
One-woman play will explore explosion of extreme sex acts on OnlyFans
Body Count explores the phenomenon and why it creates so much fury.
'I am fascinated by the amount of emotion extreme sex acts seem to garner from everybody,' Knowles told the Sunday National.
READ MORE: Kneecap responds to 'legend' who streamed their Glastonbury set after BBC blackout
'They make people so angry but I feel these kinds of events deserve a bit more critical analysis and a bit more compassion.'
Knowles pointed out that while there are just a handful of women, such as Bonnie Blue and Lily Phillips, who have been posting these videos on the OnlyFans website, there are thousands of men queuing up to have sex with the women and many thousands,
if not millions, paying to view the end result.
'It is men who have created this market but it is of course the women who are vilified,' said Knowles.
She is no stranger to the Fringe, having written and performed in her one-woman hit Model Behaviour in 2018 which was later developed into a TV pilot and picked up by Downton Abbey producer Carnival Films. The script topped the Brit List in 2022 and Knowles's debut feature, a horror called Hungry Mouth, is in development with Meduza, who produced the Robert Eggers horror The Witch.
In the meantime, she is thrilled to be returning to the Fringe with the new show which will be staged at the Pleasance.
(Image: Body Count)
'I've been dying to take a play back to the Fringe but I've discovered that in order for me to write a one-woman show, I have to be seething with rage about something,' said Knowles.
'That's the only thing that can get me back on stage because it is incredibly intimidating to be on stage on your own for an hour. So I just had to land on something that made me angry enough.'
Despite her anger, she still hesitated about pitching the idea.
'I'm not a sex worker and I struggled with the ethics of whether it was even my place to talk about this and I am still thinking it is going to piss off the right and the left,' Knowles said.
'However, I am proud of what I've ended up with and I think it is going to be a really funny, challenging show. I just want to make people think a bit deeper about stuff like this and look past what is being thrown in our faces by a patriarchal society in a very right-wing world.'
The finished show is not the one she set out to write, as she became more interested in society's response to the phenomenon during the research and writing.
'There is all this panic around OnlyFans and sex work but OnlyFans for sex workers has been a really good invention because it cuts out pimps or managers,' said Knowles. 'It's been positive for the sex-working community but there is a moral panic around it.
'Men are always asking how we can stop women creating an OnlyFans page when the question is why so many women feel it is the only way to garner a lot of financial wealth in their lifetime.'
She said that instead of asking how we can stop women selling on to the website, we should be looking at society and picking up on the fact that there is still a glass ceiling, there is still a gender pay gap.
'It is still a patriarchal society that limits women's growth and potential,' said Knowles.
'Also what is it about sex that as a society we feel so strongly that women don't know their own sexual limits and we feel the need to control the sex women have and the amount they have?'
As well as the extreme sex acts phenomenon, the finished play puts a spotlight on the rise of the right-wing and incel culture.
And having been single for the past couple of years after a four-year relationship, Knowles said she personally had felt the effects of people like Andrew Tate becoming more popular and misogyny becoming more normalised.
'Misogyny is on the rise and we have evidence in real time with reproductive rights being stripped away and trans rights being eroded,' she said.
'In the conversations I am having with men, I can see how comfortable many have become in their misogyny. Obviously it is not all men but I have never had so many men come over to me and
ask me what my body count is straight away. As if it is any indication of what kind of person I am. It just feels like misogyny is on the rise and it is not a great time to be a woman.'
Knowles said the recent OnlyFans events highlight the lack of connection in society and the trend to objectify women to the point that men can queue up for one-sided pleasure and not think much about it.
But while she believes it is not a great time to be a woman, Knowles also feels it is not a great time to be a man.
'Underneath all of this is this desire to connect,' she said. 'Men don't have the same community that women create and I think the success of these OnlyFans events is a sign of that.
'In writing the play, I wanted to get into the heads of both sides. I really wanted to humanise and understand more deeply the women who are in there and the men who are queuing up to take part.
'I wanted to find something in this that is actually a bit hopeful, as bizarre as that sounds, and if people want to find out where it ends up, they will have to come and see.'
Body Count premieres at the Pleasance Courtyard and runs from July 30 to August 25
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Scotsman
5 hours ago
- Scotsman
Fringe shows at the Edinburgh Playhouse including Bill Bailley, Dead Ringers and singer David Gray
Edinburgh Playhouse has revealed its Fringe schedule, with stars including singer David Gray, actress Miriam Margolyes and comedians Bill Bailey and Jason Byrne performing there in August. Sign up to our daily newsletter Sign up Thank you for signing up! Did you know with a Digital Subscription to Edinburgh News, you can get unlimited access to the website including our premium content, as well as benefiting from fewer ads, loyalty rewards and much more. Learn More Sorry, there seem to be some issues. Please try again later. Submitting... The famous Capital theatre kicks off its Fringe programme with three Forth on the Fringe shows on Friday, August 1 and Saturday, August 2. The line-up on Friday at 8pm includes Jason Byrne, Connor Burns, Mark Nelson, Kai Humphries, Kevin Quantum, Jess Robinson, Circa, The Black Blues Brothers, Jonny Woo, Gravity & Other Myths, Grace Mulvey and Laser Kiwi. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad On Saturday at 1pm you can see Miriam Margolyes, Hal Cruttenden, Patrick Monahan, Cirque Kalabanté, Ben Hart, Baby Wants Candy, MC Hammersmith, Circus – The Show, Footballers' Wives – The Musical, Christopher Macarthur-Boyd, Mat Ricardo and Lola. And later on that day, at 8pm, Alan Davies, Susie McCabe, Paul Sinha, Craig Hill, Rosco McClelland , Miss Frisky, Gareth Waugh, Tape Face, The Genesis, Chris Turner, Dangerous Goods and Swamplesque will take to the stage at the Playhouse. Tickets for these shows, available from £28, can be found here. Some of the shows on at Edinburgh Playhouse in August for this year's Fringe festival. | ATG Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad Marking its 25th anniversary, Dead Ringers will be on at the Playhouse on Sunday, August 17. Starring long-standing cast members Jon Culshaw, Jan Ravens, and Lewis MacLeod, the show will take you on a trip through a quarter century of classic sketches and unrivalled impressions, alongside the razor-sharp topical humour which has become the series' trademark. Tickets for this special anniversary show can be found here. Nick Mohammed is Mr Swallow: Show Pony, is on at the Playhouse on Friday, August 22. After a sell-out 2023 UK tour and extended run in London's West End, Taskmaster loser and Ted Lasso star Nick Mohammed returns as his critically acclaimed alter-ego Mr Swallow with a brand new show. Age guidance 14+, tickets available here. Fellow comedian Bill Bailey brings his Thoughtifier show to the Playhouse on August 23 and 24, with tickets available here. A magical, musical mystery tour of the human mind, along with some other pressing matters about whales, biophilia, unrequited love and other thoughts. Amplified With Music. Welcome to Thoughtifier! Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad And chart-topping singer songwriter David Gray will perform at the Playhouse on Monday, August 25, tickets available here. David Gray is back doing what he does better than almost anyone, and fans of complex, serious, lyrical songcraft should rejoice. Dear Life may be the deepest, strangest, loveliest album this pioneering British singer-songwriter has ever delivered. Years in the making, it is an album of emotional crisis and resolution, mortality and faith, reality and illusion, love and heartbreak, magic, science, loss and acceptance.


Edinburgh Reporter
5 hours ago
- Edinburgh Reporter
Fringe 2025 – show goes on for US teenagers despite the death of their writer
Fringe veteran Paul Andrew Perez was in the midst of writing a new teenage pop rock musical for the Edinburgh Fringe when he died in April. The director and theatre department head, based in Florida, was working with 15 to 17-year-old students from St John's Country Day School, Jacksonville, on a production called An Idiot's Guide To Breaking Your Own Heart. Just a couple of songs were complete and workshopping on the script had still to begin, however, flights, accommodation and a venue had been booked. And more important than that – if there was one thing Paul would have wanted it would have been for the show to go on … and it will. Todd Twining, fellow theatre teacher at St John's and show musical director, said: 'Paul's death was such a shock. He was so liked and admired by the students. We thought we'd just have to cancel – without Paul it felt like there could be no show. 'But we realised that we just had to finish what he'd started. Paul adored the Fringe and loved giving generations of young people the unique experience of performing there and being part of the world's greatest performing arts festival. 'Since then the students, their parents and everyone else have worked flat out to get the show finished, to rehearse, to prepare and make sure we can go on stage. And the support we've had from people in Edinburgh, especially our venue, has been just amazing.' The result is true to Paul's spirit – a production which allows young people to explore and express the pressures they face. These include the need to fit in, look perfect, get straight As, go to the right parties, fulfill their parents' dreams – to 'live their best lives' every minute of the day. It follows the story of Simon Walker who has a school assignment to write a manual on 'How to be You', to demonstrate whether you are a product of nature or nurture. The final part of the project is to answer two questions: What do you contribute to society? Does your life have meaning? Together with his friends, Quentin Bean and Sandy Dachowski, Simon relives the high and low points of his life. Paul Perez Todd said: 'Paul was an endlessly enthusiastic champion of young people and the ability of the performing arts to express dreams and fears and to change lives and society for the better. 'This musical is all about the issues confronting young people every day of their lives. 'The pressure they feel is insane – the absurd idea that they need to know where their life is headed when they are still growing, developing and getting to know who they are. 'Their fear of failure causes paralysis and deprives them of the ability to explore life. But failure is not an end, rather it is a beginning, that is something the arts teach us.' The show, presented as a collaboration between the school and Paul's Infinity Repertory Theatre Company, will run from 1-6 August. In 2018 The Edinburgh Reporter said the company had 'a reputation for presenting quality new work by talented young people. Three Weeks in Edinburgh praised its musical Geek for toe-tapping bluegrass-style tunes and the exceptional young cast'. Darren Neale, Greenside Venues director, said: 'Getting The Idiot's Guide to Breaking Your Own Heart on stage this year has been nothing short of extraordinary. 'In the face of heartbreak and uncertainty, these young performers and their creative team have shown remarkable resilience and dedication. 'Paul Perez was a passionate advocate for the transformative power of theatre, and this production is a beautiful tribute to his legacy. We're honoured to host a show that so clearly embodies the spirit of the Fringe.' Like this: Like Related


Daily Record
7 hours ago
- Daily Record
Park and Ride options for Oasis at Murrayfield as hotly-anticipated gigs near
Getting to the gig will be busy, but there are a few Park and Ride options available. Oasis' Murrayfield gigs are just a couple of weeks away, so it's high time fans started planning how to get there. With over 67,000 revellers attending each of the brothers' three gigs in Edinburgh, which are taking place on August 8, 9 and 12, it's safe to say that traffic will be BUSY. And what's more, the Scottish capital will already be overrun with crowds due to Edinburgh's Fringe Festival, which coincides with the three Oasis tour dates. We've outlined how to get to the gig by public transport and what road closures fans can expect, along with which items are allowed or prohibited from the venue. But another way of getting to the stadium to consider is making use of Edinburgh's many Park and Ride services. Those brave enough to tackle the traffic may wish to opt for a Park and Ride service over driving the whole way to the gig to save themselves from the worst of the jams. Here's everything you need to know about getting to the gig via Park and Ride. Park and Ride options to get to Murrayfield Stadium Citylink is offering several special bus services from various cities, including some Park and Ride spots. Halbeath Park and Ride and Kinross Park and Ride will see these extra Citylink services that will deliver you straight to Murrayfield's doorstop. But because these are special additional services, Citylink has warned that NEC cards such as the Young Scot Card or Over 60s concession card will not be valid on these particular buses. Ingliston Park and Ride is a great option for those taking the M8 from Glasgow or elsewhere in the central belt, due to its proximity to the motorway. The Edinburgh tram can take fans straight to Murrayfield from there in under 20 minutes, or the Airport Express bus also goes through Ingliston and stops outside the stadium. Also just off the M8, Hermiston Park and Ride is another option, from where you can hop a number 25 bus to Restalrig. If you get off on Gorgie Park Road, you're a mere 13 minute walk from Murrayfield, according to Google Maps. Other Park and Ride facilities in Edinburgh include Straiton and Newcraighall, but these both involve longer and more complicated bus routes to get to Murrayfield. Of all the available options, Ingliston or a specialist Citylink Park and Ride service are the quickest and most convenient, but beware to give yourself plenty of time to get to and from the gig as things are guaranteed to be extremely busy. With so many fans expected to descend on Murrayfield, and with Edinburgh already seeing thousands of holidaymakers and crowds for Fringe, planning out your journey to and home from Oasis is vital to avoid frustrating delays and traffic. Join the Daily Record WhatsApp community!