All the nerves, hope, and anticipation of getting ready for a date melt together in Tia-Renee Mullings's coming-of-age play A to B. Told through two separate, overlapping monologues, Brianna (Zakiyyah Dean) and Armani (Sheyi Cole) prepare for a night that could change their lives for the better - or go horribly wrong. Set up on a blind date by mutual friends, they have only a photo to go on. It's a premise many will recognize in today's dating app-fuelled world. But that anxiety isn't enough to sustain momentum across 80 minutes. For Brianna and Armani, nothing goes to plan: Brianna's younger sisters destroy her outfit, and a water gun ruins her hair; Armani misses his barber and ends up with the worst trim of his life. After a while, the relentless string of mishaps becomes predictable, and things feel as though they're running in circles. Keeping up appearances is armor, but we long for something deeper. Occasionally, we catch a flicker: Dean reveals Brianna as someone eager to be loved, while Cole's Armani dares to hope his date will see beyond his failed image. Directed by Ewa Dina, time-stamps flash on a screen, and the script sings through lyrical spoken-word passages and rhythmic exchanges. Mullings's words pulse with the textures of south London life, drawing British Jamaican life in vibrant shades. This is the beginning of a beautiful modern love story - we just need a little more of the story for it to feel complete.