Theatre
The Prince of Egypt, Dominion Theatre review - Moses musical goes big and broadWednesday, 26 February 2020![]() The theatre gods rained down not fire and pestilence, but a 45-minute technical delay on opening night of this substantially revised musical – a stage adaptation of the 1998 DreamWorks animated movie. But nothing could entirely halt this juggernaut... Read more... |
Be More Chill, The Other Palace review - more exhausting than enlighteningMonday, 24 February 2020![]() This latest musical theatre exercise in “geek chic” has been an American phenomenon: a show propelled by social media that developed a rabid fan base taking it all the way to Broadway last year. And here Be More Chill now is in London at The Other... Read more... |
A Number, Bridge Theatre review - a dream team dazzles anewFriday, 21 February 2020![]() There are any number of ways to perform A Number, Caryl Churchill’s bleak and beautiful play about a father and three of who knows how many of his genetically cloned sons. Since it first opened at the Royal Court in 2002, this hourlong two-hander... Read more... |
Pass Over, Kiln Theatre review - fierce critique of racist brutalityThursday, 20 February 2020![]() The Black Lives Matter movement is such an important international protest that it is odd how few contemporary plays even mention it. Since the hashtag #BlackLivesMatter has been around since 2013, following the acquittal of George Zimmerman who... Read more... |
La Cage aux Folles [The Play], Park Theatre review - half-cock farceThursday, 20 February 2020![]() Not the musical then, worst luck. How timely it would have been to mark Jerry Herman's passing with a celebration of a great achievement. Just how brilliantly the pathos and panache of his score lift Jean Poiret's long-running 1970s farce about a... Read more... |
The Best Plays in LondonWednesday, 19 February 2020![]() London is the theatre capital of the world, with more than 50 playhouses offering theatrical entertainment. From the mighty National Theatre to the West End, the small powerhouses of the Donmar Warehouse and the Almeida and out to the fringe... Read more... |
Upstart Crow, Gielgud Theatre review - terrific Shakespeare spoofTuesday, 18 February 2020![]() What joy it is to welcome this offshoot of the television series to the West End stage – complete with several of that show's cast, plus a few new additions. Ben Elton has fashioned an original story that picks up in 1605, a decade after where the... Read more... |
The Visit, National Theatre review - star turn bolsters baggy rewriteSaturday, 15 February 2020![]() Lesley Manville’s thrilling career ascent continues apace with The Visit, which marks American playwright Tony Kushner’s return to the National Theatre following the acclaimed Angels in America revival nearly three... Read more... |
The High Table, Bush Theatre review - party on in Lagos and LondonSaturday, 15 February 2020![]() Queer people of colour face a double discrimination: racism and homophobia. Against this sickness of negation and stupidity one of the best antidotes is a culture of celebration. And in this theatre can play its part. At the Bush, last September,... Read more... |
Leopoldstadt, Wyndham's Theatre review - Stoppard at once personal and accessibleFriday, 14 February 2020![]() It’s not uncommon for playwrights to begin their careers by writing what they know, to co-opt a frequently quoted precept about authorial inspiration. So it’s among the many fascinations of Leopoldstadt that Tom Stoppard, at the age of 82, should... Read more... |
Far Away, Donmar Warehouse review - one for the devoteesThursday, 13 February 2020![]() Caryl Churchill, Britain's best living playwright, is enjoying a spate of high-profile revivals of her classic work. Last year, the National Theatre staged her Top Girls, and an upcoming production of A Number is coming soon to the Bridge Theatre.... Read more... |
Nora: A Doll's House, Young Vic review - Ibsen diced, sliced and reinvented with poetic precisionWednesday, 12 February 2020![]() Ibsen's Nora slammed the door on her infantilising marriage in 1879 but the sound of it has continued to reverberate down the years. In 2013, Carrie Cracknell directed Hattie Morahan in an award-winning performance at this theatre, last year Tanika... Read more... |
