Lava
Bush Theatre
Reviewed – 15th July 2021
β β β β
“an important story, and judging by the racially charged goings-on of last week, couldnβt be timelier”
I know what the embodiment of true joy and self-assuredness looks like: It looks like RonkαΊΉ AdΓ©koluαΊΉjo in a sunshine yellow jumpsuit dancing hard all over a lava-encrusted multi-level set to a double-time remix of Arethaβs βThinkβ; dancing so hard she leaves the audience to three rounds of applause whilst she gets her breath back. And thus, we are introduced to βHerβ.
βHerβ- as Her Majestyβs Passport office keeps referring to her- is trying to renew her British passport with no luck. A dual citizen, her first name is missing from her South African passport, and she needs to fix this before theyβll renew her British one. But why is her name missing in the first place? This mystery sparks the beginning of a journey back, bridging decades and continents, beginning in a colonised Congo, and ending in modern day London, all in search of a sense of belonging. Though AdΓ©koluαΊΉjo begins with a joyous dance, the story itself is one of struggle and fury.
Though later in the story the name of βHerβ is confirmed as writer Benedict Lombe, Lombe having employed an actor to play the role might easily have given the performance a fictional detachment. But AdΓ©koluαΊΉjo undertakes the story as though it were her own, with so much love and care that the separation between writer and performer is invisible to the audienceβs eye. Slipping between prose and colloquialism, both the script and AdΓ©koluαΊΉjo are completely charming.
The premise is strong and compelling: The reason behind her missing first name is fascinating and perfectly symbolic of the messy nuances of identity and history. But thereβs a disconnect between the resolution of this first dilemma and the rest of the story, which is still rich in character and content but without a central element to keep it on track. The ending too feels messy, as though Lombe couldnβt quite decide how to finish, so she picked all the options.
This is really all much of a muchness though because it hardly dampens the effects of Lombeβs passionate and remonstrative script and AdΓ©koluαΊΉjoβs effervescent performance. This is an important story, and judging by the racially charged goings-on of last week, couldnβt be timelier.
Reviewed by Miriam Sallon
Photography by Helen Murray
Lava
Bush Theatre until 7th August
Recently reviewed by Miriam:
Tarantula | β β β β | Online | April 2021
Reunion | β β β β β | Sadler’s Wells Theatre | May 2021
My Sonβs A Queer But What Can You Do | β β β Β½ | The Turbine Theatre | June 2021
The Narcissist | β β β | Arcola Theatre | July 2021
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