Friday, May 9, 2025
MAKE A DONATION
Get in Touch
The Free Speech Union
Member Login
BECOME A MEMBER
  • Home
  • About Us
    • About Us
      • Company Staff
      • Founders & Board
      • Advisory Council
      • Legal Advisory Council
      • Writer’s Advisory Council
      • Scottish Advisory Council
      • Northern Ireland Advisory Council
    • The Freedoms We Defend​
      • Freedom of Speech
      • Freedom of Expression
      • Academic Freedom
      • Freedom of the Press
      • Freedom of Religion
    • Scotland
    • Northern Ireland
  • Latest News
  • FAQS
  • Resources
    • Informative Guides
      • Online Offences Related to Civil Disorder FAQs
      • FAQs About Scotland’s Hate Crime Act
      • FAQs About What to do if You’re Contacted by Police Scotland About a Speech-Related Complaint
      • Freedom of Speech Online FAQs
      • Freedom of Expression on Campus FAQs
      • How to Make a Freedom of Information Request
      • Gender Pronouns in the Workplace
      • How to Remove Non Crime Hate Incident from your Police Record
      • Navigating Social Media and the Workplace
      • What to do if You’ve Been De-Banked
      • Anti-Racism and Unconscious Bias Training
      • The Governments Consultation on Reforming the Human Rights Act
    • Briefing Documents
    • Press Releases
    • Media
    • Letters
    • Teaching Materials
  • Videos
  • Podcasts
    • Weekly News Podcast
    • Guest Interviews & Debates
  • Events
  • Campaigns
    • Labour’s War on Free Speech
    • Higher Education Act
    • Conversion Therapy Ban
    • Say No to Banter Bouncers
    • Time to Scrap Non-Crime Hate Incidents
  • Apply For a Grant
  • Shop
The Free Speech Union
Join Today

Trigger warnings for theatres should be scrapped, says Ralph Fiennes

  • BY Frederick Attenborough
  • February 12, 2024
Trigger warnings for theatres should be scrapped, says Ralph Fiennes

Pre-performance trigger warnings for violence, risqué language, loud noises, the 1970s, cancer, and even “distressing scenes of music, family and romance”, among other things, have become a commonplace fixture of modern theatre.

Those on the woke, safetyist left often argue that trigger warnings – or ‘content notes’ as they term them – simply allow people to make informed choices about what they see or read. Others say that the power of art to agitate, challenge and provoke is integral to its value, and that trigger warnings instill a fear of the unfamiliar in an audience’s mind.

As reported in the Telegraph, Ralph Fiennes outed himself as a member of the latter camp over the weekend, and has now joined with Sir Ian McKellen and Simon Callow in calling on theatres to ditch the trigger warning.

The actor, renowned for his roles in Schindler’s List, The English Patient and the Harry Potter film franchise, is currently starring in an immersive touring production of Macbeth alongside Indira Varma, and said the aspect of surprise is “what makes theatre so exciting”.

Speaking on BBC One’s Sunday with Laura Kuenssberg show, he was asked if attendees had gone too “soft”.

 “I think audiences have,” he replied. “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. I don’t think you should be prepared for these things and when I was young, we never had trigger warnings before a show.”

 “Shakespeare’s plays are full of murder and full of horror, and as a young student and lover of the theatre I never experienced trigger warnings like, ‘oh, by the way, in King Lear, Gloucester’s going to have his eyes pulled out’,” he added.

“Theatre needs to be alive and in the present. It’s the shock, it’s the unexpected, that’s what makes an actor in theatre so exciting.”

Earlier this year, a play about Queen Elizabeth, the late Queen Mother was given a trigger warning by a London venue because it is set in the 1970s, “and consequently reflects some of the attitudes, language, and conventions of the time”.

Shakespeare’s Globe in London also recently issued “content guidance” for its production of Antony and Cleopatra to warn audiences of “depictions of suicide, scenes of violence and war and misogynoir references”. (Misogynoir is apparently a portmanteau term for discrimination against women and black people.)

Last November, a production of Macbeth featuring David Tennant included a quasi-medical trigger warning for those who might be suffering from postnatal depression. “This production explores psychosis and contains suggestions of post-combat and postnatal mental health concerns,” the content note cautioned, before adding: “On stage there is blood, scenes of violence and depictions of death.”

Executives of London’s Globe Theatre received heavy criticism back in 2022 after warning ticket holders that a performance of Julius Caesar contained “depictions of war, self-harm and suicide, stage blood and weapons including knives”.

A repeat offender, the Globe Theatre also prompted controversy when it began issuing trigger warnings for trauma survivors, and sharing the Samaritans’ helpline number before performances of Romeo and Juliet.

Ralph Fiennes’s complaint about the seemingly inexorable de-risking of the arts came after Sir Ian McKellen last year criticised as “ludicrous” trigger warnings for his play Frank and Percy, which is about two retired men who meet on Hampstead Heath. Audiences at The Other Palace in London were told to beware “strong language, sexual references, and discussions of bereavement and cancer”.

Earlier this summer, the actor Simon Callow called for an end to the practice, after it emerged that Chichester Festival theatre had issued a warning about the “distressing” themes of “music; family; romance; the threat of Nazi Germany and the annexation of Austria” included in its production of kitsch family favourite, The Sound of Music.

Warnings of this kind, he said, demonstrated “a fundamental failure to grasp what the theatre is: not a model for behaviour but a crucible in which we look at what it is to be human”. The theatre is “not a pulpit, but a gymnasium of the imagination,” he added.

A recent meta-analysis carried out by Australian academics concluded that trigger warnings in some instances actually exacerbate anxiety. Citing a number of studies that “experimentally tested emotional reactions in the anticipatory period after giving a warning but prior to exposure to the warned-about content”, the researchers wrote: “This literature consistently demonstrates that viewing a trigger warning appears to increase anticipatory anxiety prior to viewing content.”

Previous Post

Military risks “moral disarmament” due to “lunacy of pushing woke ideas”, former flag officers warn

Next Post

Pensioner threatened with £2,500 fine by local Council for “transphobic” gender critical posters on her front door

Join the Free Speech Union

One annual investment for complete peace of mind.

As a member, you’ll have access to an array of resources and support, ensuring you can speak your mind without fear of being cancelled. Our experienced team provides guidance, support and – at our discretion – assistance with legal action. We will defend your right to speak your mind, however unorthodox your views, provided you don’t say anything unlawful.

Join Today

Make a Donation

Listen to our weekly news podcast

Listen to Our Past Interviews & Debates

IN THE MEDIA

News Archive

Join Our Community

Become a Member
Make a Donation

© The Free Speech Union Limited

Quick Links

Member Login
Privacy Policy
Terms and Conditions
Cookie Policy
Legal
FAQs
Facebook Twitter-square Youtube

Organisation Address

The Free Speech Union
85 Great Portland Street

London W1W 7LT
+44 020 3920 7865

Get in Touch
Media Enquiries email

Welcome to the Free Speech Union


If you’re looking for information and guidance, or in need of immediate help, please click the button below:
GET IN TOUCH
  • Become a Member
  • Make a Donation
  • Home
  • About Us
    • About Us
      • Company Staff
      • Founders & Board
      • Advisory Council
      • Legal Advisory Council
      • Writer’s Advisory Council
      • Scottish Advisory Council
      • Northern Ireland Advisory Council
    • The Freedoms We Defend​
      • Freedom of Speech
      • Freedom of Expression
      • Academic Freedom
      • Freedom of the Press
      • Freedom of Religion
    • Scotland
    • Northern Ireland
  • Latest News
  • FAQs
  • Resources
    • Informative Guides
      • Online Offences Related to Civil Disorder FAQs
      • FAQs About Scotland’s Hate Crime Act
      • FAQs About What to do if You’re Contacted by Police Scotland About a Speech-Related Complaint
      • Freedom of Speech Online FAQs
      • Freedom of Expression on Campus FAQs
      • How to Make a Freedom of Information Request
      • Gender Pronouns in the Workplace
      • How to Remove Non Crime Hate Incident from your Police Record
      • Navigating Social Media and the Workplace
      • What to do if You’ve Been De-Banked
      • Anti-Racism and Unconscious Bias Training
      • The Governments Consultation on Reforming the Human Rights Act
    • Briefing Documents
    • Press Releases
    • Media
    • Letters
    • Teaching Materials
  • Videos
  • Podcast
    • Weekly News Podcast
    • Guest Interviews & Debates
  • Events
  • Campaigns
    • Labour’s War on Free Speech
    • Higher Education Act
    • Conversion Therapy Ban
    • Say No to Banter Bouncers
    • Time to Scrap Non-Crime Hate Incidents
  • Apply For a Grant
  • Member Login
  • Shop