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Theatre

Theatre review: My Mum's a Twat

John Nathan enjoys a vividly drawn portrait of a neglected teenage daughter

January 10, 2018 16:30
Patsy Ferran
1 min read

This is the Royal Court. The set is a girl’s bedroom. Another revival of My Name is Rachel Corrie? Actually no. What concerns the heroine in Anoushka Warden’s one-woman play is not the Israeli/Palestinian conflict but the emotional vortex experienced by a young girl whose mother has been conscripted into a quasi-religious cult.

Warden is writing from both her own experience (as the child not the mother) but also from her imagination. This is her first play, but Warden is also the Royal Court’s head of PR and as you might expect of someone steeped in the work of the most revered new writing playhouse in the country, this portrait is vividly drawn.

The theme is parental neglect. Yet the play is no misery memoir. Rather it is lively, often funny and has a light touch, all qualities embodied by the immensely watchable Patsy Ferran who delivers this sermon of adolescent angst with a cooky charm entirely without affectation.

Dressed in teenage slacker-wear her unnamed character describes the turmoil of being the progeny of a woman who is more devoted to The Heal Thyself Centre for Self-Realisation and Transcendence than she is to her own children. The group is reportedly a fictional version of the cult that persuaded Warden’s mother to go parentally AWOL and then move to Canada to set up its new branch.