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You Won’t Break My Soul

Oran Mor, Glasgow

Three stars

 

When Beyoncé came to Murrayfield in 2023 as part of her Renaissance tour, the bootylicious diva caused a sensation. Beyond the show itself, there was likely plenty of drama for her fan base who worship at her feet, and not just among the single ladies neither. 

 

Take Jordan and Russell. The neon pink boudoir that passes for the living room of these gay best friends in JD Stewart’s new play for A Play, a Pie and a Pint’s lunchtime theatre season may be a shrine to their queen, but it also requires an overload of Febreze to clear the body odours that hang around. 

 

Partly responsible for these is the bit of rough trade Jordan who has just beaten a hasty retreat with two stolen tickets in hand. When Russell gets home, the pair’s despair at their loss sees them embark on a quest for replacements that takes them from their friend Sooz’s cafe to the local cop shop that seems to be run by a refugee from the Village People. Finally, they enter a drag contest at real life Glasgow nitespot, Delmonica’s, where first prize might just get them to the show. 

 

So far so camp in Laila Noble’s production, in which Jamie McKillop and James Peake rise to the occasion as Jordan and Russell, who reaffirm their personal bond as they revive their old double act on stage. Aided by Kaylah Copeland as Sooz, and with an extra special guest in the house, the inevitable floor show all this has been leading to is delivered with glamtastic abandon in a play that goes beyond its initial japes to a more serious look at friendship, staying true to oneself and the restorative powers of a life on stage for these destiny’s children in waiting. 


The Herald, June 12th 2025

 

Ends 

 

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