Stumped, Hampstead Theatre review - Beckett and Pinter, waiting for Doggo

 ★★★★ STUMPED, HAMPSTEAD THEATRE Beckett and Pinter, waiting for Doggo

An hour zips by in the company of two playwrights bickering on the boundary edge

Much of cricket comprises waiting – you wait on the boundary to hear news of the toss, you wait your turn to bat, you heed the call of your batting partner to wait to see if a run is on, you wait for the rain to stop. A friend once told me that he played cricket in order to make the rest of his life seem more interesting. There is something in that observation that would appeal to both principals in this play for sure.

Dear England, National Theatre review - filtering the national narrative through sport

James Graham's life-affirming new play locates hope and feeling amid the ravages of defeat

"Is everything loss?" the great Oliver Ford Davies once asked on the National's Olivier stage, in the closing moment of David Hare's masterful Racing Demon. That question informs another masterful play, James Graham's Dear England, newly opened in the same space.

Jacqueline Rose: The Plague review - tracing our response to tragedy

War and pandemic combine with new potency in this sharp work of plague writing

In The Plague: Living Death in Our Times, Jacqueline Rose makes a surprising pivot from her usual topics – Sylvia Plath, children’s fiction, Zionism, to name a few – to throw a spotlight on the Covid-19 pandemic. It was hard to process the experience while it raged, she argues, and it feels even harder to process things now, when normalcy has made its tentative return and there is all the more reason to forget.

Caleb Azumah Nelson: Small Worlds review - Ghana and London dance together

Music forms the beating heart of this lyrical novel of beauty and hardship

Small Worlds, the second novel from Caleb Azumah Nelson, is a delight: a book with a real feeling for sound and dance, and a sense of place from London to Ghana and back again. It’s a story of a first romance, the intricacies of family life, the importance of music, and the difficulties still faced by people of colour in the UK today. While it may not seem like it will set the world on fire, it’s a beautifully observed picture of the twists and turns of life and of love.

Andrey Kurkov: Jimi Hendrix Live in Lviv review - a city speaks its multitudes

A middling work from Ukraine's most famous contemporary novelist still hits home

Rock music helped to subvert the Soviet Union by glamorising youthful rebellion and the West. In the opening scene of Andrey Kurkov’s novel Jimi Hendrix Live in Lviv, a bunch of ageing hippies gather at night on the anniversary of the American guitarist’s death to pay homage to his “strange music that the regional Party committee didn’t understand, with its strange but, thank God, incomprehensible foreign lyrics”.

F**cking Men, Waterloo East Theatre - sex and not much else

★★★ F**CKING MEN, WATERLOO EAST THEATRE Sex and not much else

Modern touch-up of Joe DiPietro's seminal gay play is rollicking but lacking

“This audience is very diverse, isn’t it?” joked one of the audience members at Fucking Men at Waterloo East Theatre, a reworking of Tony-winning writer Joe DiPietro’s seminal 2008 play (itself a reworking of Arthur Schnitzler’s La Ronde, written in 1897).

A Brief List of Everyone Who Died, Finborough Theatre review - 86 years, punctuated by fun and funerals

★★★★ A BRIEF LIST OF EVERYONE WHO DIED, FINBOROUGH THEATRE New play that mines the bittersweet moments of a long life 

Jacob Marx Rice's new play mines the bittersweet moments of a long life

The family pet dies. It’s a problem many parents face, and when Gracie learns from her evasive father that her dog isn’t just gone, but gone forever, her five-year-old brain cannot process it and so begins a lifelong relationship with deaths, funerals and grief. 

Biscuits for Breakfast, Hampstead Theatre review - hunger and an aching humanity

Couple slide towards poverty in Hampstead Downstairs two-hander

Food is the centrepiece of Gareth Farr’s chilling new play Biscuits for Breakfast. Meals are described so delicately that the rich steams of them cooking are almost scented. But though they are prepared, shared and savoured with fondness, crucially, they are never physically there.

Susan Finlay: The Lives of the Artists review - the knotted threads of memoir and art

★★★★ SUSAN FINLAY: THE LIVES OF THE ARTISTS The knotted threads of memoir and art

Writing that turns with the unexpected sharpness that living demands

Benvenuto Cellini’s My Life (1728) is not the artist-biography to which Susan Finlay’s The Lives of the Artists pays its most obvious homage, but it appears to have followed its advice. All men of achievement and honesty, Cellini argues, "should […] write in their own hands the story of their lives, but they should not begin such a fine undertaking until they have passed the age of forty."

Solmaz Sharif: Customs review - a poetics of exile and return

★★★ SOLMAZ SHARIF: CUSTOMS A poetics of exile and return

Wit and tragedy co-exist uneasily in this collection of wandering verse

The language of poetic technique is perhaps weighted towards rupture, rather than reparation: lines end and break, we count beats and stress, experience caesurae (literally ‘cuttings’), and mark punctuation (literally ‘to prick’). Juxtaposition sets things in contradistinction; sonnets have firm boundaries; conservatively, form protects tradition. Even free-verse was never free: Eliot’s famous formulation included the caveat that a simple meter must always – or cannot help but – haunt the poetic line.