They are not just plays to be watched; they are psychological spaces to be inhabited. Macmillan’s defining innovation is his treatment of the solo performer. Unlike a traditional monologue, which is a story told to an audience, Macmillan’s protagonists are often talking to someone specific—a child, a therapist, a lover who is not there.
In an era of spectacle-driven theatre, where screens flash and sets rotate, playwright Duncan Macmillan has done something quietly radical: he has looked away from the pyrotechnics and stared directly into the human face. duncan macmillan plays
The play abandons the quiet intimacy of Lungs for sensory assault. Using strobes, deafening noise, and video screens, the production recreated the torture room (Room 101) not as a metaphor but as a visceral, physical experience. Critics noted that Macmillan’s script did something the novel couldn't: it made the audience complicit. By forcing us to watch Winston Smith’s will break in real time, Macmillan asked a terrifying question: Would you hold out longer than him? They are not just plays to be watched;