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Edinburgh Fringe Festival 2019: The Afflicted and Everything I Do review

Both shows are building strong word of mouth

Dave Pollock
Monday 19 August 2019 11:18 BST
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Olivia Barrowclough in groupwork’s ‘The Afflicted’
Olivia Barrowclough in groupwork’s ‘The Afflicted’ (Mihaela Bodlovic)

The Afflicted ★★★★☆ Everything I Do ★★★☆☆

For even the casual visitor to Edinburgh with any interest in eclectic and thought-provoking theatre, it would be possible to spend the entire three-week duration of the Fringe working through Summerhall’s programme and not get bored. For today’s round-up we return to the buzzing but eerie halls of the old Royal Dick veterinary school for two shows, which are building strong word of mouth.

The first is The Afflicted, a uniquely haunting piece by a brand new Scottish company called groupwork, who are here with the support of ThickSkin and Glasgow’s Tramway theatre and arts centre (although for long-serving Fringewatchers, the piece’s co-director Finn den Hertog also directed last year’s hit Square Go, from Fleabag producer Francesca Moody, which has earned a return run at this venue in 2019).

Devised by Jake Jeppson and the company, the play tells of the Hope River Girls, a true story from earlier in this decade in which footage of 24 young women from an upstate New York town were shared online as they experienced violent and unexplained twitches and spasms. As the case became a source of fascination to news media, so did the lack of explanation build a sense of frustration; no viral, chemical or psychological cause could be found, and as time went on the symptoms – for all but four of the women – went away.

Den Hertog and Vicki Manderson’s play is a gorgeous, atmospheric cacophony of styles and genres, as four actors – Grace Gibson, Amy Kennedy, Olivia Barrowclough and Felixe Forde – embody the four most deeply affected sufferers through powerful sequences of choreographed physical movement and live video in which sinister fright effects are used, while a video narration speculates as to the causes of their affliction, detailing Hope River’s involvement in historical witch hunts through to the psychological effects of present-day deindustrialisation.

The piece packs a whole lot in with style, flitting between psychological horror, true crime, the investigative tone of an Adam Curtis documentary, and a hint of The Crucible. It explores the human potential for groupthink, especially in a viral age, and shows us a reflection of our own sometimes unhelpful urge to seek and fashion answers for ourselves where none exist.

Taking place in the same room, Zoe Ni Riordain’s one-woman show Everything I Do (created with her sister Maud Lee) is also intrigued by the subject of human connection and interested in the use of different theatrical techniques to achieve its aim, although this is a much lighter and less busy piece. In fact, it’s essentially a performance of a live concept album by Ni Riordain – who has a beautiful, raw singing voice, which sounds particularly appealing when backed by her own scratchy electric guitar – as she undertakes increasingly sweat-inducing feats of physical theatre.

From promising beginnings in which she softly asks audience members whether, for example, they believe love can exist if you don’t know the person you’ve fallen for, or can’t understand their language, the set-pieces become ever more frantic; at first performing a song while trampolining dressed as Spider-Man, then dangling the trampoline precariously from a rope in the rafters. The lyrics hint at, if not love then certainly hope for a personal connection from a significant other, and Ni Riordain is a truly mesmerising performer. Yet it feels slightly disheartening that the playful physical aspects of the show don’t reveal as much as her music.

The Afflicted and Everything I Do are at Summerhall until Sunday 25 August

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