Phoebe (Eleanor May Blackburn) likes a list, to the point where there are lists about making lists, and another list about crossing off completed items on previous lists. In some ways, therefore, the show is a difficult watch, especially as some of the lists are over-ambitious, or otherwise don’t really follow all of the letters in the SMART acronym – specific, measurable, achievable, realistic and time-bound. As it isn’t possible to do all of the things she wants (or, apparently, needs) to do in a day, this causes inevitable self-induced frustration.

A Sudden, Disturbing To Do List. Photo credit: Shay RowanA Sudden, Disturbing To Do List. Photo credit: Shay Rowan

More care needed to be taken with regards to sightlines. Some of the action takes place on the floor, on a very large pink surface, which was more than a bit problematic for anyone not sat in the front row in a studio space without a rake. From where I was sat, parts of the show felt like a radio play. For instance, I only found out after the show that there was a duvet on stage, though I understood she was tucking herself in for the night from what she said. It’s also – but I think this is deliberate – not the easiest of narratives to navigate, as Phoebe sometimes creates so many lists so quickly that it’s all but impossible to keep up.

It was, at least, a highly energetic show – I wonder if the large electric fans in the room that the venue kept running throughout the performance were more for the performer than the audience – and there was a disarming and convincing honesty about the challenges Phoebe faces. Rather than presenting a ‘nobody cares’ attitude towards her relatives, there are multiple voicemails from her concerned mother, with an increasing level of frustration as none of them are returned and all she (the mother) wants to know is if Phoebe is okay.

Rather like certain comedians who talk so quickly that I couldn’t follow, Phoebe bared her soul with such rapidity that it was all a blur. Perhaps it is a play for our times though, given the sheer number of younger people struggling with psychological wellbeing.

3 Star Review

Review by Chris Omaweng

Meet Phoebe: a journalist and the queen of lists. On her fridge, her whiteboard, all over her hands and… everywhere. One day a giant, fluffy monster appears under her duvet. Why then is she suddenly listening all the ways she might die?

Written and performed by Eleanor May Blackburn

A SUDDEN, DISTURBING TO DO LIST
Greenside @ George Street at the Edinburgh Fringe
11 to 23 August 2025


  • Chris Omaweng


    Chris has been reviewing for LondonTheatre1 since 2014. He has had a range of jobs in his working career across higher education, membership organisations and the private sector, and is currently administrator and office manager at the American International Church on Tottenham Court Road, a popular audition and rehearsal space for theatre companies. He is an associate member of the Institute of Administrative Management and a member of the drama section of the Critics’ Circle.



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