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Kendra Jones

director . writer . dramaturg . instructor
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impel theatre blog

Burgeoning academic.
Creator of things to read & experience. Thinks too much.
Analyzes everything. 

Reviews are meant to catalogue, interrogate, and challenge what I see.

All opinions are just that -- opinions. 

Pip Dwyer, Kaitlin Race, Jennifer Dysart McEwan in Watching Glory Die by Judith Thompson, directed by Kendra JonesPhoto by John Gundy

Pip Dwyer, Kaitlin Race, Jennifer Dysart McEwan in Watching Glory Die by Judith Thompson, directed by Kendra Jones

Photo by John Gundy


Sunny days ☀️
Happy Mother’s Day, Canadians 

#anarchyintheuk
Tangled.

Found in Commercial Street.
#london #spitalfields #streetart
Happy birthday @bonks21 ! If these pictures don’t exemplify our relationship, nothing does. Here’s to this summer’s European adventure which trades Scottish mountains for Parisian staircases.
❤️

Found in High Holborn, London
Just hanging out. 

Found in Commercial Street. 

#london #eastlondon #wheatpaste #streetart
Outside David Garrick’s house, on the banks of the Thames; his Temple to Shakespeare.

#hampton #temple #shakespeare
Saw Hate Radio at @batterseaartscentre - thought some things. You can read them on the blog, link in bio.

#theatre #archive #review #milorau #bac
Saw Book of Mormon the other week. Thought some things. You can read them on the blog- link in bio

📸: Prince of Wales Theatre ceiling
Our appetite and capacity to digest fragmented narrative is expanding.

@jordan.tannahill - Theatre of the Unimpressed 

#reading #theatre #mediums #mediation #experiences

tweets


Avenue Q @ Shaftesbury Theatre

May 16, 2026

The best thing about the 2026 London Revival of Avenue Q is that it doesn’t just show us Avenue Q as it was; it makes a few thoughtful tweaks, both to the text and to some of the interpretation, really considering what would now be some of the dated references and interpretations in the original when viewed with 2026 eyes.

Text edits make dramaturgical sense, and if you didn’t know the original an audience likely wouldn’t notice. How can a puppet sing about the internet being for porn, for example, without bringing in the context of AI or OnlyFans?

The more clever adaptations come in the directing, however. Christmas Eve, rather than being played as a woman wearing traditional, geisha reminiscent clothes and representing racist stereotypes, is instead a young cool immigrant, stylish and misunderstood for her accent, but earnest in her desire to fit in. She is Kurisa Masa Eve….who the characters mispronounce and misquote, but without malice, just with subtle American-centric trains of thought. It is microaggressions performed.

Similarly, the casting choices are smart — while the lead puppet voices are written for 6 separate actors, with puppeting doubling up for an extra hand, this production re-tracks the performers so that Lucy and Kate are the same actor, Rod and Princeton are the same actor, and Trekke and Nicky are the same actor. The result is virtuosic performances first of all, but also a subtle hint at the way each pairing is opposite sides of the coin. Lucy and Kate, the “angel and whore” dichotomy, and so on.

All of this adds up to a production that really stands up well, and is worth seeing — if for no reason other than a great belly laugh, which we all need these days.

Tags: Avenue Q, West End, Review, musical, revivals
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