Rose Matafeo, Arcola Theatre review - Starstruck star muses on love

★★★★ ROSE MATAFEO, ARCOLA THEATRE Starstruck star muses on love

Kiwi comic on dating, phone apps and Taylor Swift

Rose Matafeo knows how to make an entrance, as she enters the stage with a choreographed dance. She's useless at ending things, she says – shows, relationships – so she's going to start On and On and On with something memorable. 

She doesn't need to, as this affable Kiwi has the audience hooked straight away in her first stand-up since her success with romcom Starstruck, 2018's Horndog and her appearance in 2019 edition of Taskmaster.

Don't Destroy Me, Arcola Theatre review - a theatre history curio

★★ DON'T DESTROY ME, ARCOLA THEATRE A theatre history curio

Forgotten play by the author of Tom & Viv is realistic, but lacks dramatic focus

British Theatre abounds in forgotten writers. And in ones whose early work is too rarely revived. One such is Michael Hastings, best known for Tom & Viv, his 1984 biographical drama about TS Eliot and his wife Vivienne, so in theory it’s great to see this playwright’s 1956 debut, Don’t Destroy Me, being revived at the Arcola by director Tricia Thorns’ Two’s Company, whose remit is the discovery and resuscitation of long-ignored work.

Under the Black Rock, Arcola Theatre review - political thriller turns soapy

★★ UNDER THE BLACK ROCK, ARCOLA THEATRE Political thriller turns soapy

Evanna Lynch heads up wan troubles-themed dark comedy

“Darkly comic thrillers” (as they like to say) set in Ireland tracking how families, or quasi-families, fall apart under pressure are very much in vogue just now. Whether The Banshees of Inisherin will garner the Oscars haul it hardly deserves remains to be seen, but set 60 years later in a different Civil War, I suspect Under The Black Rock will not be troubling theatre’s award ceremonies next year.  

Dinner with Groucho, Arcola Theatre review - often opaque

Frank McGuinness's new play about T S Eliot and Groucho Marx is a poetic puzzle

The set at the Arcola for Frank McGuinness’s Dinner with Groucho naturally features a table with two place settings and a backdrop of clouds in a blue sky. Overhead are pendant globe lights that will transform into stars. But the floor is a key feature too, covered in sawdust.

The Dance of Death, Arcola Theatre review - hate sustains a marriage in new version of Strindberg classic

★★★ THE DANCE OF DEATH, ARCOLA THEATRE Hate sustains a marriage in new version of Strindberg classic

Fine acting and bleak humour barely ameliorates a grim slog through a broken relationship

Rebecca Lenkiewicz's adaptation of August Strindberg's 1900 paean to the power of loathing over loving uses the now familiar trick of dressing characters in period detail while giving them the full range of the 21st century's argot of disdain and distress.

The Daughter-in-Law, Arcola Theatre review - searing simplicity

★★★★ THE DAUGHTER-IN-LAW, ARCOLA THEATRE Searing simplicity from DH Lawrence

DH Lawrence's tragically inflected 1913 tale of family relationships powerfully told

There’s a stark power to Jack Gamble’s production of DH Lawrence’s The Daughter-in-Law, which has transferred to the Arcola’smain stage after an acclaimed opening run in the venue’s downstairs studio last May.

Stop and Search, Arcola Theatre review - a murky view of modern-day Britain

Three interconnected stories struggle to add up

A road tunnel through the Alps, stretching underneath Mont Blanc: Tel (Shaun Mason) is ploughing home to London in a borrowed Merc, strung out and sleepless and having been to see his other girl in Monte Carlo. The Arcola Theatre premiere of Stop and Search finds this white van man incarnate returning to his trouble and strife with a bizarre cargo of beaver hats in the back. 

Thebes Land, Arcola Theatre - meta-theatre at its most thrilling

THEBES LAND, ARCOLA THEATRE Meta-theatre at its most thrilling

Off West End hit returns for a deserved encore

Thebes Land returns to the Arcola Theatre as part of the wider CASA Latin American Theatre Festival, following a short 2016 run that resulted in an Off West End Award, or Offie, for Best Production. Director Daniel Goldman's pinpoint translation of Franco-Uruguayan playwright Sergio Blanco's original text proves a tight, exhilarating two-hander on themes of violence and the ethical boundaries of theatre itself.

Richard III review - Greg Hicks gruesomely impressive as power-crazed ruler

★★★ RICHARD III, ARCOLA THEATRE Arch machination and misogyny in its hero lift an otherwise under-nuanced production

Arch machination and misogyny in its hero lift an otherwise under-nuanced production

There may never have been a time when Shakespeare’s Richard III did not have contemporary relevance, but surely never more than it does right now. And it’s to the credit of director Mehmet Ergen that this production doesn’t go to town on it, but instead leaves the audience to make its own connections.