Review: Sick

A difficult subject gets a thorough examination in this meditation on illness

Sick

New Theatre

***

A daughter cares for her ageing mother in a scruffy house in Roisin Coyle's Sick, with little respite. Deirdre Monaghan is astounding as Ruth, whose paranoia, obstinance, confusion, and occasional flashes of manipulation, are articulated in an utterly believable manner as her deterioration is met with increasing desperation from her daughter, Orla (Áine Ní Laoghaire). Sick, like illness and caring itself, is intensely repetitive: the announcements about making tea; the visits from the public health nurse (played with well-judged authoritative tenderness by Jennifer O'Dea); the frustrated outbursts from mother and daughter alike. The tedium, claustrophobia, isolation and lapses in empathy are very real, yet create an arc that is ultimately quite linear in its realisation, but that will speak very sharply to anyone familiar with this difficult and depressing subject.

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Runs until Sept 20

Una Mullally

Una Mullally

Una Mullally, a contributor to The Irish Times, writes a weekly opinion column