Tag Archives: Grace Gummer

A SUDDEN, DISTURBING TO DO LIST

★★★★

Edinburgh Festival Fringe

A SUDDEN, DISTURBING TO DO LIST

Edinburgh Festival Fringe

★★★★

“wonderfully vivid and authentic”

I really loved this show. Despite the intensity of a stuffy heat which looked upon its singular, opposing fan and spat in contempt, I never for a second felt a drifting sleep; even when the character did. The protagonist, and indeed sole character, of A Sudden, Disturbing To Do List, is Phoebe, played (and written) masterfully by Eleanor May Blackburn. She has OCD, and we follow a flare up inhabited by missed calls, increasing distress and a vague, potentially friendly monster called Fred. All the while, her titular to-do list just continues to grow, and its pressure intensifies.

Emily Browning’s direction imbues every moment with perpetual electricity. A lot of one person plays can, understandably, drift into slightly self-indulgent stasis, with the sole actor pausing in drawn moments of introspection as if their psyche is actualising itself for the audience to see. Here, however, the pace never stops unnecessarily, and each silence feels meaningful and pointed. This is a testament to both the writing and direction, working in tandem to engross you in Phoebe’s intimate, vulnerable, dynamic world. It is, admittedly, exhausting, but in a way that feels intentional; as Phoebe mourns her constant, inexplicable tiredness, we can’t help but viscerally empathise. She is eminently sympathetic as a character regardless of this sensory immersion, because Blackburn’s performance is simply superb. I was in awe of her energy but moreover her control throughout. There are so many beats she has to create; no plot point or character interruption provides structure, it’s entirely held and developed through her performance.

This is sometimes necessary, however, because the script at points lacks a strong narrative through line to maintain emotional concern. The script has plenty of motifs which are expertly weaved through the ebbs and troughs of Phoebe’s blurred experience – the ever-expanding list, the phone calls, the memory song – but these motifs never quite equate into a cohesive structure. Nevertheless, one’s attention is never lost or empathy undermined, and that, I think, is the central takeaway. There are elements underexplored and certain motivations lost amongst the repetition but it never detracts from the wonderfully vivid and authentic characterisation which Browning and Blackburn develop.

 



A SUDDEN, DISTURBING TO DO LIST

Edinburgh Festival Fringe

Reviewed on 13th August 2025 at Mint Studio at Greenside @ George Street

by Horatio Holloway

Photography by Shay Rowan

 

 

 

 

 

A SUDDEN

A SUDDEN

vA SUDDEN

Germ Free Adolescent

★★★★

The Bunker

Germ Free Adolescent

Germ Free Adolescent

The Bunker

Reviewed – 31st October 2019

★★★★

 

“a story which is both funny and moving, with fantastic timing and energy”

 

In Medway, Ollie and Ashley are about to celebrate their three month relationship. They are both sixteen. Ollie is certain that tonight is the night. He’s cooked her dinner, sent her flowers at school, which maybe he shouldn’t have done but anyway, he’s sure he’s done everything right. Only he’s paranoid that because of his leg, she won’t like him. Ashley isn’t certain she can go through with this. She’s the resident sexual health expert at school, four leaflets on every subject, always four, it’s got to be four. And what if they have sex and then – and then …

Ashley struggles with OCD. She thinks no one knows about it, and spends her life buried in her own coping mechanisms, doing her best to hide what she is dealing with. Written by Natalie Mitchell, this is a show about what normal is, or isn’t, about no one really being normal, whatever that means after all. It’s a show about young love, sex, and self-acceptance. And it talks about all this with humour.

Francesca Henry and Jake Richards as Ashley and Ollie respectively, are fantastic individually and lovely together, well directed by Grace Gummer. The relationship between them, with all its complexities, is believable throughout. They deliver a story which is both funny and moving, with fantastic timing and energy, underscored by a youth and vulnerability that the play is made by.

The two tell the story out to the audience, never quite together onstage even though they are onstage together, until the final scene, where they actually speak to each other directly.

Lizzy Leech’s set is split into four strips. A strip of that grey school corridor flooring they always use, especially in science corridors. Another strip of patterned wallpaper, grey bordering on silver. The third is dark grey, full colour, the last one grey tiles. Across its walls and the floor at various points in the piece, Kristallnacht is projected, letter by letter, spelt out as a coping mechanism.

The ending isn’t as strong or as believable as the rest of the play. Something about it feels too easy, too conclusive. But the journey we are taken on leading up to this point is an intelligent and engaging one, honest and lively as it talks about such an important issue.

 

Reviewed by Amelia Brown

Photography by Sam Wainwright

 


 Germ Free Adolescent

The Bunker until 9th November

 

Last ten shows reviewed at this venue:
Boots | ★★★★ | February 2019
Box Clever | ★★★★★ | March 2019
Killymuck | ★★★★ | March 2019
My White Best Friend | ★★★★★ | March 2019
Funeral Flowers | ★★★½ | April 2019
Fuck You Pay Me | ★★★★ | May 2019
The Flies | ★★★ | June 2019
Have I Told You I’m Writing a Play About my Vagina? | ★★★★ | July 2019
Jade City | ★★★ | September 2019
We Anchor In Hope | ★★★★ | October 2019

 

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