Monday, May 04, 2026

'Driftwood' by Martina Laird

4 May 2026

On Saturday we were at The Other Place in Stratford-upon-Avon to see 'Driftwood' - a new play by Martina Laird, directed by Justin Audibert, in a RSC production in association with Kiln Theatre. This is the debut play by Martina Laird - an actor who has previously appeared in a number of RSC productions in Stratford. We saw her playing an American political strategist in 'The New Real' by David Edgar, also at The Other Place, in 2024 (reviewed here in October 2024). 'Driftwood' is set in Trinidad and Tobago in 1956 as Eric Williams' People's National Movement is about to win the general election that will set the country on the path to self governance and then independence (which was achieved in 1962). The play focuses on a gentleman's club in Port of Spain, which is owned by an Englishman, managed by a local woman Pearl and her daughter Ruby, and is attracting the interest of a corrupt US Marine who wants to use the premises to store some form of contraband. The action takes place in one room of the club where the six characters interact with each other with the feel of a Tennessee Williams play. But the story of the club, its ownership, its future and the family who have been running it, is clearly an analogy for what is happening to Trinidad and Tobago. 'Driftwood' is enjoyable, emotional and unpredictable. Martina Laird's writing is strong, including a particularly clever multi-layered card game scene. But I think a little more reference within the play to the historical political setting might have helped us fully to appreciate the intended parallels. The acting is excellent, especially Cat White as Ruby and Martins Imhangbe as Diamond - the stranger whose arrival at the club opens the play. 

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