17th century
Shakespeare Trilogy, Donmar at King's CrossThursday, 24 November 2016![]() If you are new to the Donmar Warehouse all-female stagings of Shakespeare’s Julius Caesar and Henry IV – 2012 and 2014 respectively – the biggest surprise is not so much that these highly masculine dramas are performed entirely by women. It is their... Read more... |
Cymbeline, RSC, BarbicanTuesday, 08 November 2016![]() “Britain is a world by itself.” It could be the slogan of the year – and rather longer, probably – but the phrase comes from Shakespeare’s late romance Cymbeline. Its Act III scene, in which Britain announces that it is breaking its... Read more... |
10 Questions for Director Lucy BaileyWednesday, 26 October 2016![]() Theatre was not Lucy Bailey’s first target. At school she was a flautist, headed probably for music. Then, in her gap year, she took a job as a telephonist at Glyndebourne, and noticed a vigorous man with a beard – name of Peter Hall – moving people... Read more... |
Adriaen van de Velde, Dulwich Picture GalleryWednesday, 26 October 2016![]() Oh, those dogs: just a flick of the brush, and there they are, bursting with life. Pets, hunting dogs, companions, strays: romping on beaches, or in Dutch forests, living on farms and in imagined arcadias. Adriaen van de Velde was a 17th century... Read more... |
10 Questions for Conductor Sir John Eliot GardinerSunday, 16 October 2016![]() The Lobgesang "lies very near my heart," wrote Mendelssohn. And the composer was so self-critical that the published order of his symphonies bears no resemblance to their composition: this "Hymn of Praise", known as the Second, was the penultimate... Read more... |
Beyond Caravaggio, National GalleryWednesday, 12 October 2016![]() Cheekily bottom-like, their downy skin blushing enticingly, these must be the sexiest apricots ever painted. If you held out your hand, you might just be able to touch them, there in the foreground of what is thought to be Caravaggio’s earliest... Read more... |
The Fairy Queen, AAM, BarbicanTuesday, 11 October 2016![]() Purcell’s The Fairy Queen is a riddle to which directors must find an answer. The problems posed by a work whose theatrical characters have no foothold in the musical interludes, whose text is an awkward composite of almost-Shakespeare and not-at-... Read more... |
The Libertine, Haymarket TheatreWednesday, 28 September 2016![]() Restoration theatre has the reputation of being a rake’s paradise – all those randy young aristos in hot pursuit of buxom wenches. But even in the depths of 17th-century playwriting, there was room for repentance and regret among the discarded... Read more... |
Imogen, Shakespeare's GlobeSaturday, 24 September 2016![]() What's in a name? Imogen has a softer music to it than Cymbeline, the only one of Shakespeare's plays in which the title character is marginal, and the daughter certainly dominates in a way that her regal father doesn't. So Cymbeline Renamed, as... Read more... |
The Alchemist, RSC, BarbicanThursday, 15 September 2016![]() The confidence trick to end all tricks, Ben Jonson’s The Alchemist is so utterly recognisable, so clearly contemporary, that to update the setting feels a bit like underlining the point in red pen. In this transfer from Stratford's Swan Theatre... Read more... |
Two Quixotes, The English Concert, Bicket, Wigmore HallThursday, 15 September 2016![]() They dreamed the impossible dream in 1970, turning aspects of Cervantes' Don Quixote into the musical Man of La Mancha. But Purcell, Eccles and the lively dramatist Thomas D'Urfey - anyone know his hit song "The Fart"? - got there first nearly 300... Read more... |
Doctor Faustus, RSC, Barbican TheatreWednesday, 14 September 2016![]() What price a human soul? That’s the question Marlowe’s Doctor Faustus asks – a question whose answers are rooted in faith and theology. But in a society with little use for faith and still less for theology, how do you reframe the question? Director... Read more... |
