Manic Street Creature, Southwark Playhouse review - songs in the key of a traumatised life

★★★ MANIC STREET CREATURE, SOUTHWARK PLAYHOUSE Songs in the key of a traumatised life

Maimuna Memon sings of the pain mental illness brings, and not just to the person it afflicts

There’s an old-fashioned feel to the story at its outset: Young woman, guitar in hand, Northern accent announcing as much as it always did, who makes a new life in London, all the money going on a room in Camden. One recalls Georgy Girl or Darling, films that were very much of their time.

The Changeling, Southwark Playhouse review - wild ride proves too bumpy to land all its points

★★★ THE CHANGELING, SOUTHWARK PLAYHOUSE Wild ride proves too bumpy to land all its points

An excess of gimmicks and uneven tone unbalance an innovative take on a Jacobean epic

Writing about the upcoming 60th anniversary of the founding of the National Theatre in The Guardian recently, the usually reliable Michael Billington made a rare misstep. He called for the successor to Rufus Norris, the departing artistic director, to stage neglected classics: “I would also argue that the National, given its resources, has a civic duty to revive the drama of the past that, Shakespeare aside, is in danger of being consigned to the dustbin.” 

Operation Epsilon, Southwark Playhouse review - alternative Oppenheimer

Revival of Alan Brody’s award-winning 2013 history play is solid but plodding

Must science always be dominated by politics? This question is most urgent when the stakes are high – climate change or nuclear weapons. And it is grimly true that the fact that audiences are still interested in the race for the atom bomb between the Allies and Nazi Germany in the 1940s says something about our current anxieties about Russia, North Korea and Iran.

The Curious Case of Benjamin Button, Southwark Playhouse Elephant review - superbly performed folksy musical

A winning ensemble led by Jamie Parker deliver a refreshing piece

The short story F Scott Fitzgerald wrote as a challenge, of a man born 70 years old whose body gets younger as the years pass, has already been blown up into a lengthy film of the same name starring Brad Pitt (and lots of CGI). Jethro Compton decided a bare-bones musical for six multi-instrumentalists and no special effects was what it needed to be, and how well it works.

Berlusconi, Southwark Playhouse Elephant review - curious new musical satire

A reprehensible man treats women badly, but the political magic is left entirely unexplored

One wonders if Ricky Simmonds and Simon Vaughan pondered long over their debut musical’s title. Silvio might invite hubristic comparisons with Evita (another unlikely political leader), but Berlusconi feels a little Hamilton – too soon? They went with the surname of their anti-hero which appears a mite unwieldy on the playbill.

Brilliant Jerks, Southwark Playhouse review - busy three-hander casts a biting glance toward Uber

★★★ BRILLIANT JERKS, SOUTHWARK PLAYHOUSE A biting glance toward Uber

Joseph Charlton's 2018 play revived on the back of his subsequent West End success

It never hurts the trajectory of a promising young playwright if they have a good eye for the zeitgeist, and the writer Joseph Charlton can certainly be said to possess that. His last play Anna X, inspired by high society scammer Anna Delvey and starring Emma Corrin, was a briefly-seen West End success post-pandemic and was staged several months before Netflix aired its phenomenally successful Inventing Anna series.

The Walworth Farce, Southwark Playhouse Elephant review - dysfunctional Irish myth-making

★★★★ THE WALWORTH FARCE, SOUTHWARK PLAYHOUSE ELEPHANT Four spot-on performances confirm that Enda Walsh's queasy thriller is here to stay

Four spot-on performances confirm that Enda Walsh's queasy thriller is here to stay

The farce in question is fast and furious, but not often hilariously funny; that’s because it’s the invention of a scary Irish dad who forces his sons to act it out with him every day in their seedy Walworth Road flat. Go with conventional expectations and you’ll be wrong-footed, or downright disappointed; Enda Walsh pushes boundaries, pulls the dirty rug from under our feet. Vividly acted, directed and designed, this revival of his 2006 two-acter suggests it’s a masterpiece.

Smoke, Southwark Playhouse review - dazzling Strindberg update

 SMOKE, SOUTHWARK PLAYHOUSE A dazzling Strindberg update

The perils of navigating power relations when sexual tension is all but tangible

A play’s title can be an almost arbitrary matter – there’s no streetcar but plenty of desire in that one for example – and it might have crossed Kim Davies’ mind to call her play Ms Julie, since it is a reimagining of August Strindberg’s 1888 masterpiece, Miss Julie. 

Here, Southwark Playhouse review - award-winning kitchen sink drama goes down the drain

★ HERE, SOUTHWARK PLAYHOUSE Characters drown in a surfeit of issues

The prestige of the Papatango Prize cannot rescue a play that fails to transcend its inexplicable limitations

The kitchen sink drama has been a standby of English theatre for 70 years or more, but not always with an actual sink on stage. But there it is, in an everyday home that harbours a secret or two in Clive Judd’s debut play, the winner of the 2022 Papatango New Writing Prize.