Theatre
The Strange Death of John Doe, Hampstead Theatre review - ambitious but not entirely successfulWednesday, 06 June 2018![]() Regular air travel is a hassle. All that queuing, all that security, all those hot halls, and then the endless waiting, the bawling kids and the limited legroom. Basically air travel sucks. But at least it’s reasonably safe. The same cannot be said... Read more... |
Killer Joe, Trafalgar Studios review - family drama, creepy and cruelTuesday, 05 June 2018![]() Right from the beginning of Simon Evans’s production of Tracy Letts's 1993 play, it’s clear we’re in for an intense, raw experience. A storm of almost symphonic musical accompaniment roars, lightning flashing over the claustrophobic trailer... Read more... |
The Two Noble Kinsmen, Shakespeare's Globe review - a breezy bromance served up slightMonday, 04 June 2018![]() Those who find the Bard tough going – wasn't that one of Emma Rice's admissions back in the day? – should beat a path to The Two Noble Kinsmen, a late-career collaboration with John Fletcher that emerges as Shakespeare lite. Remembered (dimly) as... Read more... |
Fatherland, Lyric Hammersmith review - loud and proud, shame about the contentSaturday, 02 June 2018![]() Masculinity, whether toxic or in crisis (but never ever problem-free), is a hardy perennial subject for British new writing, and this new piece from playwright Simon Stephens, Frantic Assembly director Scott Graham and Underworld musician Karl Hyde... Read more... |
Translations, National Theatre review - an Irish classic returns with cascading forceThursday, 31 May 2018![]() What sort of physical upgrade can a play withstand? That question will have occurred to devotees of Brian Friel's Translations, a play that has thrived in smaller venues (London's Hampstead and Donmar, over time) and had trouble in larger spaces: a... Read more... |
Tartuffe, Theatre Royal Haymarket review - dual-language production loses its wayThursday, 31 May 2018![]() The idea of producing a classic play in a mix of two languages is pretty odd. What kind of audience is a bilingual version of Molière’s best-known comedy aiming at, you wonder. Homesick émigrés? British francophiles with rusty A-level French?... Read more... |
Consent, Harold Pinter Theatre review - exhilaratingWednesday, 30 May 2018![]() Question: is Consent, transferred from the National to the West End, a sharp-tongued comedy or an acute reinvention of a revenge drama? There are more than enough smartly placed laughs throughout the tart, increasingly taut first act, to make you... Read more... |
Break of Noon, Finborough Theatre review - irredeemable?Tuesday, 29 May 2018![]() I’ve forgotten my wallet. This is both embarrassing (where did the fun lush part between callow youth and irrefutable senility disappear?) and upsetting because by the interval of the Finborough Theatre’s revival of French symbolist writer Paul... Read more... |
Peter Pan, Regent's Park Open Air Theatre review - ensemble playing at its bestSaturday, 26 May 2018![]() This exuberant production both clarifies and further complicates the conundrum of Peter Pan. In any production true to Barrie there is an underpinning of sadness, an acknowledgement of the losses we must all suffer: children leave home and adult... Read more... |
The Grönholm Method, Menier Chocolate Factory - sleek and short but in no way deepFriday, 25 May 2018![]() Add Catalan writer Jordi Galcerán to the shortlist of European playwrights who are finding an international perch, in this case with a tricksy four-character play that has had more than 200 productions in over 60 countries. The UK premiere of... Read more... |
The String Quartet’s Guide to Sex and Anxiety, Brighton Festival review - molto nervosoFriday, 25 May 2018![]() Calixto Bieito has a reputation as a radical theatre-maker, and by any standards The String Quartet’s Guide to Sex and Anxiety is an unusual, genre-breaking piece; Bieito has described it as “like a symphonic poem for a quartet of musicians, and a... Read more... |
Ian Rickson: 'I'm an introvert, I want to stop talking about myself' - interviewTuesday, 22 May 2018![]() Ian Rickson’s route into theatre was not conventional. Growing up in south London, he discovered plays largely through reading them as a student at Essex University. During those years he stood on a picketline in the miners’ strike, and proudly... Read more... |
