One moment you’re laughing at a ridiculous visual gag, the next you’re watching an extended liminal-space sequence that somehow becomes weirdly hypnotic. The entire show felt surprising, playful, and alive. A joyful, inventive piece of interactive theater that reminded me why live performance can do things no other art form can.
What I didn't like
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My overall impression
Before the show even officially begins, Adam Smith is already onstage dancing, living completely inside his own world while the audience files in. That playful commitment never lets up. Audience members are invited into the action, gifted bizarre costume pieces, and transformed into party guests. The result feels less like watching a show and more like getting swept into someone’s strange, hilarious dream.