London

Rika’s Rooms – The Playground Theatre

The world premiere of Gail Louw’s Rika’s Rooms is adapted from the playwright’s novel of the same name and based on the real-life experiences of her late mother’s childhood flight from Nazi Germany, uneasy teenage settlement in Israel, marriage and immigration to apartheid South Africa, and eventual deterioration and disintegration living with dementia in England. Despite the weighty nature both of the story itself and the delivery method of its storytelling, this harrowing one woman show is suffused with love and light.

Emma Wilkinson Wright is a revelation as Rika, where many a singular actor might seem overburdened and stoop under the heft of so dense a series of monologues, she acts with a potent naturalism, ruthlessly efficient in both vocal and physical transformation to the point of mesmerisation. Alone onstage she is impossible to pull one’s eyes away from even as Louw’s script forces audiences to confront some very grim realities. Ranging in this performance from depicting adolescent sexuality to elderly violence and a whole host of emphatically tactile experiences in between, the intimate connection she fosters with the audience through sheer force of earnest vulnerability is powerfully winsome.

Photo: Bastian Knapp

Directed with focus and restraint by Anthony Shrubsall, Wright is well technically supported by Set and Costume Designer, Male Arcucci who builds a world in two flats so practical and variable that it manages to encompass three continents tremendously convincingly. Lighting Designer, Petr Vocka too accomplishes a staggering amount of visual storytelling and lends Wright an immense assist in ensnaring audiences.

The detailed descriptions Louw gives Wright to realize as Rika, of her sister’s kibbutz, of a swanky hotel, a care home, or a car ride, are all so vividly rendered in performance that it cannot fail to activate both imagination and empathy in its viewers. Neither devoid of humour nor particularly reliant on it, Rika’s Rooms both demands serious consideration and invites the audience into a certain kind of escapism. Clearly written through the lens of a fine eye for social justice but charged with a powerful desire to celebrate love in whatever strange and unseemly forms it comes in, this play approaches its themes of political responsibility with a dignified gracefulness, all the more affecting the more intimate and messier it gets.

Rika’s Rooms plays at The Playground Theatre until the 10th of March.

Reviewer: Kira Daniels

Reviewed: 5th March 2024

North West End UK Rating:

Rating: 4 out of 5.
Kira Daniels

Recent Posts

Peter James: Picture You Dead – The Lowry

Opening night at the Lowry Theatre’s Lyric Theatre welcomed a full house and a palpable…

8 hours ago

Kinky Boots – Birmingham Hippodrome

Undeniably the best musical ever to be set in Northampton, the story of ‘Kinky Boots’…

9 hours ago

Heisenberg – Arcola Theatre

A brilliant production, Heisenberg is a reimagining of Simon Stephen’s excellent play about relationships and…

2 days ago

Donald Grant and The Scottish Ensemble: Thuit an Oidhche Oirnn (The Night Overtook Us) – Queen’s Hall, Edinburgh

A foot tapping and thought provoking night from one of Scotland’s finest fiddle players accompanied…

2 days ago

Supersonic Man – Southwark Playhouse

Southwark Playhouse Borough hosted the world premiere of ‘Supersonic Man’ this week, a new musical…

5 days ago

Gideon: A Play with Music – Hallé at St Michael’s

This important play, developed by Modalways and written by Daniel Mawson, hits all the right…

5 days ago