Macmillan Plays !!top!! — Duncan
In , the narrator speaks directly to their depressed mother, then to a vet, then to us. The audience becomes a stand-in for the entire world. The play, a list of things worth living for (from "ice cream" to "sunset" to "wearing someone else’s jumper"), is a masterclass in using comedy as a Trojan horse for grief. It is, by Macmillan’s own admission, "a play about suicide that makes you laugh until you cry."
To watch a Duncan Macmillan play is to sit in a dark room and hear someone say the thing you thought only you were thinking. That is not just theatre. That is a relief. duncan macmillan plays
They are not just plays to be watched; they are psychological spaces to be inhabited. Macmillan’s defining innovation is his treatment of the solo performer. Unlike a traditional monologue, which is a story told to an audience, Macmillan’s protagonists are often talking to someone specific—a child, a therapist, a lover who is not there. In , the narrator speaks directly to their