82. Scream Queen

82. Scream Queen

From Sideways by BBC Radio 4

March 3, 2026 · 29 min

About this episode

The episode explores the journey of Djamila Azzouz from musical theatre to finding empowerment through screaming amidst societal expectations.

As a young girl, Djamila Azzouz loved performing - musical theatre, choirs. She loved nothing more than the thrill of entertaining an audience. But in her teenage years, mental health issues made her shy away from a career that would put her in the spotlight. When even singing itself became difficult, she found a surprising alternative: screaming. But as a woman, her raw, unfiltered expression often clashed with social expectations, even on the metal music scene. Matthew Syed explores how, throughout history, women's screams have frequently been tightly controlled, accepted only in specific contexts. And considers whether there are signs of a shift towards greater acceptance and empowerment through screaming, even in horror, where traditionally scream queens have conveyed fear, pleasure, or vulnerability. With Ithaca’s vocalist Djamila Azzouz, vocal coach Melissa Cross, behavioural and data scientist Professor Pragya Agarwal, and Elizabeth Erwin, researcher in film and media at LeHigh University, Pennsylvania. Presenter: Matthew Syed Producer: Julien Manuguerra-Patten Editor: Katherine Godfrey Sound Design and Mix: Mark Pittam Theme music by: Ioana Selaru A Novel production for…

People in this episode

Host: Matthew Syed

Guest: Djamila Azzouz

Topics covered

  • mental health
  • screaming
  • women's empowerment
  • music
  • social expectations
  • horror

Keywords

  • screaming
  • mental health
  • women's rights
  • music scene
  • horror
  • empowerment

Mentioned in this episode

Organizations: Ithaca, BBC Radio 4

Books & works: They Fear Us, Impulse Crush, Cremation Party

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