Some audience members wear hoods provided before the play. A light illuminates the entrance aisle in the darkened theater. A woman with long blonde hair, wearing a short red robe, and holding a telephone enters the stage from the back of the theater. The stage features a satin mattress and several telephone stands.
The woman is Pollie. She is a failed consultant who has a plan to make money quickly. She will take advantage of OnlyFans, a social media platform that allows content creators to earn money through subscriptions, tips, and pay-per-view messages. Pollie plans to monetize the internet by sleeping with a thousand men in one day, charging them, and broadcasting the events for a fee. The term Body Count refers to the numerical record of an individual’s previous sexual partners. The character Pollie is loosely based on Bonnie Blue and Lily Phillips, both of whom achieved the goal of sleeping with 1,000 men within 24 hours on OnlyFans.
Pollie drops her robe. She is nude. She quickly throws herself into her plan. Some audience members wear hoods to symbolize the internet’s anonymity. Thus, the audience becomes the viewers of OnlyFans. Pollie breaks the fourth wall and directly interacts with certain members of the audience.
Body Count is written and acted by Issy Knowles. She brilliantly portrays Pollie as well as some of the men who line up to have intercourse with her. Between the vividly acted sex acts, Pollie and the men tell the story of Pollie’s journey from her Catholic childhood to her failed consulting service to OnlyFans.
Body Count is part of SoHo Playhouse’s 2026 International Fringe Encore Series. The play was originally presented at the Edinburgh Fringe. This 55-minute production addresses topics that extend beyond exclusively British matters. This is more than an attempt to appeal to sensationalist emotions. Body Count raises the troubling question of whether one can separate the body from emotions. One walks away trying to answer this question.