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You’re Needy (Sounds Frustrating) review: An eerie, claustrophobic and thought-provoking show for an audience of one

Dublin Fringe Festival 2023: My interactive role is that of the weekly volunteer visit to help Carrie back to normal life

Youre Needy Sounds Frustrating by tasteinyourmouth image by Allie Whelan
No spa ever looked this creepy. Photograph: Allie Whelan

You’re Needy (Sounds Frustrating)

Pembroke Cottages
★★★★☆

My seat for You’re Needy (Sounds Frustrating) is atop a toilet lid in the steamy, candlelit bathroom of a Donnybrook cottage, the air scented with atomisers. I am an audience of one for this intense and interactive show from TasteInYourMouth.

Carrie (Laoise Murray, making an extremely physically demanding role look effortless) is in a bath strewn with flowers and seaweed, strikingly lit from within with LED lights. She’s wrapped in cling film. Her face is obscured behind a weird mask, her eyes replaced by cucumber slices. Is she having a beauty treatment? No spa ever looked this creepy.

Carrie speaks. There are disturbing monologues about body obsession, purging, meditation, sleeplessness, fasting and striving towards “purification”: collectively both a satire on the wellness industry and a demonstration of the negative impact of body image on young girls. Recorded voiceovers play phrases of wellness-cliche mumbo-jumbo at intervals.

My interactive role is that of the weekly volunteer visit to help Carrie back to normal life. She asks ad hoc questions. How often do I vomit? Can I light a cigarette for her? (I do.) What do I regret in my life? Can I give her a bowl of noodles? (I do.) Can she take a Polaroid of me? (No.) The bath water grows cold, Carrie’s ramblings louder.

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The whole effect is eerie, claustrophobic and thought-provoking, assisted by the excellent set, lighting and sound (the unseen Freya Gillespie, Sophie Cassidy, Lara Gallagher.) Theatre needs an audience to exist, though, and one audience member per show seems a costly return for such a collective production effort.

Continues at site-specific location, as part of Dublin Fringe Festival, until Saturday, September 23rd

Rosita Boland

Rosita Boland

Rosita Boland is Senior Features Writer with The Irish Times. She was named NewsBrands Ireland Journalist of the Year for 2018