Sadiq Ali Company: Tell Me review – poignant tale of sex, revelry and glistening abs amid the 80s Aids crisis

5 days ago 21

In the programme note for Tell Me, its creator Sadiq Ali says that 2025 was the year he might have been expected to die of Aids-related complications, were it not for advances in medicine. Instead here he is, muscled and strong, wound round a Chinese pole, suspending himself in the air, abs glistening.

Ali is also thriving as an artist. His last show, The Chosen Haram, garnered five-star reviews, and he has just officially launched his own circus/theatre company. This new work, Tell Me, follows a woman with an HIV diagnosis, which is something still stigmatised and misunderstood, especially outside the LGBTQ+ community. It is a subject that’s personal to Ali but he doesn’t put himself at the centre. Instead Phoebe Knight is the protagonist, joined by Ali and Jonah Russell, and along with a clever set made from cube-shaped frames that double as poles and trapezes to climb and swing from, they portray a coherent story and evoke some stinging emotions.

To contrast with the present day, we are sucked back to the synth-soundtracked 1980s, to the febrility of fear and shame as Aids became public enemy number one, and people with a diagnosis were heartbreakingly shunned by friends and family. This show was originally made as an outdoor performance (premiered at Norfolk and Norwich festival last year) but a black box theatre allows for a darker atmosphere, actually and figuratively.

Tower of strength … Sadiq Ali in Tell Me
Tower of strength … Sadiq Ali in Tell Me. Photograph: Alberto Santos Bellido

Friendship, revelry, nightlife and sex are played out in movement across the floor and vertically up the poles, until the characters end up facing their demons – rather literally – with Ali dressed in horns and knee-high PVC heelless platforms. The first half of the show feels smart and sharp in terms of theatrical choices; the use of music, sound, set, text and dance, to deftly delineate what’s happening. Once we descend into murkier territory with the devilish minotaur creature, it plateaus for a while.

Tell Me is not ultimately a story of triumph or transcendence, it’s one of love, support and acceptance, with some poignant intimate moments. It’s also a well put together piece of theatre, and there is no doubt much more from Ali to come.

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