Thomas Everchild

Fanny Hill (Edinburgh Festival Fringe)
(from Memoirs Of A Woman Of Pleasure by John Cleland)
Producer: Philippa Hammond
Writer/Director: Thomas Everchild

The play is packed with erotic adventures of all shapes and sizes nailed by a versatile cast which delights in taking many parts, dropping many breeches and lifting many skirts. It’s deliciously naughty and well worth staying up for.
(The Scotsman)

FULL REVIEW

Fanny Hill (Edinburgh Festival Fringe)
(from Memoirs Of A Woman Of Pleasure by John Cleland)
Producer: Philippa Hammond
Writer/Director: Thomas Everchild

This adaptation of John Cleland’s neglected Georgian masterwork is a hugely enjoyable bawdy romp through one woman’s life and sex life, which for the purposes of the tale appear to be virtually interchangeable.

The eponymous heroine, a naïve country virgin, finds herself all alone in the world with nothing but a bag of second-hand trinkets to her name, when a chance meeting with an old schoolfriend sets her on the path to the big city and a life as a streetwise whore. But Fanny is not wretched at the thought of having to turn tricks to make her way, and in fact fate continually smiles down on this “tart with a heart”: when one brothel door slams in her face another seems courteously to fly open.

The play is packed with erotic adventures of all shapes and sizes nailed by a versatile cast which delights in taking many parts, dropping many breeches and lifting many skirts. It’s deliciously naughty and well worth staying up for.

The Scotsman
(Jane-Ann Purdy)

Thomas Everchild

by S1919