'A landmark in the National Theatre's history: a tumultuous epic about first-generation Jamaican immigrants... skilfully adapted... one of the most important plays of the year'
Guardian
'In this inspiring adaptation, which compresses the book into a gripping three-hour state-of-the-nation epic, Small Island has found its ideal home... the show acknowledges struggle and strife on all sides, flies the flag for compassion and achieves a hard-won (and still to be fought for) inclusivity'
Telegraph
'A passionate engagement with the past that's sure to resonate with audiences at a time when the very idea of Britain is under such fierce scrutiny'
Evening Standard
'This is a show that shoots arrows of empathy and engagement out towards its audience and they respond... from a novel dealing with the past [comes] a play for today'
WhatsOnStage
'A moving stage adaptation of the late Andrea Levy's great novel about the Windrush generation... Edmundson does some supreme work compacting a sprawling book into a pacy three-hours-ten-minutes - she has a knack for skilfully distilling story... a ferociously entertaining three hours of theatre'
Time Out
'Beautifully translated to stage by adaptor Helen Edmundson, using thrilling theatrical solutions to honour Levy's epic - and still urgent - tale... a stirring spectacle that never loses sight of the people at its heart'
Broadway World
Produktdetaljer
Biographical note
Multi-award-winning writer Helen Edmundson has adapted many novels for the stage, including Coram Boy for the National Theatre. Her original plays include Queen Anne and The Heresy of Love (both for the RSC), Mary Shelley, The Clearing and Mother Teresa is Dead.
Andrea Levy's novels include Every Light in the House Burnin', Never Far from Nowhere, Fruit of the Lemon and The Long Song. Small Island won a number of prizes, including the Orange Prize for Fiction, and the Whitbread Novel and Book of the Year Awards.