Museum of Austerity review β a devastating reckoning with Britainβs decade of neglect
Young Vic theatre, London
A powerful blend of mixed reality, testimony and theatre exposes the human toll of benefit cuts β and asks what justice looks like in a new political era
David Cameron did not just leave us the gift of Brexit before fleeing his premiership. There is also the toxic legacy of his βage of austerityβ policies. Here is an excoriating production that examines what austerity meant for those targeted by it. They include some of the most vulnerable members of society β people who were abused, destitute, disabled, mentally ill and jobless (what was it that Pearl Buck said about the test of a civilisation?).
The show is based on the lives of people who were denied welfare benefits and died. Directed by Sacha Wares, it is an installation that combines promenade theatre with holograms. Wearing a mixed-reality (MR) headset, you enter a room where eight static figures emerge, played by actors. They lie on gurneys, bare mattresses, park benches, pavements and soiled duvets, and make for a woeful army of βinvisiblesβ who have, for this time, come into our line of vision. We hear their stories, told by relatives (interviews co-edited by Wares and special advisor John Pring) and the accounts bring tears to your eyes.
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Β© Photograph: Ellie Kurttz

Β© Photograph: Ellie Kurttz

Β© Photograph: Ellie Kurttz


