Skip to main content
Play on fractious women's football team struggles for result
Archetypes: The cast of The Wolves

The Wolves
Theatre Royal Stratford East

THERE’S nothing quite like a rousing chorus of Beyonce’s Who Run The World? followed by the slogan to end all others, “Suck my tampon, bitches!” to announce — in case you missed it amid all the upspeak — that this a play about teenage girls navigating their way through the post-training-bra years.

In Sarah DeLappe's story of a high school indoor “soccer” team from Middle America making their way through the league and hoping to be scouted for college teams, the arguments are about tampon blood and the Khmer Rouge, with the conversations occasionally coalescing gruesomely — “It’s like a mass grave in my bathroom!”

Stretching in unison and gossiping in cliques, the dialogue is superbly handled by director Ellen McDougall’s brilliant cast, but as the play goes on, these archetypal characters buckle under the demands of the script and the narrative simply doesn’t cohere.

The long warm-up scenes are occasionally punctured by flashes of insight into the girls' fraught lives with an almost dismissive brevity. The nervous vomiting of one becomes a standing joke, while another is assaulted and ultimately dies — the list goes on — and the only self-assured character travels the world with her successful, career-driven mother.

She's a glimmer of hope for womankind until she too has a psychotic attack and dribbles off the pitch muttering feverish nonsense. This vast and sensitive territory is delivered rapid-fire, as if tipped from a box marked Bad Things that Happen to Girls. The characters have just seconds to impress upon us the horrific truths of their lives before they’re whisked out of the scene to make way for more stretching and bickering.

Fleshing out nine complex character arcs — 10 when “soccer mom” enters — in 90 minutes is a lot to ask and the idea that we’re left with is that the female story is only as interesting as its most formative traumatic experience, leaving me wondering whether they haven’t missed a trick here.

Praised for its authenticity in capturing the voice of young women today, if it's any kind of litmus test, The Wolves is nevertheless a fairly grim portrait of female relationships in the future. The banter, couched in determinedly machismo comic terms, may draw the laughs, but it’s not always clear who we’re laughing at.

What saves this show is its stellar cast of gutsy, intelligent and intuitive performers who work around the material admirably. Their dues come right at the end, when huddled together they whispering a chant that becomes the battle cry: “We are the Wolves!”

It's a moment when, at last, the characters show up for each other because they realise it’s the only way to play the game.

Runs until November 17, box office: stratfordeast.com

Morning Star Conference - Race, Sex & Class
Support the Morning Star
You have reached the free limit.
Subscribe to continue reading.
More from this author
Culture / 11 November 2020
11 November 2020
Ruby Fischer hails a photobook that celebrates the freedom, delight and mischief of childhood among Travellers
ONLINE WATCH / 13 April 2020
13 April 2020
Timely celebration of women's global contribution to the art and craft of of film-making
(Left to right) Power figure (nkisi), Kongo peoples (Loango,
Picture This / 12 February 2020
12 February 2020
Revelatory exploration of funerary practice in sub-Saharan Africa
Left to right- The empty window+Franziska Goes to Heaven+Ama
Exhibition / 13 November 2019
13 November 2019
RUBY FISCHER sees a potent exhibition of the enigmatic and troubling paintings produced by Charlotte Salomon before she was consigned to a nazi death camp
Similar stories
NO THRILLS: East is South at Hampstead Theatre
Theatre review / 19 February 2025
19 February 2025
MARY CONWAY is disappointed by a play about AI that results in a deadening disconnect for its audience
INEQUALITIES EXPOSED: Joshua-Alexander Williams as Blue and
Theatre Review / 14 February 2025
14 February 2025
PAUL DONOVAN applauds an adaptation that draws out the contemporary relevance of George Orwell’s satire
Nigel Betts (Billy) and Nigel Cooke (Cliff) in Double Act
Theatre review / 29 January 2025
29 January 2025
MARY CONWAY applauds a study of comedians in whose cheap prejudice the tenets of the emerging political right are crystal clear
CLASS ACT: Kevin Bishop, Omar Malik, Pandora Colin and Tamzi
Theatre Review / 13 September 2024
13 September 2024
PAUL DONOVAN recommends a new, updated production of Mike Leigh’s bittersweet comedy of manners