'By weaving Nulty's personal history into a profound meditation on the nature of change, 'Did I Call You?' opens up a space for the cultivation of a genuinely radical theatre, where individual experience can be the seed for broader social commentary.' The Skinny.
Ian Nulty is a live artist based in Glasgow
There's a powerfully provocative show pupating inside Ian Nulty's solo performance Robinson Family Undercover Secret Agents. He's taken up some clever cudgels against America's right-wing Christians and politicians, not least because of their aggressive hostility towards homosexuality. He's even created an online persona that masquerades as a rabid fellow traveler. Mary Brennan The Herald
Ian Nulty’s Robinson Family Undercover Secret Agents starts in chilling political style, with a screen display of some of the sickening anti-Obama propaganda produced by the American far right; both racist and Islamophobic, it sets the scene for some powerful sequences in which Nulty – as his right-wing alter ego Robert Robinson – indulges in real-time, real-life Facebook chat with America’s huge army of right-wing Christians, ranting on about the Rapture, and their hopes for an imminent war on Iran. Joyce mcmillan The Scotsman
Did I call you?
From the perspective of a 1970's science fiction geek. Did I call you? explored the outcomes of futurology in the 21st century. interactive with the audience through mobile phone ( star trek communicator) SMS.
Did I call you? First performed for glasgay, This work explored how as children in the west we are conditioned into wanting and aquiring more and more stuff from a planet with finite resources.
Did I call you? First performed for glasgay, This work explored how as children in the west we are conditioned into wanting and aquiring more and more stuff from a planet with finite resources.