The Scotsman

Coping with condiment help

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The man of her dreams has dropped her, again, and her mind’s gone to mustard. It starts with a grimy South London encounter by the side of the scummy Thames, he’s a racing cyclist who sees a spark in her, he’s got a scar like uncooked salmon, and she wants to ride him silly. Then he starts to behave in a fashion that drives her mad.

The playwright and performer Eva O’connor’s writing in this one-woman show, the story of a girl named E, is so scarring and funny, so laden with jealousy and hate and wickedness, you have to take time away and breath out, then pick it up a few verses later.

The stagecraft is starkly simple, the set could be a work of conceptual art, but delicious and shocking to watch, if not to eat.

E is harsh and vulnerable and cynical all at once, while her mother is wonderfull­y infuriatin­g, in an Irish home where mustard, in all its glorious potted forms, was the only English import.

The patriarchy, young and old, is getting it in the neck a bit at the moment, I’m told. Mustard is made about the boy but far from simple, or even one-sided; E turns on herself, then turns on him, and manages to be sexy, and smeary, dishing out revenge cold, with a bit of yellow stuff.

An award-winning writer and actor, O’connor, from Ogonnelle, County Clare, was at Summerhall last year with Maz and Bricks.

What a privilege to see this at the outset of the festival with just a dozen people in one of Summerhall’s best spaces. When you have

TIM CORNWELL

friends coming to the Fringe this year, and asking to see a circus show, tell them if you want to see a bit of real theatre, go see Mustard.

Until 25 August. Today 11:30am

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 ??  ?? 0 Award-winning playwright and performer Eva O’connor’s protagonis­t E believes in the yellow stuff
0 Award-winning playwright and performer Eva O’connor’s protagonis­t E believes in the yellow stuff

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