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Anger over Epstein and Andrew fuels festival of 'female anarchy' 12 minutes ago Share Save Add as preferred on Google Ian Youngs Culture reporter BBC All the Rage combines performances and artistic installations in an empty office in the City of London Dozens of leading female writers are uniting to stage an ambitious theatrical event in a financial office to express their "seismic rage" over the Epstein files and honour his victims. Titled All the Rage, the rapidly assembled large-scale performance will be staged in 15 rooms of a former insurance building in the City of London from Thursday. "It's a huge office that was all about men and money, and we've peopled it with a kind of female anarchy, which feels really exciting," said writer Rebecca Lenkiewicz, who set up the project. Lucy Kirkwood, Penelope Skinner, Timberlake Wertenbaker and Gurpreet Kaur Bhatti are also among more than 70 UK-based playwrights taking part. They have each written short scripts and texts that will be used in performances and installations. They are inspired by the revelations from the files relating to US former financier and sex offender Jeffrey Epstein, and the themes of power, abuse and exploitation. Getty Images Parts of the performance are inspired by Virginia Giuffre, who said she was "a sex slave" for Epstein and his circle, and who died in 2025 Lenkiewicz has written a poem in response to the memoir by Virginia Giuffre, who detailed her abuse by Epstein and accused the then-Prince Andrew. Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor reached a financial settlement with Giuffre in 2022 and has repeatedly denied any wrongdoing. Lenkiewicz said she was "so angry" about what she saw as the lack of time given to victims and survivors in media coverage of the Epstein files. "Every day was full of the men and the money - so we thought it would be wonderful to have the female perspective on it," Lenkiewicz said. Penny Layden, Inès De Clercq, Clare Barstow and Melanie-Joyce Bermudez are among the show's cast "A lot of the language around sexual violence and rape is about shame, and we want to shift the shame, we want the guilt to be with the perpetrators," the writer added. "A lot of it is about silencing voices, be it Weinstein's victims or Epstein's victims, and [maintaining] this institutional silence so perpetrators can keep going. "We want to smash it, and we want women and all victims to feel like they have a voice, because to be silenced is just horrific." Epstein and other prominent men won't be portrayed directly by actors in the show. "Those men have had enough oxygen," Lenkiewicz said. A recreation of a 1990s teenage girl's bedroom is one of the installations featured in All The Rage Lenkiewicz previously wrote the 2022 film She Said about the investigation into Harvey Weinstein, and was the first female dramatist to have an original play on the main stage of the National Theatre in 2008. For All the Rage, the writer has also penned a letter to a man from her own past, which
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