Theatre
Plaza Suite, Savoy Theatre review - real-life married couple brings panache and pain to period comedyMonday, 29 January 2024![]() Sarah Jessica Parker's screen renown as Carrie Bradshaw in Sex and the City has made a London event out of the West End revival of Plaza Suite, the Neil Simon triptych from 1968 that is as definably New York as the TV series in which Parker made her... Read more... |
Northanger Abbey, Orange Tree Theatre review - larky retelling of Austen’s satire with a poignant coreFriday, 26 January 2024![]() What Zoe Cooper has concocted in her loving rewiring of Jane Austen’s first completed novel looks at first sight like a knockabout satire of a satire. But her aim is more sober than that: a queer rereading of this text as she first experienced it as... Read more... |
Cowbois, Royal Court review - fabulously queer extravaganzaSaturday, 20 January 2024![]() At its best theatre is a seducer. It weaves a magic spell that can persuade you, perhaps against your better judgement, to love a show. To adore a show; to enjoy yourself. This, at least, is my experience of Charlie Josephine’s Cowbois, a queer... Read more... |
Jekyll and Hyde, Lyceum Theatre Edinburgh review - audacious contemporary resonancesThursday, 18 January 2024![]() Evil walks among us. But it doesn’t arrive courtesy of mad scientists, bubbling potions and horrifying transformations. Instead, it comes from ordinary people surrendering themselves to their basest desires and resentments. Even worse, doing that... Read more... |
Kin, National Theatre review - heartfelt show makes its demands, but yields its rewardsWednesday, 17 January 2024![]() Waiting in the National Theatre’s foyer on press night, a space teeming with people speaking different languages, boasting different heritages – London in other words – news came through that leading members of the government had resigned because... Read more... |
Don't Destroy Me, Arcola Theatre review - a theatre history curioWednesday, 17 January 2024![]() British Theatre abounds in forgotten writers. And in ones whose early work is too rarely revived. One such is Michael Hastings, best known for Tom & Viv, his 1984 biographical drama about TS Eliot and his wife Vivienne, so in theory it’s great... Read more... |
The Good John Proctor, Jermyn Street Theatre review - Salem-set drama loses some of its power in LondonSaturday, 13 January 2024![]() It is no surprise that the phrase “Witch Hunt” is Donald Trump’s favoured term to describe his legal travails. Leaving aside its connotations of a malevolent state going after an innocent victim whilst in the throes of a self-serving moral panic, it... Read more... |
The Enfield Haunting, Ambassadors Theatre review - muddled revisiting of famous paranormal eventsFriday, 12 January 2024![]() Reports of supernatural events are always met with either willing belief or dismissive scepticism. The "camps" generally don't have much to say to each other: belief in immovable logic, discounting the weird as merely the so-far unexplained, can be... Read more... |
1979, Finborough Theatre review - niche subject matter finds a strong resonanceSaturday, 06 January 2024![]() If a week is a long time in politics, what price 44 years? And 3500 miles? Turns out, not much, as Michael Healey’s sparkling play, 1979, proves that events all that time ago and all that way across the Atlantic maintain a remarkable relevance today... Read more... |
Best of 2023: TheatreWednesday, 27 December 2023![]() Wait, and your wishes are answered. That seemed to be the case during the theatre year just gone, following on from 2022 when new British writing of quality seemed thin on the ground.That couldn't have been further from the case during 2023, not... Read more... |
This Much I Know, Hampstead Theatre review - an intellectual game with a slight emotional payloadSaturday, 23 December 2023![]() How do you make a play out of Stalin’s defecting daughter Svetlana, the psycho-economic theories of Daniel Kahneman and a fictionalised version of Derek Black, the son of a leading American white nationalist?Playwright Jonathan Spector, who reveals... Read more... |
The Motive and the Cue, Noel Coward Theatre - National Theatre transfer excels in the West EndWednesday, 20 December 2023![]() Plays about the theatre tend to go down well with audiences. Why wouldn’t they? The danger is that they become too cosy as actors and audience smugly agree on the transcendence of the artform. Jack Thorne’s The Motive and the Cue comes perilously... Read more... |
