The Press and Journal (Inverness, Highlands, and Islands)

A unique and deeply personal one-woman show looks at the issues behind what it takes to make a baby, writes

Susan Welsh

-

Many stage shows which come to Eden Court are based on real-life and personal events, none more so than, Egg.

This story is told in an unusual way as aerial artist and circus performer Sarah Bebe Homes narrates while at times dangling from silk fabric suspended more than 16ft above the stage.

Sarah, who hails from Maine in the United States but has lived in Edinburgh for the past seven years, said: “The show is performed using words, aerial acrobatics and live music and tells my personal story of me giving my friend Carol my eggs in order for her to have a child with her husband.

“She is 18 years older than me and we have a special relationsh­ip as she has been a mentor role model and more like a mother to me.

“She and her husband tried for years to conceive before asking me if I’d help them fulfil their dream of having a child. I was in my 20s when we went through the process which was successful and they now have a son aged 10.”

Carol and Sarah took the decision that this was something they wanted to be open about and not keep hidden.

“A lot of times women don’t talk about this but I wanted it to be something that was spoken about with a sense of joy and ease,” said Sarah. “People would ask how would we tell her son but it is so easy to describe it to a two year old. We’d say mummy needed a part and Bebe (Sarah’s middle name) gave her the part.

“Who made you? Mummy, daddy and Bebe. It’s so simple – he’s always understood this since he was old enough to talk.”

The idea to turn her experience into a show came to her a few years ago.

“It was always in the back of my mind that this was an amazing story, but I wasn’t sure how to tell it. In 2016, I wrote the script which resulted in this hour-long show,” said Sarah.

“I think the end result is a story that’s personal, and quite specific.

“There are lot of universal truths that people who don’t experience infertilit­y can understand. It’s really educationa­l and about the female productive system in a way that we’re not always informed of.

“Going through the process I learned so much about how my own body works – we think we know so much about women and their health but actually there’s so much about us that isn’t common knowledge and should be for us, while men also need to know about what is happening inside of us.

“We use projection in the show to get a visual image of what actually goes on and describe how IVF works as most STORY OF LIFE: As told by aerial artist and circus performer Sarah Bebe Homes

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom