Review: Love Me or I'll Kill Myself

Faith Brandon's autobiographical exploration of a young woman addicted to love

★★★
theatre review (edinburgh) | Read in About 2 minutes
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Love Me or I'll Kill Myself
Photo by Alex Brenner
Published 08 Aug 2022

Toxic masculinity, toxic positivity and toxic love – this is the cheery trio of issues brought to the forefront in Faith Brandon’s autobiographical Love Me or I’ll Kill Myself. Detailing her doomed relationship with the elusive Juan, Brandon shows how all three of these toxicities manage to have such a chokehold on her, exploring what can go wrong when you hear what you want to hear and ignore the parade of red flags thrown up by the person you think is 'The One'.

Using examples from love songs and television (Brandon really spills the tea about Sex and the City’s ultimate ick, Mr Big), she deep dives into the restrictive concept of relying on just one person to make us happy in life. In one second funny – Brandon is a master of physicality and has her comic timing on point – in the next tragic, Love Me or I’ll Kill Myself veers dizzyingly from her deliberately overwrought heartbroken-by-Juan persona to a very real, very raw person who just wants to know why she’s been treated so badly.

Brandon breaks fourth wall after fourth wall as she dips into psychologist Arthur Aron’s romantic experiment, The 36 Questions That Lead to Love and tries to coax an audience member into falling for her. Through these specific questions, Brandon depicts exactly how she went from open-hearted and excited to finding herself in one of the darkest places she could be. It’s irreverent, it’s hopeful, it’s darkly funny: Love Me or I’ll Kill Myself is ultimately a balm for anyone who’s ever been a little bit crazy in love.