Brutally Moving Edinburgh Hit, I Am Not Myself These Days, Coming To Liverpool.

At the 2015 Edinburgh Fringe the extraordinarily compelling tour-de-force performance of Tom Stuart, in his own adaptation of the best-selling memoir, became one of the talking points of the Festival. Audiences were visibly moved by the story of alcoholic drag queen Aqua desperately trying to make a relationship work with Jack, a high-class rent boy addicted to crack. As part of a U.K. tour the play is coming to Liverpool Playhouse from the 2nd-6th February.

I Am Not Myself These Days is a fast-paced one-man show that is by turns brutal, funny and heartbreaking, a gripping tale of love and self-discovery set amidst the hedonistic excesses of 1990’s New York. It is adapted for the stage from Josh Kilmer-Purcell’s New York Times Bestseller, a darkly humorous autobiographical story of a young New Yorker’s unconventional journey to self-acceptance while living a daring dual life – advertising art director by day, glitter-dripping drag queen by night.

Although the characters pride themselves on their unconventionality, their problems are universal. Tom Stuart felt compelled to adapt the novel for the stage to bring the personal journey of a marginalised member of society into a wider context, seeking to help break down the barriers of prejudice.

Tom puts it like this, “It’s such an incredibly honest, open and engaging book. I wanted to see if I could extend that honesty to the stage and make an audience feel how I felt reading the book alone in my bed. I like to think of it as a love story, albeit an unconventional one. Although set in a specific time and place, I think most people will be able to relate to and recognise something of themselves in it, whatever their background or circumstances.”

Tom Stuart works extensively in theatre around the U.K. and appears frequently at Shakespeare’s Globe. His television work includes Kathy Burke’s Walking and Talking, Psychobitches, Little Crackers and Law and Order. Films include Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy, Michael Winterbottom’s The Look of Love‘, and John Boorman’s Queen & Country.

Fuel produces fresh work by adventurous people by inspiring audiences. Founded in 2004 and led by Louise Blackwell and Kate McGrath, Fuel is a producing organisation working in partnership with some of the U.K.’s most exciting theatre artists to create, develop and present new work for all. www.fueltheatre.com

Tickets for I Am Not Myself These Days are priced at £16 for evening performances and £14 for matinee. Tickets are available to purchase from the Playhouse Theatre Box office, by telephone on 0151 7094776 or online at www.everymanplayhouse.com.