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Hot Gay Time Machine
Hot Gay Time Machine
from Wikipedia

Hot Gay Time Machine
Music
Lyrics
  • Zak Ghazi-Torbati
  • Toby Marlow
  • Lucy Moss
Book
  • Zak Ghazi-Torbati
  • Toby Marlow
  • Lucy Moss
Awards2017 Edinburgh Fringe Festival, Brighton Fringe Award

Hot Gay Time Machine is a British musical comedy cabaret show created by Zak Ghazi-Torbati and Toby Marlow, and co-authored and directed by Lucy Moss.

Background

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Hot Gay Time Machine was co-written by Ghazi-Torbati, Marlow, and Moss when they were students at Cambridge University.[1] The show debuted in February 2017 at the Corpus Playroom at Corpus Christi College.[2][3]

Productions

[edit]

Hot Gay Time Machine was performed at the 2017 Edinburgh Fringe Festival, winning the Brighton Fringe Award for Excellence,[4] and returned for a sold-out run at the Fringe in 2018.[5][6] The show's co-creator Toby Marlow performed in Hot Gay Time Machine at the same time that another of his co-creations, the musical Six, was on in Edinburgh.[7]

In November 2017, the show had a brief run at The Other Palace Studio.[8] From December 2018 to January 2019, it had a limited run at Trafalgar Studios in London's West End,[5] for which festive jokes were added to the show.[9] In August 2021, it had a limited run at Soho Theatre.[10]

Plot and format

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During the 75-minute show, Marlow and Ghazi-Torbati take the audience through "a musical retrospective of their lives", travelling back to the first moment when each of them realised they were gay.[11] Other moments they re-enact humorously include coming out and anxieties in the school changing room, through to their first sexual experiences and challenges in forming friendships with other gay men.[11] The show features two life-sized cutouts of Beyoncé,[12][6] and incorporates pop hits and dance anthems, as well as original musical numbers, including vocals and keyboard (the "hot gay music machine").[8][13] The finale for the show is a dance party with audience participation.[5]

Critical reception

[edit]

Reviews of Hot Gay Time Machine have been positive, with many reviews describing it as "hysterical".[9][11] In a review for Attitude, Steve Brown described the lyrics as "[veering] from witty to filthy" and the music as "instantly catchy and delivered with madcap energy."[5] Paul Vale also commented in The Stage on Marlow and Ghazi-Torbati's high-energy performance, and quipped, "they are bursting with gay pride, ready to party and appear to have no off-switch."[8]

The music has drawn comparisons with Six, with Alun Hood writing in Whats on Stage that "HGTM...offers a cursorily similar combination of catchy, derivative tunes overlaid with coruscating lyrics."[9]

Fiona Mountford of The Evening Standard emphasised that the show was recommended for ages 18+ for a reason, noting that Marlow and Ghazi-Torbati "are not going to spare the details or the blushes".[12]

References

[edit]
[edit]
Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
is a British musical comedy cabaret show created, co-authored, and performed by Zak Ghazi-Torbati and , with direction by . The production features the duo recounting key episodes from their lives through a fantastical time-travel framework, incorporating original songs, , and humorous anecdotes centered on their experiences as . Debuting as a hit at the Edinburgh Fringe Festival, the show gained acclaim for its energetic performances and witty autobiographical content before transferring to London's West End at Trafalgar Studios in late 2018. Toby Marlow's involvement extends to co-writing the successful musical Six, highlighting his contributions to contemporary British musical theatre. Produced under the Hot Gay Time Machine theatre company, the show has toured and returned for limited runs, such as at Soho Theatre, maintaining its appeal through multi-award-winning status and festive adaptations.

Origins and Development

Conception

Hot Gay Time Machine was conceived by Zak Ghazi-Torbati, , and as a satirical musical . The trio met during their university years and formed the Hot Gay Time Machine theatre company to produce works blending original musical numbers with humorous explorations of experiences. Ghazi-Torbati and Marlow served as co-writers and performers, while Moss contributed to the writing and directed the production. The show's concept centers on two "hot gays" using a time machine to revisit pivotal moments in gay male life, from to cultural milestones, delivered through energetic songs and sketches. Development drew from the creators' backgrounds in , with early iterations performed in fringe settings before its formal . Initial workshops likely occurred around 2017, aligning with a run at Studio that , where the format's verve and well-constructed comic songs were noted by reviewers. This foundational phase emphasized live performance energy over scripted narrative, prioritizing audience interaction and elements.

Key Creators

Zak Ghazi-Torbati and Toby conceived Hot Gay Time Machine as a semi-autobiographical musical reflecting their friendship and personal histories, with the duo serving as both creators and lead performers portraying heightened versions of themselves. Ghazi-Torbati, a British-Iranian performer, and Marlow, a and known for subsequent works like Six, collaborated on and original songs, drawing from their real-life experiences as gay men navigating youth and identity. Lucy Moss joined as co-author and director, contributing to the book's structure and staging the show's energetic, interactive format with dance and audience engagement elements. Moss, who later directed the hit Six, shaped the production's cabaret style during its initial development at the Edinburgh Fringe in 2017, emphasizing rapid scene transitions via the titular "time machine" prop. The creative team's prior collaborations, including university productions, informed the show's intimate, performer-driven approach, with Ghazi-Torbati and Marlow handling much of the musical composition alongside Moss's input on lyrical and narrative elements. Producers Kenny Wax and Paul Taylor-Mills supported the early staging but were not involved in core authorship.

Initial Workshops and Preparation

The initial development of Hot Gay Time Machine occurred at the , where creators , Zak Ghazi-Torbati, and collaborated as students to write and structure the show's satirical format featuring original comedic songs about key moments in gay male life. The trio, who met during their university years, focused on crafting energetic, Tim Minchin-inspired musical numbers and rapid costume changes to support the time-travel premise centered on the performers' personas. Preparation was coordinated through student theatre groups, including the Cambridge University Musical Theatre Society (CUMTS) and Eggbox Comedy, which handled production logistics such as venue booking and technical setup for the debut. Marlow and Ghazi-Torbati took on the starring roles of "Hot Gay Toby" and his counterpart, respectively, emphasizing live performance elements like audience interaction and vocal harmonies developed during rehearsals. contributed to co-authoring and early directing, laying the groundwork for the show's high-energy delivery before its formal Fringe outings. The process culminated in a limited three-performance run from February 2 to 4, 2017, at the Corpus Playroom during Lent Week 2, serving as a testing ground for the material ahead of later expansions. This university staging, held at 21:30 each evening, allowed the creators to refine the show's outrageous humor and musical timing in a small-scale environment typical of Cambridge's student scene.

Productions

Edinburgh Fringe Debut

premiered at the Edinburgh Festival Fringe on August 7, 2017, with performances running through August 27 at the Underbelly Med Quad venue. The production was staged by the theatre company of the same name, co-founded by Zak Ghazi-Torbati, Toby Marlow, and Lucy Moss, who developed the show following their collaboration at the University of Cambridge. The debut featured Ghazi-Torbati and Marlow as performers in a two-hander format, presenting a series of original musical numbers, sketches, and dances that satirically depicted pivotal moments in the lives of two gay best friends, including coming out, school experiences, and relationships. Conceived in a university dressing room, the show's concept originated from late-night writing sessions focused on gay-themed narratives, with the title serving as the initial hook. The Fringe run marked a turning point after earlier trial performances, where initial doubts gave way to commitment by the third show, leading to a sold-out engagement that validated the creators' vision and foreshadowed subsequent transfers. Critics noted the energetic delivery and well-constructed comic songs, though specific Edinburgh reviews from the debut emphasized its flamboyant, indulgent style as a fresh entry in musical comedy.

London West End Transfer

Following a sold-out run at the Fringe Festival in August 2018, where it received five-star reviews, Hot Gay Time Machine transferred to 's West End at Trafalgar Studios 2. The transfer was first reported on August 31, 2018, with formal announcement on September 14, 2018. The production premiered on November 27, 2018, and ran through January 5, 2019, as a limited holiday engagement emphasizing a festive adaptation with Christmas-themed elements, including nods to . Starring creators Zak Ghazi-Torbati and , with co-authorship and direction by , the maintained its core format of musical numbers and time-travel vignettes through gay history while incorporating seasonal updates for the West End audience. The West End version retained the intimate, low-production-values style from its fringe origins, forgoing significant upgrades in staging or cast size despite the larger venue, which some critics noted as a deliberate choice to preserve the show's raw energy. Tickets were available through ATG Tickets, positioning the run as a "gaytastic Christmas season" attraction.

Subsequent Runs and Revivals

Following the West End transfer at Trafalgar Studios 2, which concluded on January 5, 2019, Hot Gay Time Machine experienced a brief hiatus from major professional productions. The show returned for a limited revival at from August 9 to 14, 2021, as part of the venue's reopening season following pandemic-related closures. This six-performance engagement featured the original creators Zak Ghazi-Torbati and alongside director , maintaining the cabaret's high-energy format of autobiographical songs and sketches. Producers explicitly marketed it as the final outing for the production, with no plans announced for continuation. No further professional runs, tours, or revivals have occurred since the 2021 Soho Theatre engagement, though the show's creators have since focused on other projects, including the international success of Six.

Content and Format

Narrative Structure

Hot Gay Time Machine employs a non-linear, episodic structure framed as a time-traveling adventure through the personal histories of its performers, Zak Ghazi-Torbati and . The duo serves as both narrators and protagonists, using the conceit of a "hot gay time machine" to leap between key autobiographical moments, eschewing a traditional plot arc in favor of vignette-based storytelling delivered via musical numbers, comedy sketches, and direct audience engagement. Central to the format are high-energy songs recounting formative experiences, such as childhood realizations of , first romantic encounters, and encounters with societal prejudice, often exaggerated for humorous effect while rooted in the creators' real lives. This picaresque approach—jumping erratically through time without chronological progression—mirrors the fragmented, reflective nature of personal memory, prioritizing emotional resonance and performative flair over sequential causality. Interludes feature banter between the performers, reinforcing their real-life friendship and shared identity as the narrative's connective tissue. The structure culminates in a festive or reflective coda, depending on the production variant, but maintains an open-ended, revue-like quality that invites and audience interaction, ensuring each performance feels dynamic rather than scripted rigidly. This ethos, influenced by the creators' backgrounds in musical theater, emphasizes spectacle and over dramatic resolution, aligning with the show's origins in fringe festival settings where brevity and impact are paramount.

Performance Style and Elements

Hot Gay Time Machine employs a high-energy format characterized by satirical comedy, direct audience engagement, and fourth-wall breaks, with performers Zak Ghazi-Torbati and embodying heightened versions of their autobiographical personas as best friends navigating gay life milestones. The 75-minute runtime features no interval, maintaining relentless momentum through rapid transitions between musical numbers and choreographed segments. Musical elements dominate, with Toby Marlow accompanying on keyboard while delivering catchy, derivative pop melodies infused with influences from musical theater, gay icons, and anthems, often structured as witty, coruscating songs that blend humor and occasional emotional depth. Dance routines are aggressively enthusiastic and campy, incorporating fierce breaks, sensational , and group finale sequences that escalate into audience-involving dance parties, emphasizing physical exuberance over technical precision. Staging remains minimalistic and tacky, befitting its fringe origins, with a , pink microphone stands, a stool, flashing lights, and cardboard cutouts of figures like for visual punch, prioritizing performative flair over elaborate scenery. Costumes feature coordinated outfits in , and denim accented by leopard-print plimsolls, reinforcing the show's unapologetically aesthetic. Certain runs, such as the 2018 Trafalgar Studios production, incorporated festive adaptations with subtle Christmas motifs, loosely echoing through gay-centric brunches and seasonal satire without altering core elements.

Original Musical Numbers

The original musical numbers in Hot Gay Time Machine form the core of its structure, composed by and Zak Ghazi-Torbati and performed live by , with Marlow providing keyboard accompaniment. These songs advance the narrative through chronological vignettes of the creators' lives, from adolescent self-discovery to adult relationships, emphasizing comedic exaggeration and personal vulnerability. Performed in a high-camp style with integrated dance routines, the numbers draw on pop-influenced melodies and witty lyrics to explore gay male experiences, often blending with sincerity. One prominent number, "Couldn't Get It Up" (also titled "I Couldn't Get It Up"), depicts the performers' early sexual realizations, focusing on failed attempts at heterosexual intimacy that prompt acknowledgment of their . The song employs rapid-fire verses and harmonious vocals to convey frustration and epiphany, performed with theatrical flair including exaggerated gestures. "We Love to Look at Cocks in the Locker Room" addresses school-era attractions and communal male spaces, using irreverent humor to evoke the awkwardness of suppressed desires among peers. Reviews note its catchy refrain and role in building the show's escalating energy. A later sequence features a song about to the performers' mothers, adapted to the tune of "" from Disney's Frozen (2013), which underscores the relief and drama of disclosure while critiquing familial dynamics through . This number transitions into broader explorations of post-coming-out life, including university encounters and contemporary dating via apps like , though specific titles for these remain unlisted in public accounts. The originals collectively runtime approximately 60-75 minutes, prioritizing live improvisation over rigid scripting.

Reception

Critical Response

Critics have generally acclaimed Hot Gay Time Machine for its high-energy performance style, satirical wit, and original songs, often highlighting the charisma of performers Zak Ghazi-Torbati and . Attitude magazine awarded the 2018 Trafalgar Studios production five stars, praising the "side-splitting banter," "witty to filthy" lyrics co-written by , and "instantly catchy" pop-rock melodies delivered with "madcap energy," while noting the 85-minute runtime without interval left audiences desiring an extended experience. WhatsOnStage commended the show's clever lyrics, hilarious observations—such as a rendition of ""—and engaging audience participation in its festive West End transfer, though it critiqued the relentless pace as occasionally "heartless" and suggested the format suited a bar venue more than a theater. CurtainUp described it as an "over-the-top musical journey" through the protagonists' lives, emphasizing the duo's charm in breaking the , intelligent and relatable songs, and seamless blend of humor with sincere personal storytelling, all within a tight 75-minute structure. The British Theatre Guide lauded the autobiographical narrative's fresh camp appeal, superb original compositions by Marlow, and infectious choreography, positioning it as joyful and relatable for gay audiences, but faulted the Trafalgar Studios 2 venue for excessive volume, poor acoustics hindering vocal clarity, and a sparse set that failed to elevate the Fringe-originated production for West End standards. , reviewing the 2017 Studio run, characterized it as an "energetic satirical " with verve despite an old-fashioned approach, and well-constructed comic songs that underscored its appeal. Reception underscored the show's niche focus on gay male experiences, with consistent praise for its performers' personalities and musical craftsmanship, though minor critiques centered on brevity, intensity, and production limitations rather than substantive flaws in content or execution.

Audience and Commercial Performance

Hot Gay Time Machine garnered significant audience enthusiasm, particularly within LGBTQ+ communities, evidenced by its sold-out runs at the in 2017 and 2018. The interactive style, featuring direct performer-audience engagement such as personal interactions and participation, created a lively, inclusive atmosphere that reviewers described as warm and non-judgmental. This format elicited strong reactions, including and emotional responses, aligning with the show's high-camp recounting of personal gay life milestones. Commercially, the production performed robustly for a fringe-originated musical , transferring from to London's Trafalgar Studios 2 for a limited West End run from December 27, 2018, to January 5, 2019. It also featured a sold-out engagement at in 2018 and a brief residency at from August 9 to 14, 2021. While precise figures remain undisclosed, the multiple sold-out outings and award wins, including the Fringe Award for Excellence, underscore its viability and appeal in niche theatre circuits.

Awards and Recognition

Hot Gay Time Machine garnered recognition primarily from fringe festivals, winning the Brighton Fringe Award for Excellence after its 2017 performance at the Brighton Fringe Festival. This accolade highlighted the show's comedic cabaret style and historical narrative, performed by creators Zak Ghazi-Torbati and Toby Marlow. The production also received the Brighton Fringe LGBTQ+ Award in the same year, acknowledging its thematic focus on gay history and identity through musical numbers spanning eras from ancient times to modern events. Despite sell-out runs at the Edinburgh Fringe in 2017 and subsequent London transfers to venues like and Trafalgar Studios, the show did not secure major national theatre awards such as Oliviers or WhatsOnStage honors specifically attributed to it. These fringe successes, however, bolstered the profiles of Ghazi-Torbati and Marlow, paving the way for broader recognition in their later works.

Themes and Cultural Context

Autobiographical Elements

Hot Gay Time Machine draws heavily from the personal experiences of its creators and performers, and Zak Ghazi-Torbati, who conceived the show during their time at the , where they also met co-author and director while working on a production of Rent. The narrative frames their lives as a time-traveling journey, highlighting pivotal moments tied to their identities as gay men, including to parents and navigating adolescence. This autobiographical structure originated as a low-budget university project, produced in a week on approximately £400, evolving into a professional that retains its roots in the duo's friendship and shared anecdotes. Key episodes in the show reflect real-life incidents, such as the performers' experiences to their mothers, school locker room challenges, and the discovery of mutual support in finding a "gay best friend." One song addresses the anxiety of parental disclosure, described by the creators as evoking a " churning" sensation similar to scenes in films like , though reframed with an optimistic arc for dramatic effect rather than strict factual recounting. Another number humorously revisits an early moment when Marlow and Ghazi-Torbati kissed, initially left unexamined in their relationship but later incorporated as a lighthearted narrative pivot. Songs like "Couldn't Get It Up" further infuse personal vulnerabilities with camp exaggeration, blending vulnerability with to explore themes of sexual awakening and relational mishaps. While the production exposes intimate details—prompting concerns among the creators about over-exposure—the autobiographical content is selectively curated to balance specificity with universality, avoiding claims to represent all gay experiences. This approach underscores the show's origin as a vehicle for the performers' voices, transforming private milestones into a 75-minute that prioritizes emotional authenticity over verbatim . The result emphasizes causal connections between personal history and , presented through musical numbers that prioritize humor and resilience.

Representation of Gay Identity

Hot Gay Time Machine portrays gay identity via a satirical structure that simulates to revisit formative experiences in gay male development, such as and early romantic encounters. The narrative frames these episodes as universal milestones, delivered through high-energy performances that emphasize emotional highs and lows without romanticizing hardship. Co-creators Zak Ghazi-Torbati and , drawing from their personal backgrounds, infuse the show with confessional elements that highlight the intersection of with —Ghazi-Torbati's Iranian-Welsh roots adding layers to depictions of familial and societal tensions. Original musical numbers employ exaggerated camp and irony to dissect stereotypes, such as obsessive crushes or app-based hookups, presenting gay life as absurd yet resilient rather than victimized. This approach contrasts with more earnest LGBTQ+ media by prioritizing self-deprecating humor over didactic messaging, allowing audiences to engage with gay identity's complexities through laughter and recognition of shared absurdities. Critics note the show's old-fashioned verve modernized for contemporary storytelling, avoiding solemnity in favor of energetic subversion.

Broader Societal Debates

The show's exuberant, camp-infused portrayal of gay life milestones—such as , first relationships, and sexual exploration—intersects with ongoing debates about the role of in representation. Critics have observed that Hot Gay Time Machine draws on longstanding British comedic traditions of camp and , which some view as reclaiming subversive elements of gay culture, while others argue they risk reinforcing reductive tropes amid calls for more nuanced depictions. For instance, the production's satirical songs and dance routines, including numbers addressing and , highlight tensions between performative flamboyance and authentic vulnerability, reflecting broader discussions on whether such humor normalizes or exoticizes gay experiences. Creators and Zak Ghazi-Torbati have positioned the show as a personal exploration of narratives, providing a platform for underrepresented voices in musical theater at a time when diversity in representation remains contested. This aligns with societal conversations on the evolution of visibility post-legalization of in the (), where works like this are praised for celebrating joy and resilience but scrutinized for potentially prioritizing entertainment over deeper engagement with issues like or stigma in communities. No significant controversies have arisen from the production, suggesting its lighthearted approach evades polarized backlash, though it contributes to dialogues on balancing assimilationist narratives with subversive camp in an era of mainstream LGBTQ+ integration.

References

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