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IN CONVERSATION WITH: Ted Walliker

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RON is an absurd, violent, genre-bending queer odyssey exploring the nature of unrequited love; how far would you go to show someone you love them?

At its heart, RON is about queer longing, obsession and the strange, sometimes destructive ways we try to prove love to one another. Starting in the familiar setting of a McDonald’s before spiralling into increasingly surreal and violent territory, the show twists stand-up comedy and emotional confession into something wildly unpredictable.

A Youngish Perspective holds this exclusive dialogue with the writer and star of the show, Ted Walliker.


The show’s origins are certainly connected to that thin line. I wrote my BA dissertation at university about the construction of stand-up comedy, culminating in a practical piece called ‘Stand-Up Tragedy’ in which a comedian unravels personal truths, leaving behind the concealment and resorting entirely to confession. I enjoyed making that, but ultimately when it came to creating RON I found there was a lot more to be enjoyed about the interplay between confession and concealment. There’s also an argument to be made for not knowing which device is being used at certain points to create more intrigue around this bizarre character we’re watching.

The word safety is definitely the key there. As an audience member I love nothing more than feeling like I genuinely couldn’t guess what’s going to happen next. But that’s not to say it’s about randomness, there’s a logic and a process behind it all. The comedy group Aunty Donna are a particular favourite of mine because they work to a philosophy of ‘doing whatever is funniest’ regardless of traditional comedic construction – they often get labelled as wholly absurdist, as a result, but I think it goes beyond that. When people say ‘expect the unexpected’, you generally do so and the unexpected becomes expected, but Aunty Donna are such craftspeople that you’re continually delighted and surprised by each bit.

Without giving too much away, I think there are aspects of Tony which will feel everyman-ish and I’d say his driving force – the thing that makes him do the things he does – is, hopefully, relatable at its core. The way he processes emotions and information, however, I think makes him specifically him and I’m definitely excited by the term dangerous being ascribed to him as a result of that specificity. What a vague answer! I hope my vagueness is ultimately to the benefit of the audience of the show – I like to know absolutely nothing going in so I can experience a piece without pre-conception.

Definitely. Though, there are moments of intimacy in RON, but some of them are probably not expressions of intimacy we’d say are familiar to us. I think that’s part of it too. I hope that the emotion behind it all feels recognisable, I just felt that I had to express it in my own way. Longing can feel very irrational or urgent or uncontrollable, like a plague of the mind and heart it can consume you, particularly if you’re trying to grapple with who you are at the same time.

We spend the play in Tony’s world but I don’t know whether that felt distinct from constructing a traditional play. We’re always in someone’s world, I suppose. Sometimes that’s a much clearer mirror of the real world and sometimes we’re invited into something entirely unreal. Doing the lighting and music felt like a natural extension of Tony, for sure. The starting point for RON (beyond ‘Stand-Up Tragedy’) was actually that I was trying to write some music for someone’s short film and I ended up writing a piece that was completely inappropriate for the short, but it felt like the ending of something else. I wanted to figure out what that something was, and RON started to take shape. So, the world of the play came together as it was being written.

There’s a very specific reason for this which I mustn’t spoil. If I may continue my irritating vagueness to answer your question, though: crazy stuff happens in all sorts of places. You never know! You really never know…

Ron is on at Riverside Studios from 13th June – 5th July.

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