Be drawn in by a play about unconventional love in Soviet society this autumn.

Written by acclaimed Azerbaijani playwright, Ilyas Afandiyev, and originally produced in 1964, You're Always With Me revolves around love, class and Soviet society’s impact on individuals.

Afandiyev wrote more than 80 different works in his lifetime, including novels, short stories and essays in addition to his plays and is considered a master of the psychological drama.

You're Always With Me tells the story of a bittersweet romance, a pair, both lonely in their own ways, find themselves drawn to each other.

As they form a bond that defies conventions, their relationship makes us ask whether love holds the answer to loneliness? Can we ever make love shape our lives for the better?

Its resonances are still relevant today, in its gentle examination of how love naturally takes different forms in the different stages of our lives, and the way how the world seeks to impose and mould those loves.

This production, by Aloff Theatre, is directed by Filiz Ozcan, a member of the World Arts Platform Artist Advisory Group and currently working at Pegasus Theatre.

You're Always With Me; Lost Theatre, Wandsworth Road; September 12 to 27, Tuesday to Saturday 7.30pm, Sunday 3pm; £10 on the door, £8 conc, £11.25 adv, £9 conc adv; 020 7720 6897; losttheatre.co.uk.