Curve, Leicester
4th June, 2026
“Now I’m the missing pieces”
In recent years, Curve has become a powerhouse of producing
musicals – notably revivals, but also new work. Freya Catrin Smith and Jack
Williams’ RIDE in 2023 was a neat chamber musical with a playfully
expansive narrative. Last year, Scott Evan Davis’ and Kait Kerrigan’s Indigo
was a formally innovative, refreshingly colourful musical about a fractured family.
And this year, two new British musicals are enjoying overlapping runs in
Leicester. Rob Madge and Pippa Cleary’s Bank of Dave: The Musical has
just finished in the main house, and now, following an earlier version at the
Edinburgh Fringe in 2023, Public the Musical is playing in the Studio. Written
by Hannah Sands, Kyla Stroud, Natalie Stroud and Olivia Zacharia (and created
by Stroud & Notes), Public the Musical is a promising, funny four-hander
about (and probably most appealing to) Gen-Zs discovering their purpose and
identities in life.
Trapped in a public bathroom with no phone signal or hope of getting
out, four strangers confront each other and themselves. We have Zo (Grace
Towning), a champagne-socialist on her way to a protest whilst being bankrolled
by the bank of Mum and Dad; there’s Laura (Cole Dennis), who’s too-polite exterior
is covering a bed of 11th hour nerves about their wedding; Finley
(Ivano Turco), whose anxiety makes him anti-social and seems to have made him
stuck in a dead-end job; and Andrew (Matt Corner), an insensitive city banker
with humble beginnings. Four very different people stuck in a confined setting
makes for a perfect dramatic conceit, a crucible in which the writers can
develop contrasting characters and bounce them off each other, work together and,
ultimately, bond. The concept easily grabs an audience and, considering its
simplicity, the characters are easy to spend 90 minutes with as an audience. A
part of me didn’t believe they would ever walk into such a grotty public toilet
in the first place but musicals are all about suspending your disbelief, right?
Being in a pressured environment (impressively realised by Amy
Jane Cook), they’re initially prone to antagonism. Andrew’s ignorance over
Laura’s pronouns (they’re non-binary) annoys Zo (more so than Laura) who has
him marked as a chauvinist who only cares about his precious bike locked up
outside. He has her outward displays of progressivism (she’s dressed as a bee) pegged
as being shallow. He also judge’s Finley’s job at a pizza place and perhaps
mistakes his anxiety for apathy. And Laura is so passive they haven’t mentioned
they’re due to get married tomorrow. The title’s double meaning cleverly refers
to the idea of a public persona we’re comfortable presenting. In a public
setting, we’re all the more aware of this persona, giving us the opportunity to
generate, curate or hide our ‘true’ selves. And for the most part Public
articulates these interests successfully. It’s interested in the assumptions we
make based on first impressions. For instance, Zo’s defensive over-protection
of Laura leads her to berate Andrew but her efforts occasionally crack showing
her own prejudices and naiveties underneath. These exchanges are telling windows
into the musical’s interest into the complex world of navigating identity in
the contemporary world. The book is often funny, and captures the phrases,
rhythms and anxieties of young people today as refreshingly as Everybody’s
Talking About Jamie.
What’s frustrating, then, is that, given the musical’s resistance
for easy answers, Public is occasionally let down by characterisation
which is too broadly drawn. Despite giving fine performances, we never really
know much about Finley because he has a tendency to (literally and otherwise)
lock himself away. The musical form gives an opportunity to dig deeper, and his
song ‘Nervous Disposition’ is one of the stand outs of the show. It gives Turco
an opportunity present Finley’s inner self and how he’s working through some
issues, but that isn’t really advanced much further after that early song.
Likewise, with Andrew, we get that he’s not as shallow as we first glimpse but
his true depths remain murky. This is exacerbated by the start of his solo number
‘Missing Pieces’ starting in such a high register it (perhaps purposefully)
doesn’t seem to fit his character. This is perhaps a tell-tale sign the writers
are still developing their crafts. Similarly, a running joke about syphilis struck
me as oddly unfaithful to some of the characters’ personalities.
The songs are solidly performed by a cast of four who have
all racked up an impressive amount of experience in their careers so far. This
experience shows and they make the songs sound as if they’re an established
part of the canon. The best songs
advance character and Turco’s ‘Nervous Disposition’ and Towning’s ‘Harder to
Chew’ are standouts for this reason. Others such as ‘Graffiti’ in which
characters riff off the scrawling on the bathroom tiles (lucky Tom!) provide frothier
moments. For me, Public is still at a stage of pop song cycle rather
than providing narrative momentum. However, this new musical is a welcome
addition to keep the form moving forward and showcasing future talents.
Public the Musical runs at Curve, Leicester until 13th June.
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| (L-R) Matt Corner (Andrew), Grace Towning (Zo), Cole Dennis (Laura) and Ivano Turco (Finley) in Public the Musical. Credit: Mark Senior |
%20Matt%20Corner%20(Andrew),%20Grace%20Towning%20(Zo),%20Cole%20Dennis%20(Laura)%20and%20Ivano%20Turco%20(Finley)%20-%20Photography%20by%20Mark%20Senior%20(1).jpg)
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