“Why Not?”

Them Them

“WHY NOT?”
Actor and co-author
Barcelona Flower Market
GREEK Festival

1995

"It's been a while since I saw a show in Barcelona so sad, so intelligent and at the same time so funny. A show cleanly executed, with considerable skill and which, in fairness, should open the doors of any theater to Los Los. I've already seen it a couple of times and I plan to go back. They won't miss it."

Joan de Sagarra (El País)

"They are undoubtedly a find. His show lasts just over an hour and is a constant feast for the imagination. They make humor and above all they create it. A funny and sometimes bitter humor. Although you laughed openly. Ases, Collins-Moore and Steiner execute their Trabajo with great cleanliness, I would say with great originality. But in addition, the three actors demonstrate preparation, quality in their performance and a great sense of theater. I attended the show on Saturday night - people stayed outside - and it was a party. Few times like this can you talk about intelligent entertainment”
Gonzalo Pérez de Olaguer (El Periódico)

"Everything turns out to be comical with a non-conformist comicality: critical with a gesture of innocence that, rather than concealing the malice, highlights it. The three actors are excellent. They achieve their effects in an empty space. Los Los are the great coñones of contemporary humor. They reject the obvious and nevertheless, abound in fine, penetrating observations, but served as a caricature of the caricature. In pure jest, full of intention"
Lorenzo López Sancho (ABC)

"It's been a while since an exercise so playful, agile, intelligent and fun has passed through our stages. Everything is gesture and stage truth. Throughout this succession of sketches an existentialist ghost hovers and manifests itself in the most legible way: leaping from the pathetic to the funny”
Eduardo Suárez del Real (Diario de Mallorca)

"The Catalan company, in a show with brilliant passages, shows an original synthesis of mime, clowning and intelligent dialogue or monologue, in rapid and brilliant transformations"
Albert de la Torre (Scene)

Pin It on Pinterest