Skip to main content
Inescapable prison
MARY CONWAY admires a vivid, compassionate portrait of a father and daughter pinioned in the criminal underclass
COMPELLING PORTRAITS: Joanne Marie Mason Alice Walker in Che Walker's Burnt Up Love

Burnt Up Love
Finborough Theatre

CHE WALKER, who writes, directs and stars in Burnt Up Love at the Finborough is such an old hand as playwright, director and performer that we immediately know where we are. He knows what he’s setting out to do and delivers with confidence.

Mac is a prisoner, serving 20 years for murder. What keeps him going is his profound love for the daughter he last saw when she was three and a half. Her crumpled photograph on his wall is the light that illuminates the desperate darkness of cell life. And when he finally gets out, he goes to look for her.

The dramatic collision of dream with reality is inevitable. For, over the years, Mac has constructed in his mind a tale of social elevation and success for his girl. In the real world, however, the long arms of violence and the criminal underworld have reached far beyond the confines of his own cell, and they have mangled his daughter’s life as uncompromisingly as they have his own. Her attempt at a lesbian relationship with petty criminal Jayjayjay is doomed.  Even her name — Scratch — is hard and grating. No easy happy ending is on the cards when brutality and self-loathing are etched into Scratch’s psyche.

The 95th Anniversary Appeal
Support the Morning Star
You have reached the free limit.
Subscribe to continue reading.
Similar stories
CO-DEPENDENCY: Rex Ryan and Lauren Farrell in Men's Business
Theatre Review / 27 March 2025
27 March 2025
MAYER WAKEFIELD is chilled by the co-dependency of two lost souls as portrayed by German communist playwright Franz Xaver Kroetz
AWKWARD HOMOGENISING OF RCIAL GROUPS: Gershwyn Eustache Jnr
Theatre Review / 3 March 2025
3 March 2025
MAYER WAKEFIELD wonders why this 1978 drama merits a revival despite demonstrating that the underlying theme of racism in the UK remains relevant
RAW POSSESSIVENESS: Jemma Carlton, Dario Coates and Sophie W
Theatre Review / 19 September 2024
19 September 2024
MARY CONWAY marvels at the totally engrossing revival of a little-known classic that speaks volumes to interpersonal relationships today
CHARACTER OR SYMBOL? Peter De Jersey as Vet in Suzan-Lori Pa
Theatre Review / 30 May 2024
30 May 2024
SIMON PARSONS investigates a play that is neither a family drama representative of a polarised US, nor symbolic drama of violent isolationism