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Theatre
May 12, 2026
Analyzed by Llama- 4 Scout 17B 16E Instruct

Sunset Boulevard: The Backstage Cut review – a faithful but pointless rendition

AI Summary
The article reviews 'Sunset Boulevard: The Backstage Cut', a play adapted from the 1950 film of the same name. Despite its faithful rendition and strong performances, the play lacks purpose and originality.

Theatre Review: Sunset Boulevard: The Backstage Cut

Over the past decade, Morag Fullarton has been developing a popular line in bijou Hollywood adaptations. With a camp flourish and a multitasking cast, the writer and director has boiled down favourites including Casablanca and It’s a Wonderful Life. She last had a crack at Sunset Boulevard, then billed as a “lunchtime cut”, in 2015 at Glasgow’s A Play, a Pie and a Pint, the company she went on to co-run for four years.

The Event Details

Now associate director at Perth, she has reunited the fine four-strong company who went down so well the first time around, worked in an extra 20 minutes of material and given it a handsome main-stage production. But for all its strengths of mimicry and its affection for Billy Wilder’s 1950 original, it is a show severely lacking in purpose.

The Performance Analysis

Caught like a fly in Norma’s web, John Kielty captures the brashness and vulnerability of skint screenwriter Joe Gillis, fated to end up face-down in his employer’s pool. Frances Thorburn, also acting as narrator to help skip through the scenes, is a bright-eyed Betty Schaefer, the script reader, turning Joe’s head and showing a keen ear for snappy Hollywood dialogue. Mark McDonnell is masterfully dry as butler Max and in other roles.

The Impact Analysis

But seen in this context, the play offers little of its own. It is not pastiche, parody, reimagining or commentary. Instead, it is a faithful and rather pointless rendition of a film that, inevitably, does the same job better.

The Prediction

The play will run at Perth theatre until 16 May. Whether it will find its purpose then remains to be seen.