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PREVIEW: Edinburgh Fringe: ‘Welcome to the Cliterati’

August 6, 2015

Erotic performance poet, Jay Walker takes new show Welcome to the Cliterati, her first foray into the heady mix of poetry, sex and stand-up to the Edinburgh Festival later this month.

 

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Described as “the literary lovechild of Jeanette Winterson and Allen Ginsberg” spoken word artist Jay Walker has made a big impact on the performance poetry scene in the last two years.

Writing for Broadway Baby, Sarah Macintosh sums up the hallmark feature of Jay’s work in the phrase “dizzying eroticism”.

Renowned for her hot and bold poetry, Jay’s words are animated by her lust for language and her passion for life, bound up with the inimitable eloquence and vulnerability of the body erotic.

She has performed widely to critical acclaim in general and LGBT venues from Shrewsbury’s Severn Theatre to Seattle Pride stopping off at L Fest, Incite, Brighton Emporium, Slick, the Ludlow Fringe and the legendary Velvet Tongue, among others, along the way.

The iconic Bar Wotever have described her shows as both “horny and lustfilled” and “heart breaking” as she shares a surprising twist in the story of the body erotic.

Expect the unexpected: she’s back at the Edinburgh Fringe this year with a smut fest of poetry woven together with a quirky sprinkle of her own off-beat brand of stand-up in her new show, Welcome to the Cliterati.

This is poetry that gets under your skin, stand up that celebrates absolute absurdity, and we learn a few queer home truths along the way.

Why sex? It’s hot, it’s fun, and catch Jay off stage and she’ll even talk theory.

Jay says: “What we don’t talk about gets a life of its own fuelled by secrecy and imbued with shame.”

“Something has gone very wrong when the erotic is presented as distasteful, shameful, excessive. Pleasure, desire, connection and embodiment, which are all part of the hologram of erotic knowledge, are vital compasses in how we navigate our lives meaningfully. Without the erotic we are thrown into a dangerous place where body and mind are dislocated. I wanted to speak graphically of the erotic and its absence. This way the audience get to hear two narratives that are rarely presented in one trajectory and can experience for themselves what is at risk both with constructing silences and breaking silences.”


Event: Welcome to the Cliterati 

Where: The Street, Picardy Road, Edinburgh

When: August 23-26

Time: 7.15pm

Tickets: Entry free

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For more information about, Jay Walker, click here:

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