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Terry's: An American Tragedy About Cars, Customers and Selling Cars to Customers

 
Roger Kay Review by Roger Kay 4 Published: 6 Aug 2025 Pleasance Courtyard Show Dates: 30 Jul 2025-25 Aug 2025

It’s the late 90s and in a fictitious small town in Ohio, the sales team at Terry’s are trying to sell cars. It’s Memorial Weekend, the equivalent of a bank holiday weekend in the UK, with implicitly heightened sales opportunities.

A swirl of comedy, drama, music, song and physical theatre

The team are playing heavily on the Memorial theme: stars and stripes adorn the lot and they draw ever-more spurious patriotic links with their deals on vehicles. The lead salesman Tom refers to himself as ‘Major Tom’. They shoot in-house television adverts, featuring superheroes and injecting razzmatazz at each turn, all with the purpose of creating sales leads.

They are under pressure though. The eponymous business owner has set sales targets; if these are not hit, the team will not secure essential financial bonuses. The pressure is layered, however. While Terry may be unseen, he looms ominously over proceedings akin to Wilson in The Dumb Waiter. It will be more than missed bonuses if targets are not hit, job security being fragile. Sheila has a teenage son demanding attention. Henri needs time to study for his citizenship test, not to mention money to pay for legal fees. Kelly is new to the team and is, initially at least, clearly not the aggressive salesperson that will thrive in this high-octane environment. Leads need to be converted to sales, of course.

As the weekend dissipates, the number of cars needing to be sold per day inexorably rises. The stakes are higher for everyone now and the team seek to deploy increasingly more desperate measures. Arthur Miller, while writing Death Of A Salesman, noted the “hopeless hope of the day's business”.

David Mamet’s Glengarry Glen Ross depicted underhand sales techniques and there are some parallels in Terry’s: An American Tragedy About Cars, Customers, and Selling Cars to Customers. Tom drums into his team the “ABC: Always Be Closing” mantra. Yet, while some themes such as patriotism and consumerism are touched upon, this production centres on an examination of the American Dream.

All of the performances are consistently strong in this fine production. The BRILLIG company’s Lecoq training is evident, as the show is a fusion of comedy, drama, music, song and physical theatre. The pace is relentless, being a metaphor for the pressures the team face.

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The Blurb:

Memorial Day weekend. The US-of-A. The sales team at Terry's Cars and Automobiles is preparing to honour the fallen by slashing prices on some gently used, (mostly) American-made cars. But, the pressure's on. If Terry's team doesn't shift 66 cars by Monday, there'll be hell to pay. From award-nominated, Lecoq-trained company BRILLIG, Terry's is an absurd, sitcom-esque tragi-comedy featuring original live music, physical theatre and one very special balloon. There's no guarantee the team will make the target, but you're bound to have the ride of your life...