Close Menu
London ReviewsLondon Reviews
  • Home
  • What’s On News
  • Going Out
  • Reviews
  • Spotlight
  • AI News
  • Tech & Gadgets
  • Travel
  • Horoscopes
  • Web Stories
  • Forgotten eBooks

Subscribe to Updates

Get the latest creative news from FooBar about art, design and business.

What's Hot
New Egg-venture at Go Ape this Easter

New Egg-venture at Go Ape this Easter

March 24, 2026
Government announces plans to tag thousands of extra offenders

Government announces plans to tag thousands of extra offenders

March 24, 2026
Reading Wuthering Heights At A London Castle: Main Character Moment With Very

Reading Wuthering Heights At A London Castle: Main Character Moment With Very

March 24, 2026
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
  • Privacy
  • Terms
  • Advertise
  • Contact
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
London ReviewsLondon Reviews
Subscribe
  • Home
  • What’s On News
  • Going Out
  • Reviews
  • Spotlight
  • AI News
  • Tech & Gadgets
  • Travel
  • Horoscopes
  • Web Stories
  • Forgotten eBooks
London ReviewsLondon Reviews
Home » Summerfolk review: Strikingly relevant’ rewrite of classic
Stories

Summerfolk review: Strikingly relevant’ rewrite of classic

March 23, 20262 Mins Read
Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email Telegram WhatsApp
Summerfolk review: Strikingly relevant’ rewrite of classic
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

Summerfolk opened in St Petersburg in 1905 following the death of Chekhov and before the first Russian Revolution.

The mix of an impending political storm laced with Chekov’s views on social mobility and entitlement is all clearly recognisable.

Sophie Rundle in Summerfolk at The National Theatre. (Image: Johan Persson)

In Robert Hastie’s finely tuned production, these upwardly mobile Russians are a notch away from Chekhov’s fading aristocrats. Their language is ballsier, their frustrations more urgent and the play is strikingly relevant.

The summerfolk have gathered to replenish their energies away from the city as they drift between neighbouring dachas on a development that feels like a sequel to Chekhov’s The Cherry Orchard and Lopakhin’s land grab.

A development of dachas is evoked through Peter McKintosh’s set of vaulted wooden planks and decking beside water where they picnic, paddle and fish.

The cast of Summerfolk at The National Theatre. (Image: Johan Persson)

The ensemble of 23 actors is perfectly cast. Paul Ready as gossipy lawyer Bassov married to remote, beautiful Varvara [Sophie Rundle] captures a man’s failings to fully comprehend his wife through his estuary twang and coarse laugh, thinly disguising his fury at her rejection.

Doon Mackichan as wide-eyed, aspiring poet Kaleria is brilliantly comic but poised, her arms ofttimes outstretched as if she’s awaiting a visitation.

Daniel Lapaine as the balding, uptight writer Shalimov barely attempts to conceal his bitterness, declaring, ‘Of course I’m disappointing, I’m human.’

Soft lighting by Paul Pyant brings requisite melancholy to the proceedings, at times throwing up haunting, threatening shadows.

The atmosphere compensates for the lack of any realist trees on stage; their culling having made space for this playground of layabouts. Some updates in language and swearing land with a thud.

These characters forget poems as soon as they’ve been recited, they declare love, botch suicide attempts, scrap, want sex, want money, project lofty ideals onto one another, weep and flounder when desires fade or random gunshots from the oppressed peasants circling their community shatter their fantasies.

They are stuck, fragmented and fearful. It’s very funny and very sobering.

Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email

Related Posts

New Egg-venture at Go Ape this Easter

New Egg-venture at Go Ape this Easter

March 24, 2026
Noughties pop star Sophie Ellis-Bextor to perform in Harlow

Noughties pop star Sophie Ellis-Bextor to perform in Harlow

March 24, 2026
Good Food Guide 50 best bakeries include Don’t Tell Dad

Good Food Guide 50 best bakeries include Don’t Tell Dad

March 24, 2026
Save up to 40% on 2026 getaways with Shorefield Holidays’ spring sale

Save up to 40% on 2026 getaways with Shorefield Holidays’ spring sale

March 23, 2026
Hampstead Heath cafes tenant Cosmin Stuparu – Bidding process ‘fair’

Hampstead Heath cafes tenant Cosmin Stuparu – Bidding process ‘fair’

March 23, 2026
Brits sitting on £1.2bn in unused supermarket loyalty points

Brits sitting on £1.2bn in unused supermarket loyalty points

March 23, 2026
Editors Picks
Government announces plans to tag thousands of extra offenders

Government announces plans to tag thousands of extra offenders

March 24, 2026
Reading Wuthering Heights At A London Castle: Main Character Moment With Very

Reading Wuthering Heights At A London Castle: Main Character Moment With Very

March 24, 2026
HS2 trains could run slower than 360km per hour to save ‘low billions’ in costs, says minister

HS2 trains could run slower than 360km per hour to save ‘low billions’ in costs, says minister

March 24, 2026
Noughties pop star Sophie Ellis-Bextor to perform in Harlow

Noughties pop star Sophie Ellis-Bextor to perform in Harlow

March 24, 2026
Latest News
ILIOS appointment speeds delivery of STEP Fusion at West Burton

ILIOS appointment speeds delivery of STEP Fusion at West Burton

By News Room
Restricted access – Le Monde

Restricted access – Le Monde

By News Room
They set life-saving ambulances on fire. Anti-Semitic attack in Golders Green? – Ziarul Românesc UK – news from Great Britain

They set life-saving ambulances on fire. Anti-Semitic attack in Golders Green? – Ziarul Românesc UK – news from Great Britain

By News Room
London Reviews
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest Vimeo YouTube
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of use
  • Advertise
  • Contact
  • Disclosure
© 2026 London Reviews. All Rights Reserved.

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.