Supermarket driver John and property manager Anita spend their working days in Hull’s endless traffic, each trying to keep a step ahead of modern life.
Driven wild by substitute tomatoes and dodgy plumbing, tensions erupt when they collide on a busy roundabout, with devastating consequences.
Biting Point is a brand-new play about road rage, performed outdoors in a car park in Pocklington.
It mixes live theatre with original music and sound design, experienced through headphones.
This is a story that asks big questions about class, race and anger in Britain today.
It’s about the communities we belong to and how the constant pressure we’re all under can turn us into people we don’t want to be.
Biting Point is written by Sid Sagar and produced by Middle Child, funded by Arts Council England, Hull City Council, Garfield Weston Foundation and Sylvia Waddilove, supported by Pocklington Arts Centre, East Riding of Yorkshire Council, Selby Town Hall, Redcar and Cleveland Borough Council, The Culture House and Wykeland.
Biting Point was developed through the Without Walls Blueprint R&D with the support of the National Theatre Generate Programme, The Mono Box, Davina Moss, Tessa Walker, Jennifer Davis and Roy Williams.