Superb Revival for the late, great Tom Stoppard's play
about India

FLORA And it’s called a duck bungalow …

MRS SWAN Dak bungalow.

FLORA … although there is not a duck to be seen

 

Irvine Iqbal as Rajah and Ruby Ashbourne Serkis as Flora Crewe (Photo: Johan Persson)

Within minutes it became clear that this is a well‑written play with engaging dialogue and strong performances. Written in 1995 and adapted from his 1991 radio play, the late and much‑lamented Tom Stoppard sets the story in India, where he spent part of his childhood during the Second World War. It takes little imagination to feel transported there.

The play moves seamlessly between the present day and the mid‑1930s centring on two sisters. The younger, Eleanor Swan née Crewe (Felicity Kendal), recounts to researcher Eldon Pike (Donald Sage Mackay) the letters and sent by her older sister and shows him the portraits of Flora Crewe (Ruby Ashbourne Serkis).  Flora died, probably of consumption, in India at the age of 35.  Eleanor is later visited by Anish Das (Aaron Gill), the son of Nirad Das (Gavi Singh Chera), a painter and one of Flora’s suitors.

Felicity Kendal as Mrs Swan and Aaron Gill as Anish Das (Photo:: Johan Persson)

The staging is cleverly designed, using solid backdrops to depict gardens, hills, and the two‑room house where Flora lived for a time in India. This allows for smooth transitions as the story unfolds. The historical setting is significant: at the time, Great Britain was still proclaiming that “the sun never sets on the Empire”.  Britain governed in South Asia countries that are now India, Pakistan, Bangladesh and Sri Lanka, then home to over 100 million people. Because of the vast distances involved, the British administration allowed local rulers a degree of autonomy, though ultimate authority remained in London. The early rumblings of independence are present, a struggle not resolved, and then with conflict, until after the Second World War in August 1947.

Ruby Ashbourne Serkis as Flora Crewe and Gavi Singh Chara as Nitad Das (Photo: Johan Persson)

Flora, a poet recently arrived from England and planning a tour despite her declining health, finds herself courted by the Maharaja (Irvine Iqbal), the British officers stationed there and a talented portrait painter, Nitad Das (Gavi Singh Chara). Each plays a brief but meaningful role in her life.

The British often treated foreign postings as opportunities to relax their usual standards of behaviour Kenya had its “Happy Valley,” and in India the arts flourished, including a vogue for nude portraiture. When Mrs Swan entertains guests with tea and cake, she recalls fragments of the past and discovers a partially finished nude painting of Flora.

Director Jonathan Kent has worked skilfully with the cast, all of whom deliver believable performances. Ruby Ashbourne Serkis is particularly impressive; on stage for most of the play, she captures Flora’s determination to live each day fully, knowing her time is limited. Felicity Kendal brings just the right balance of presence and gentle eccentricity to Eleanor, a woman entering the early stages of dotage. As a small piece of trivia: when the play premiered in 1995, Kendal played Flora; now she portrays the surviving sister.

The ending is both sad and uplifting. The audience, myself included, clearly enjoyed a thoughtful, well‑directed, and beautifully performed production. I intend to see it again before it closes.

Ruby Ashbourne Serkis as Flora Crewe and Sagar Arya as Coomaraswami (Photo: Johan Persson)
Donald Sage Mackay as Eldon Pike and Sushant Shakhar as the Servant, Neil D'Souza as Dilip (Photo: Johan Persson)

Production Notes

Indian Ink

Written by Tom Stoppard

Directed by Jonathan Kent

Felicity Kendall as Mrs Swan and Ruby Ashbourne Serkis as Flora Crewe (Photo: Johan Persson)

Cast

Starring:

Felicity Kendal

Donald Sage Mackay

Evan Milton

Gavi Singh Chera

Mark Carlisle

Neil D’Souza

Sagar Arya

Tom Durant-Pritchard

Irvine Iqbal

Aaron Gill

Ruby Ashbourne Serkis

Bethany Muir

Sushant Shekhar

Creatives

Director: Jonathan Kent

Composer: Kuljit Bharma

Set Designer: Leslie Travers

Costume Designer: Nicky Shaw

Choreographer:  Jack Murphy

Lighting Designer: Peter Mumford

Sound Director:  Christopher Shutt

Information

Running Time: Two hours 45 minutes including an interval

Booking to 31st January 2026

Theatre: 

Hampstead Theatre 

Eton Avenue

Swiss Cottage

London NW3 3EU

Phone: 020 7722 9301

Website: 

www.hampsteadtheatre.com

Tube: Swiss Cottage

Reviewed 

by Malcolm Beckett at

Hampstead Theatre 

on 18th December 2025