Tag Archives: Meghan Tyler

CROCODILE FEVER

★★★

Arcola Theatre

CROCODILE FEVER

Arcola Theatre

★★★

“The central performances belong to Tyler and Rooney. They are on fire.”

Crocodile Fever is a chaotic drama set in chaotic times about chaotic family relationships. Meghan Tyler’s play, first shown at the 2019 Edinburgh Festival Fringe, is enjoying its London premiere. It is set in a family household in Northern Ireland in 1989 – that is, in the midst of the ‘Troubles’, a euphemism for the violent conflict of the times.

Younger audience members (and even some not-so-young) might benefit from knowing something of the background and history of those times because there are references – for example the sinister memory of the ‘knock on the door’ in the night – that are easily missed yet will enrich understanding of the play.

What makes Tyler’s setting relevant are the underlying themes of oppression, abuse, dysfunctional sisterhood and casual horror. These are ably exploited by Arcola’s co-founder and artistic director Mehmet Ergan and his production team, and cannot help but recall other situations where these elements of war continue to be present. Altogether, however, it is hard to place the play neatly into a genre. Is it a metaphorical family drama, a black comedy or a grotesque absurdist play? Crocodile Fever defies categorisation, by intention.

The action opens in a pristine kitchen (set designer Merve Yörük deserves a mention) where pious sister Alannah (Rachel Rooney) is obsessively cleaning. She has tight control over her environment and wants to keep it that way, although we have early indications of a disturbed mind. Into this order, bursts Fianna (Meghan Tyler), out of a long term in prison and at the opposite end of the personality scale (apparently) to her sibling but wanting to renew their connection. She believes that their father died in a confrontation with the ‘paras’ (paratroopers) so is shocked to find out that he is, in fact, living: upstairs in the family home. Fianna is his long-suffering carer.

At this point any realism in the play starts to disintegrate, slowly but believably at first, and chaos takes over as the interaction between the sisters twists and turns helped by old songs, alcohol, quick fire dialogue and snatches of history that are hard to keep track of. We are on a track to horrible happenings. The father (brilliantly played by Stephen Kennedy) is the reptile in the attic and must be dealt with. His appearance towards the end of the first act is a shock. And from there on, there is a rapid descent of the action into gore and strange symbolism.

The central performances belong to Tyler and Rooney. They are on fire. Rooney, in particular, shows an extraordinary range of comic expression (a touch of the Mrs Doyle?) and, despite the absurdism, is then convincing in her portrayal of release and disintegration. She doesn’t let the flamboyant acting of Tyler as Fianna hog the limelight, as could so easily happen.

Yet, somehow I felt there should be a magnetism exhibited in the sister relationship (whether repelling or attracting) that somehow failed to materialise. It may be that the play, in dealing with so much, lacks a central focus and resolution. This could leave one feeling dissatisfied at the end; nevertheless, the overall impression is of a drama that is tackling big subjects in an innovative way so, if it loses its way a little, well isn’t that what happens in times of terrible conflict?



CROCODILE FEVER

Arcola Theatre

Reviewed on 23rd October 2025

by Louise Sibley

Photography by Ikin Yum


 

Previously reviewed at this venue:

THE POLTERGEIST | ★★★★★ | September 2025
RODNEY BLACK: WHO CARES? IT’S WORKING | ★★ | September 2025
SENSE AND SENSIBILITY: THE MUSICAL | ★★★★ | August 2025
JANE EYRE | ★★★★★ | August 2025
CLIVE | ★★★ | August 2025
THE RECKONING | ★★★★ | June 2025
IN OTHER WORDS | ★★★★ | May 2025
HEISENBERG | ★★★ | April 2025

 

 

CROCODILE FEVER

CROCODILE FEVER

CROCODILE FEVER

Medicine – 3 Stars

Medicine

Medicine

The Hope Theatre

Reviewed – 16th August 2018

★★★

“There are some terrific, sharp exchanges between mother and daughter which both ring true and are very funny indeed”

 

Meghan Tyler, who wrote Medicine, and also plays Moira-Bridget Byrne in this production, tells us in the programme notes that she was inspired to write the play after listening to the song Medicine, by Daughter. It is a haunting song, and its influence is clearly felt in Paul Brotherston’s beautiful, spare production. The set is bare, other than an old park bench, but the subtle and insistent sound design (terrific work from Iida Aino) and the perfect, nuanced lighting (credit here to Will Alder) work in tandem to provide the ideal, understated backdrop for Ms Tyler’s three-hander.

The play takes place on a clifftop in Northern Ireland, and mainly consists of a long conversation between Ma Byrne and her daughter Moira-Bridget, who has fetched up there after a drunken night out. Tyler has a good ear, and the dialogue initially zips along, ably treading the tight line between believability and theatrical interest. There are some terrific, sharp exchanges between mother and daughter which both ring true and are very funny indeed, and the moon-cup section (yes, ladies and gentlemen, you did read that correctly) was a particular high-spot.

The play does lose pace about a third of the way through, and the writing begins to become slightly repetitive, but the ball is kept in the air by Lynsey-Anne Moffat, who excels as Ma Byrne, and is heartbreakingly convincing throughout. Possibly because, as the writer, she is very close to the piece, Meghan Tyler’s Moira-Bridget doesn’t ring as true, and the character seems less fully realised than those of her parents. The play’s denouement reveals a level of seriousness to Moira-Bridget’s plight which does not come across when we see her on stage, and it takes the achingly poignant final scene between Ma and Da Byrne to lend some emotional gravitas. Adam Best was wonderful as Da Byrne; it seemed a shame not to use his talents more fully. Ultimately though, the play is Ma’s story, which puts flesh on the bones of the song lyric: ‘You’ve got a warm heart, you’ve got a beautiful brain/But it’s disintegrating from all the medicine’.

Medicine marks a very good writing debut for Meghan Tyler, and there is clearly a wealth of talent in the cast and creatives who have realised it. It is a diverting hour for theatre lovers and proof that The Hope continues to thrive under Matthew Parker, as the OFFIES recognised last year, awarding him the Best Artistic Director title. Long may it continue.

 

Reviewed by Rebecca Crankshaw

Photography by Alex Fine

 


Medicine

The Hope Theatre until 1st September

 

Related
Previous production from Off The Middle
In Other Words | ★★★★★ | The Hope Theatre | March 2017

 

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