Reviewing
Pork for
The New York Times, journalist
Grace Glueck wrote, "All in all, it's a cozy bunch; take out the fornication, masturbation, defecation and prevarication with which 'Pork' is larded and you might have a certain similarity to the juvenile gang in '
You're a Good Man, Charlie Brown.'" Journalist
Valerie Jenkins wrote for the
Evening Standard that "Pork's redeeming essence is that it finds itself so ridiculous; from start to finish it demands not to be taken seriously; it's Warhol people debunking themselves." Keith Nurse of
The Daily Telegraph likened the play to "the nearest thing to a theatrical
emetic ... It's a sort of avant-garde candid camera which takes a venereal and bizarre look at the backside of life. And the net effect is more
purgative than funny; inescapably boring rather than titillating." Musician
David Bowie was a fan of the play, and he was influenced by the London production. He later hired several of the
Pork cast members to join his management firm
MainMan. == References ==