Judi Dench: Need a trigger warning? Then don’t go to the theatre

Ralph Fiennes, right, performs in Macbeth with Jake Neads. The actor believes trigger warnings are unnecessary. He said: 'The impact of theatre is that you should be shocked and you should be disturbed'
Ralph Fiennes, right, performs in Macbeth with Jake Neads. Fiennes said: 'The impact of theatre is that you should be shocked and you should be disturbed'

People who require trigger warnings before theatre performances should stay at home, according to Dame Judi Dench.

The actress expressed shock that warnings about potentially distressing content had been placed on Shakespeare plays.

“Do they do that? My God, it must be a pretty long trigger warning before King Lear or Titus Andronicus,” she told Radio Times.

“I can see why they exist, but if you’re that sensitive, don’t go to the theatre, because you could be very shocked. Where is the surprise of seeing and understanding it in your own way?”

Shakespeare’s Globe issued “content guidance” earlier this year for a production of Antony and Cleopatra, warning that it contained “depictions of suicide, scenes of violence and war, and misogynoir references”.

The theatre also attached a warning to a 2021 production of Romeo and Juliet over its “depictions of suicide, moments of violence and references to drug use”, plus gunshot sound effects and the use of fake blood. Contact details for the Samaritans were attached.

Dame Judy Dench expressed shock that warnings about potentially distressing content had been placed on Shakespeare plays
Dame Judy Dench expressed shock that warnings about potentially distressing content had been placed on Shakespeare plays - DAVE BENETT/GETTY IMAGES

Dench’s comments echoed those made by Ralph Fiennes and Sir Ian McKellen.

Fiennes said: “We didn’t used to have trigger warnings. There are very disturbing scenes in Macbeth, terrible murders and things, but I think the impact of theatre is that you should be shocked and you should be disturbed.”

McKellen scoffed at a trigger warning on his most recent play, Frank and Percy, which mentioned strong language, sexual references, and themes of grief and death.

“I think it’s ludicrous,” he said. “I quite like to be surprised by loud noises and outrageous behaviour on stage.”

Dench is back on television in reruns of A Fine Romance, which originally aired on ITV from 1981-86. She starred opposite her real-life husband, the late Michael Williams.

A Fine Romance, featuring Dame Judi Dench and her real-life husband Michael Williams, is being rerun on Rewind TV. The show originally aired on ITV from 1981-86
A Fine Romance, featuring Dame Judi Dench and her real-life husband Michael Williams, is being rerun on Rewind TV. The show originally aired on ITV from 1981-86 - EVERETT COLLECTION INC/ALAMY

The sitcom will be shown on a new channel, Rewind TV, which launches next week.

Dench, 89, joked that her macular degeneration meant that she did not have to compare how she looked now with her younger self in the show. “It’s rather blessed I can’t see any more – I can ignore the bits I don’t want to look at,” she said.

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