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ARCADIA

★★★★★

Duke of York’s Theatre

ARCADIA

Duke of York’s Theatre

★★★★★

“fuses science and humanity with dazzling clarity”

Following its critically acclaimed, Olivier-nominated Old Vic run, Sir Tom Stoppard’s ‘Arcadia’ makes a historic West End debut on the very day the Duke of York’s Theatre is renamed in his honour. Stoppard fuses science and art into one of the most existential plays ever written – sharp, layered and deeply rewarding, it stays with you long after it ends.

Thomasina – a nineteenth century teen prodigy – is on the cusp of unravelling the secrets of the universe, aided by her errant tutor, Septimus. Generations later, descendants and scholars comb the same manor for answers of their own. They all seek meaning amid the noise, as the expected order of things dissolves into brilliant chaos.

The late Stoppard’s work is a masterpiece. Intelligently and elegantly layered, it feels like a good cup of tea – deeper and more flavourful with time. It artfully marries scientific rigour with human richness – complex physical theories feel accessible while emotional clarity rings true. Pithy, crisp humour offers sharp relief. True to the quote that inspired the name, decay – be it death or entropy – is ever present. Though some characters feel more approximated than resolved, their fluid relationships capture entropy’s chaos so deftly it becomes a strength. A brilliant fusion of scientific and human unpredictability.

Carrie Cracknell’s superb direction is full of humanity and warmth. The sharp humour anchors denser ideas – signal amid the noise perhaps. The double revolve reveals order, chaos and time’s inexorable drift – a powerful reminder that nothing’s ever truly static. Ira Mandela Siobhan choreographs entropy with striking intelligence, and subtle transitional sequences add meaning. The waltz scene is gorgeous, its final gesture devastating. Though technically in the round, the gradual accumulation of debris reads less clearly from the front, but it’s a small trade off in an otherwise brilliant piece.

Alex Eales preserves the deceptively simple Old Vic staging, with a pared back double revolve and futuristic overhead lights evoking celestial bodies orbiting the steadfast central table. Guy Hoare’s deliberately restrained lighting favours warm and cool tones, but with colour blooming and overhead lights pulsing and drifting at key moments. Stuart Earl’s score surprises, with string rich polyrhythms that span time periods. Donato Wharton’s sound design gives the music real lift, and Suzanne Cave’s costumes deftly sketch each era before blending them.

The ensemble cast navigates this intricate play with breathtaking clarity. Isis Hainsworth’s Thomasina and Seamus Dillane’s Septimus are especially captivating. Hainsworth brings a luminous mix of naïveté and wisdom to her precocious genius, striving for meaning until the very end. Dillane sparkles with saucy insouciance, gleefully outmanoeuvring the hapless Mr Chater (Matthew Steer), before smouldering with restrained desire. Yolanda Kettle’s Lady Coombs is a delight, her cutting wit and striking poise laced with sly seductiveness. Hannah’s (Nikki Amuka-Bird) patient diligence offsets Bernard’s (Oliver Chris) flamboyant romanticism. Together, they all coalesce in beautifully chaotic symmetry.

Arcadia fuses science and humanity with dazzling clarity. Steeped in meaning, each visit reveals something new – a historic West End run you definitely shouldn’t miss.



ARCADIA

Duke of York’s Theatre

Reviewed on 1st July 2026

by Hannah Bothelton

Photography by Manuel Harlan

 

 

 

 

ARCADIA

ARCADIA

ARCADIA

ARCADIA

★★★★★

Old Vic

ARCADIA

Old Vic

★★★★★

“extremely intelligent, stimulating, challenging and fun”

It is rare in the theatre when the question about why jam cannot be ‘unstirred’ from a bowl of rice pudding sets our thoughts on a mind-boggling tangent about the universe. But it epitomises the skill and the beauty of the writing in Tom Stoppard’s “Arcadia”. It is the ‘ordinary-sized stuff which is in our lives, the things people write about – clouds, daffodils, waterfalls, what happens in a cup of coffee when the cream goes in – these things are full of mystery’. Carrie Cracknell’s revival of the 1993 stage play is, indeed, full of mystery. Like a detective story with an abundance of clues that, once in the hands of the protagonists, don’t really lead to the solution they are looking for. Mainly because there is always a counter argument.

The age-old conflicts between science and art, intellect and romance, certainty and poetry, truth and fiction, are explored with beautiful eloquence. Stoppard picks away at our own beliefs, and by setting the play in two parallel eras (the early nineteenth and the late twentieth centuries) he picks away at the fabric of time itself. Many of the issues soar way over our heads as dollops of theories are added to the metaphoric rice pudding. Postulations of quantum mechanics, entropy, chaos theory and Newtonianism, for example, rub shoulders with bawdy humour and ‘carnal embraces’ (aka sex). The subject matter collides like tiny atoms, but far from being chaotic the result is a glorious three hours of theatrical bliss. And a gorgeous tribute to the playwright who died barely ten weeks ago.

The outstanding cast goes a long way in ensuring the watchability of the drama. The play opens in 1809 with the precocious and privileged Thomasina Coverly (Isis Hainsworth) in a light-hearted but deep conversation with her tutor Septimus Hodge (Seamus Dillane). The quality of the performances is established from the outset – both playful and serious at the same time. The dynamics are flirtatious, a touch dubious but somehow chaste. Dillane wears a guilty conscience like a made-to-measure second skin while Hainsworth faultlessly displays a mix of playful childishness, genius and sassiness. In storms the bumbling, wannabe poet Ezra Chater (Matthew Steer on brilliant form) challenging Septimius to a duel in the belief that he is carrying on with his wife (he is). He is also ‘carrying on’ with Thomasina’s mother – we are led to believe. Oh, what a tangled web we weave… Fiona Button wonderfully displays coquettishness and playful attraction despite ruling the manor – and her daughter – with an iron fist.

Cut to 1993 and we are in the same location. The ghosts of the historical characters are hanging in the air as academic Hannah Jarvis (Leila Farzad) is locked in debate with Bernard Nightingale (Prasanna Puwanarajah) over what happened nearly two centuries ago in the very same room. Puwanarajah has some of the best monologues of the play as he charismatically extrapolates his theories; often proved wrong by Farzad’s cool Hannah. Links to the past are provided by the present-day Chloë Coverly (Holly Godliman) and her brother Valentine (Angus Cooper) who seems to be wrestling with the scientific predictions of his forebear Thomasina, but with considerably less ease.

Alex Eales’ design places the action in the round on a slowly moving revolve which mirrors the passage of time – perceptible but simultaneously unnoticed. In this way, the connections between the two time periods are highlighted, aided by Cracknell’s slick, overlapping transitions from one to the other which eventually fuse into a searingly poignant final act as the two merge together in a dreamy waltz. What is revealed ultimately is that, despite the breakthroughs of science, and despite the changing philosophies and beliefs over time; human connection never alters. There is much talk of loss in the dialogue. The loss of belief, of meaning and also of the material artefacts that define us – the books and the architecture of life. What do we look for then?

Yes, “Arcadia” is like a detective story with an abundance of clues that, once in the hands of the protagonists, don’t really lead to the solution they are looking for. Perhaps because what they are really looking for is love. Stoppard dresses it all up in a very wordy but extremely intelligent, stimulating, challenging and fun play. His spirit lives on and, with productions of his work like this one, we can be sure of its longevity.



ARCADIA

Old Vic

Reviewed on 6th February 2026

by Jonathan Evans

Photography by Manuel Harlan


 

 

 

 

ARCADIA

ARCADIA

ARCADIA