October 24, 2025
Athens, GR 14 C
Expand search form
Blog

Ruth Leon’s Pocket Theatre Review – Noughts and Crosses

Ruth Leon’s Pocket Theatre Review – Noughts and Crosses

This is an adaptation of a wildly successful young adult novel by British writer Malorie Blackman. It has been adapted for the stage by Dominic Cooke.

Set in a segregated violent post-21st-century England, it is a love story of teenagers, one White, one Black, separated by a rigidly divided society in which all authority rests with the Black half of the population. Noughts are White, and reviled, Crosses are Black, and envied.

The girl’s father is a senior politician, the mother a wine-swilling shopping addict. The boy’s father is a gruff working man, the mother a former nanny to the girl’s family. To make things even more formulaic, the girl has a snooty older sister, the boy an older brother who is a member of a violent anti-establishment group that will blow up a shopping centre.

Despite the excellent performances from the huge cast of actors, some playing multiple characters, all adhering to their Black and White reverse stereotypes, I find this revisionist view of the world absurdly simplistic and old-fashioned. Every racial cliché is exploited in harsh contrasts.

The staging, by director Tinuke Craig, is largely a matter of the cast restlessly moving the furniture around the multi-level set and running up and down stairs and gantries, making the production more closely resemble Snakes and Ladders than Noughts and Crosses.

Read more

The post Ruth Leon’s Pocket Theatre Review – Noughts and Crosses appeared first on Slippedisc.

Previous Article

Cancer claims a wonderful Carmen, 61

Next Article

Dear Alma, They are squeezing the life out of my opera company

You might be interested in …

First report: Vienna’s Endgame

First report: Vienna’s Endgame

The Israel composer Oded Zehavi attended the dress rehearsal today of György Kurtag’s late opera, Fin de Partie: There are similarities between Endgame and Wozzeck. Musical interpretation of great literary text is not easy: it […]

Bayreuth flips Gatti

Bayreuth flips Gatti

There’s a pair of last-minute changes in Bayreuth’s Meistersinger tonight. Conductor Daniele Gatti is replaced by Axel Kober. Hans Sachs will be sung by Michael Volle, jumping in for the still-unwell Georg Zeppenfeld. What goes […]