Type and hit ENTER

Commonly used tags...

Brighton Festival Brighton Fringe Brighton Pride British Sea Power Cinecity Lewes Psychedelic Festival Locally Sourced Lost & Found Love Supreme Festival Mutations Festival Nick Cave Poets Vs MCs Politics Rag'n'Bone Man Record Store Day Save Our Venues Six Of The Best Source Virgins Streets Of Brighton Street Source Tattoos The Great Escape Tru Thoughts Unsung Heroes
  • Home
  • News
  • Previews
  • Reviews
  • Features
  • Food
  • Tickets
  • Contact
  • Contribute
  • Advertise
  • Home
  • News
  • Previews
  • Reviews
  • Features
  • Food
  • Tickets
  • Contact
    • Contact
    • Contribute
    • Advertise
Reviews

Brighton Festival Review: The String Quartet’s Guide to Sex and Anxiety

May 24, 2018
-
Posted by Steve Clements

The provocative title could be a Woody Allen film and the promotional picture suggested a sensual experience but the end result leaned more to anxiety and nervous tension than cheap tittilation.

The fact that Cathy Tyson was appearing in this show was always going to mean it would be something special. Tyson along with Mairead McKinley, Miltos Yerolemou and Nick Harris performed a series of, mostly, monologue texts between and alongside two four-part pieces by Ligeti and Beethoven.

The anxiety was present from the offset with Yerolemou pacing through music stands and making eye contact with the audience before pontificating on the creation of original sin as The Heath Quartet and his fellow actors took the stage. With the cast assembled the actors reacted with nervous twitches and startled jumps to the quiet menace and discordant hurrying strings and violent shards of Ligeti’s well-named Allegro Nervosa.

Harris’s character mused matter-of-factly on his own impending doom and multiple phobias and how, in the womb, he was doomed to be born nervous. McKinley gave the most physical performance of the evening beginning with a detailed account of how to give a blow job to a well-endowed husband, which was followed by the second movement which felt like a post-coital woozy shimmer. Harris continued his musings on how to best administer tranquilisers and booze to block out fears of flying and existential thoughts, or quitting them to resurrect a voracious sexual appetite, all of which was quickly countered by an horrific account of sexual assault. Through each monologue the other cast members made use of their space to express their characters’ traits.

For ‘To Kill A Child’, Cathy Tyson bravely conveyed the normality of the day that a child is killed and how those left behind are changed irrevocably, with Ligeti’s final movement gently laying the scene to rest. The Beethoven piece came as a soothing comfort blanket with a more traditional quartet feel that felt closest to a sensual experience but it didn’t seem that anyone was feeling too sexy by this point. Tyson’s grieving mother kicked against the stereotype she’d been saddled with as McKinley clambered over the props in a negligee.

Director Calixto Bieito has sought medical help for his own psychological issues with sex, anxiety and music always looming large in his life and expressed them all too clearly in this work. The Heath Quartet delivered a fine performance, especially with the Legeti piece, and the collaboration with the actors worked well. The sex portrayed was loveless and mechanical at best, violent at worst, but the key to the show’s success was the depiction of various states of anxiety and neuroses played out against the two well-chosen pieces of music. A fascinating piece that probably led to some interesting post-show discussions.

Theatre Royal, Wednesday 23rd May 2018
Tickets available for Thursday 24th here

Photo by Erwin Olaf

Brighton Festival
May 24, 2018
Email
Steve Clements
Steve has been a SOURCE contributor since Summer 2010. Favourite quote - "There's no such thing as a sold out gig".
← PREVIOUS POST
Brighton Fringe Review: My Father Held a Gun
NEXT POST →
Brighton Festival Review: A Change Is Gonna Come
Mailing List

Recent Posts
  • Lewes Psychedelic Festival 2026
    Nov 13, 2025

    What finer way is there to beat the January Blues than drink some Harveys and bath in the glory of the Lewes Psychedelic Festival!

  • Kill Local Review
    Nov 12, 2025

    A dark American comedy about a family of hit-women grappling with life’s direction, containing some graphic moments: enjoyable, with potential for even more.

  • Play On short play night returns to The Actors, Tuesday 11th November
    Nov 4, 2025

    If music be the food of love and all that... More short-form theatrical treats from Play On

  • Top Tips For The Mutations Line Up
    Nov 4, 2025

    Mutations 2025 is upon us and Team Source has your back, with these hand picked recommendations of who to see.

  • ABC Lexicon Of Love Orchestra Review
    Nov 4, 2025

    Martyn Fry and Anne Dudley brought ABC's iconic album to life with a dazzling orchestral show.

  • Ghost Stories Review
    Nov 3, 2025

    A wonderful concept of eerie and scary stories of creeping dread from a bygone era, told by incredible actors in a compelling and authentic way.

  • Band Of Holy Joy Review
    Oct 29, 2025

    The New Cross indie legends really delivered with an electrifying performance, ably supported by Brighton's own Asbo Derek.

  • The Talented Mr. Ripley Review
    Oct 28, 2025

    Absolutely stunning in every sense: Ed McVey’s powerhouse performance leads one of the best stage adaptations to grace the stage in a very long time.

Website developed in Brighton by Infobo
Copyright © Brighton Source 2009-2023
Brighton Festival Review: The String Quartet’s Guide to Sex and Anxiety - Brighton Source