A highly watchable piece of theatre .The cast are all superb. The play delivers.Broadway World
London is lucky to have a third opportunity to see this fascinating and emotional play which has been staged beautifully.Theatre Weekly
An important piece. First rate. Bravo to all concerned.Boyz
So perfectly played it truly hurts. An important play that well deserves this excellently acted revival.Theatre News
Heartfelt .hilarious revival .The acting from all concerned is sublime.The Upcoming
Avert your eyes if you are prudish.The Times
There’s something almost revelatory about the two hours Spreadbury-Maher and his cast serve up in the basement of the Trafalgar Studios.Telegraph
Screamingly funny and surprisingly moving, Coming Clean is an eighties anthem to love, friendship and the pain of infidelity.Spy in the Stalls
Remarkable. Visceral, shocking. Heartbreaking. Evocative and thought-provoking.Morning Star
Tensions simmer, smart then erupt. Other producers take note.Sunday Times
A triumph in delivering Elyot’s quick wit and emotional depth.A Younger Theatre
Due to the sold out and critically successful 2019 run, King’s Head Theatre and Making Productions were delighted to bring back to the West End Kevin Elyot’s Coming Clean.
The play is set in a flat in Kentish Town, north London, in 1982. Struggling writer Tony and his partner of five years, Greg, seem to have the perfect relationship. Committed and in love, they are both open to one-night stands as long as they don’t impinge on the relationship. But Tony is starting to yearn for something deeper, something more like monogamy. When he finds out that Greg has been having a full-blown affair with their cleaner, Robert, their differing attitudes towards love and commitment become clear.
In his foreword to Kevin Elyot: Four Plays (Nick Hern Books, 2004), Elyot writes, “From 1976 to 1984 I’d acted in several productions at the Bush Theatre, and Simon Stokes, one of the artistic directors, had casually suggested I try my hand at a play. I presented them with a script entitled Cosy, which was passed on to their literary manager Sebastian Born. He responded favourably and, largely through his support, it finally opened on 3 November 1982 under the [new] title Coming Clean.”
Written 12 years before his most famous play, My Night With Reg, Coming Clean won Elyot the Samuel Beckett Award for writers showing particular promise in the field of the performing arts.
Theatre critic Michael Coveney wrote of Elyot in his obituary for The Guardian in 2014, “In writing about the human heart and the art of living… Elyot transcended categorisation and produced a small body of stage plays that will reward revival, and not just as period pieces.” Coveney goes on to describe Coming Clean as “an elegiac play about sexual relationships at a time when Aids was still a barely credible rumour in Britain, but there was a sense of foreboding in the final scene.”
Press★★★★ Telegraph
★★★★ Sunday Times
★★★★ Broadway World
★★★★★ Theatre Weekly
★★★★★ Boyz
★★★★ Theatre - News
★★★★ London Theatre 1
★★★★The Upcoming
★★★★ Spy in the Stalls
★★★★ Morning Star
★★★★ Upper Circle
★★★★ Attitude Magazine
★★★★ A Younger Theatre
ByKevin Elyot
CastTony - Lee Knight
Greg - Stanton Cambridge-Plummer
William – Elliot Hadley
Robert - Jonah Rzeskiewicz
Creative TeamDirector - Adam Spreadbury-Maher
Associate Director - Alex Hicks
Assistant Director - Aran Cherkez
Set Designer - Amanda Mascarenhas
Lighting Designer - Nic Farmam
Sound Designer - Yvonne Gilbert Movement Director - Jess Boyd
Production Manager - Colin Everitt
Stage Manager - Ella Corcoran
Creative Direction - FORMAT.LDN
VenueTrafalgar Studios 2Year2020