-liner and I couldn’t resist putting some punchlines into the script.
Jonny: The comedy is just there in the writing, Sex/Crime has scenes that are just hilarious. For me the show is a thriller, yes, and a very modern horror, but it’s definitely a satire that pokes fun at the gay male existence.
Alexis’s writing uses humour to dig the knife in even deeper. Yes there are murder scenarios, but you’ll see your own private life in there too.
Does the show explore the sexual relationship of the two men in comparison to their murderous relationship? Are they different or the same?Ā
Alexis: It all interlinks and crosses over; sex, desire, fetish, violence, power and various taboos.
EveryĀ boundary in Sex/Crime is very is blurred and thenĀ crossed!
It looks from the trailer like the men try and dominate each other, or role play with each other, is there a focal point of the play ā is it a battle between the men?
Alexis: The status between ‘A’ and ‘B’ shifts, and is always shifting between the two men, yes.
Power is another commodity that āAā and āBāĀ barter over, as do many gay couples.
We explore sexual dominance but also class andĀ social status. It’s an hour-long white knuckle ride, there’s a lot in there.
Why do you think pieces of queer theatre are so important? Is it solely about representation in the arts or is there more to it than that?
Jonny: Queer folk make queer work. It’s our truth, our stories.
Alexis: For me it is about more than just representation.
Iām really passionate about putting queer lives onĀ stage and exploring our truthsĀ and the complications and contradictions that come with those truths.
Do you think queer theatre is having an emerging moment currently? How do you think it can be sustained as a movement?Ā
Alexis: It’s definitely having a moment and has been for the last couple of years. Suddenly our lives areĀ mainstream in an extraordinaryĀ turn around. I donāt want our stories sanitised though, or toldĀ purely for the unchallenged gaze.
Nor do I feelĀ our stories, and indeed ourĀ lives, should be dubbed down or made more palatable for others; for straightĀ andĀ queerĀ audiencesĀ alike.
I hope that we are not aĀ trend.
Iām seeing some really radical queerĀ programming inĀ some London theatres at theĀ moment too and I think that is reallyĀ exciting.
Do you connect with the subject matter of Sex/Crime on a personal level or is it strictly a piece of theatre for you both?Ā
Alexis: All of myĀ plays come from an autobiographical place and I only write about subjects that excite me and matter to me, obviously not always literally with a play like Sex/Crime and its associated murderous intentions!
But I understand all of my characters,Ā theirĀ joy and pain, their successes and triumphs ā my life is in there, yes. I hope people find Sex/Crime expansively humanĀ in itsĀ themes and the ground that we cover.
As I said, it’s a jam-packedĀ rollercoasterĀ ride.
Jonny: Sex/Crime stands alone I think as a modern horror, it doesn’t need to be pigeon-holed.
It can be, but the very reason we chose Soho Theatre to develop the show is that it’s a good play which we think is performed and directed well and has resonance across the audience spectrum.
You don’t need to be gay to understand Sex/Crime or enjoy it. Of course the words resonate for us gay men, there’s devil in the detail, but at the end of the day it’s just a bloody good piece of theatre that Alexis has written!
This is the latest in a long list of successful plays Alexis. Whatās next for you?Ā
Alexis: Straight after Sex/Crime, I am back on the road in February forĀ LGBTĀ History MonthĀ touring Riot Act again, my solo show about queer activism though the decades.
We have oneĀ London date at The Turbine Theatre actuallyĀ on February 16th so come to that!
Then I need to get to work on the threeĀ other plays I amĀ developing as well as the Riot Act film which is moving ahead nicely.
Sex/Crime is at Soho Theatre from 21st Jan – 1st FebĀ
There are special post-show talks on both Saturday performances, see Soho Theatre website for details.