The Guardian 7 August 2022

“And still my motto is: I dare,” says Alan Cumming at the end of his ravishing one-man evocation of Robert Burns. And if the Ayrshire poet was daring, then so, too, is the actor. Cumming has always had a slinky, insinuating presence, whether as the Emcee in Cabaret or as Dionysus, the god of good times, in The Bacchae, but he is not known for overtly physical theatre. To label Burn as dance might be stretching a point, but it is the work of two choreographers, Steven Hoggett and Vicki Manderson, and is structured with more dreamy fluidity than writerly precision. Cumming has dared to put himself in an unfamiliar place.

We see him first, arms outstretched, as Tim Lutkin’s back lighting picks out the contours of his biceps that ripple like the undulating waves of light spilling across the auditorium. His arrival signals an end to a storm, but the stripped-back set by Ana Inés Jabares-Pita remains bleak and monochrome. The floorboards are distressed and colourless, a single desk and pile of discarded paper his only company on a desolate stage backed by Andrzej Goulding’s austere video, displaying dates, locations and a galloping ghost of a horse. [READ MORE]

By Mark Fisher

MARK FISHER is a freelance theatre critic and feature writer based in Edinburgh and has written about theatre in Scotland since the late-1980s. He is a theatre critic for The Guardian, a former editor of The List magazine and a frequent contributor to the Scotsman and other publications. He is the co-editor of the play anthology Made in Scotland (1995), and the author of The Edinburgh Fringe Survival Guide (2012) and How to Write About Theatre (2015) – all Bloomsbury Methuen Drama. He is also the editor of The XTC Bumper Book of Fun for Boys and Girls and What Do You Call That Noise? An XTC Discovery Book (both Mark Fisher Ltd).