The String Quartet’s Guide to Sex and Anxiety, Brighton Festival review - molto nervoso

Calixto Bieito's melange of text and music delivers a mesmerising riff on desolation

Calixto Bieito has a reputation as a radical theatre-maker, and by any standards The String Quartet’s Guide to Sex and Anxiety is an unusual, genre-breaking piece; Bieito has described it as “like a symphonic poem for a quartet of musicians, and a quartet of voices”.

Tully review - Charlize Theron plumps for sentiment

★★★ TULLY Charlize Theron plumps for sentiment in fiery motherhood movie from Jason Reitman

Fiery motherhood movie from Jason Reitman ends up opting for fantasy

Inside Tully – or maybe inside Charlize Theron’s massively pregnant belly – is a darker, more daring film trying to get out. There are startlingly original moments, but it’s as if writer Diablo Cody and director Jason Reitman, creators of Juno and Young Adult, chickened out in the end and plumped for whimsy and sentiment.

4.48 Psychosis, Royal Opera, Lyric Hammersmith review - despairing truth in song and speech

★★★★ 4.48 PSYCHOSIS, ROYAL OPERA, LYRIC HAMMERSMITH Despairing truth in song, speech

Philip Venables' opera is now as classic as the Sarah Kane drama it sets

Depression, with or without psychotic episodes, is a rare subject for drama or music theatre - and with good reason: the sheer unrelenting monotony of anguish and self-absorption is hard to reproduce within a concentrated time-span.

Booby's Bay, Finborough Theatre review - a bit fishy

Play about the Cornish housing crisis isn't so swell

Carry on out of London past the Finborough Theatre and you hit the A4. Follow it east as it becomes the M4, take a southern turn at Bristol for the M5 and you’re in the West Country. Bude and Bodmin, Liskeard, St Austell, Padstow, Mousehole, Newquay and Newlyn. Out here are fishing villages, tin mines, granite churches, wide seas, surfers, pixies, low mental health indicators, and a great deal of unemployment.

Reissue CDs Weekly: Television Personalities

‘Beautiful Despair’, a collection of previously unreleased demos, is an uncomfortable listen

How much of someone else’s despair is it possible to take? What are the limits on putting a sense of desolation or isolation into a song? Can such naked expression be mediated by a glossy production or crowded instrumental arrangements which distract from the core essence of the song?

Out from the Darkness: painting out prison

OUT OF THE DARKNESS How wrongfully convicted Patrick Maguire found solace in art

Imprisoned as a child, his whole family wrongfully convicted of terrorism offences, Patrick Maguire found solace in art

When I was sent to an adult high security prison aged 14 all the normal colour, shapes and movement that I saw around me each and every day as a child disappeared. It wasn’t there. Prison does that; it’s all straight lines, hard on the eye, hard to the touch. There are square walls or oblongs but there are no triangles, no interesting shapes. It was a harsh environment and I was a child, the softness of that child taking all of that in.

The A Word, Series 2, BBC One review - is it turning into 'Emmerdale' with a twist of autism?

★★★ THE A WORD, SERIES 2, BBC ONE Is it turning into 'Emmerdale' with a twist of autism?

Return of the popular drama about everyday Cumbrian folk dealing with an autistic child

At its weakest The A Word is just Emmerdale with a twist of autism, especially when the drama swivels away from the little boy to focus on adult infidelities, a grumpy patriarch, sibling rivalries and comedy Poles wisecracking in subtitles.

Chris Packham: Asperger's and Me, BBC Two review - 'like an alien from another planet'

★★★★ CHRIS PACKHAM: ASPERGER'S AND ME, BBC TWO How the nature broadcaster copes with life on the spectrum 

How the nature broadcaster copes with life on the spectrum

Chris Packham, who devises and presents programmes about nature and animals, has described himself as "a little bit weird". This autobiographical documentary about himself explained what being on the autistic spectrum meant to him in particular in daily life and beyond.

Billion Dollar Deals That Changed Your World, BBC Two review - Big Pharma gets a diagnosis: it’s sick

★★★ BILLION DOLLAR DEALS THAT CHANGED YOUR WORLD, BBC TWO Jacques Peretti's look at the pharmaceutical industry was a bitter pill to swallow

Jacques Peretti's look at the pharmaceutical industry was a bitter pill to swallow

“What if the way people understand the world is wrong? What if it isn’t politicians that shape the way people live their day-to-day lives, but secret business deals?” This is the question at the heart – and at the start – of Jacques Peretti’s new three-part documentary series. 

The 'self-experimenter': Howard Brenton on Strindberg in crisis

HOWARD BRENTON ON STRINDBERG IN CRISIS Playwright introduces The Blinding Light at Jermyn Street Theatre

Brenton's new play 'The Blinding Light' tells the story of August Strindberg’s Paris breakdown

I wrote The Blinding Light to try to understand the mental and spiritual crisis that August Strindberg suffered in February 1896. Deeply disturbed, plagued by hallucinations, he holed up in various hotel rooms in Paris, most famously in the Hotel Orfila in the Rue d’Assas.