17th century
Nell Gwynn, Apollo TheatreFriday, 12 February 2016![]() As a subject for drama, theatre history is always popular in the West End. Between Mr Foote’s Other Leg, which has recently closed at the Theatre Royal Haymarket, and Mrs Henderson Presents, which opens soon at the Noël Coward Theatre, comes Nell... Read more... |
Scholl, Halperin, Sam Wanamaker PlayhouseMonday, 04 January 2016![]() “Music for a while, shall all your cares beguile.” So promise Dryden and Purcell in their hypnotic song, a high-stakes closer for Andreas Scholl and Tamar Halperin’s "Exquisite Love" recital. But beguiling away cares on the eve of a national return... Read more... |
Michael Palin’s Quest for Artemisia, BBC FourTuesday, 29 December 2015![]() For his latest journey Michael Palin, actor, writer, novelist, comedian, Python, traveller, has gone beyond geography in search of the visual arts with his characteristic enthusiasm, eclectic curiosity, and sense of discovery.With his usual... Read more... |
Castor et Pollux, St John's Smith SquareSaturday, 21 November 2015An evening of Rameau was never going to be a neutral event. Last Friday all things French became painfully, irretrievably politicised, and while there were no speeches or acknowledgements last night, when Christian Curnyn dispatched the opera’s... Read more... |
Masters of the Everyday: Dutch Artists in the Age of Vermeer, The Queen’s GallerySaturday, 14 November 2015![]() What is it about Vermeer? Just mention the name and there will be queues around the block. It’s true that there are a handful of other artists with that charisma, but none so rare as Vermeer. The Girl with a Pearl Earring is not only the subject of... Read more... |
L'Ospedale, Wilton's Music HallFriday, 13 November 2015![]() Anyone lamenting the current trend for “wellness” and other associated holistic, pseudo-medical fads might want to take themselves for a medicinal trip down to Wilton’s Music Hall for L’Ospedale. There you will discover (best keep the homeopathic... Read more... |
Tamerlano, Il Pomo d'Oro, Emelyanychev, BarbicanWednesday, 11 November 2015![]() The curse of Tamerlano strikes again. The last time London saw Handel’s darkest and most sober opera was in 2010. Graham Vick’s production for the Royal Opera House lost its unlikely star Placido Domingo before it even opened in London, ran... Read more... |
Orpheus, Royal Opera, Sam Wanamaker PlayhouseSaturday, 24 October 2015![]() It’s Orfeo in the original Italian: not Monteverdi’s, nor yet another version of Gluck’s Orfeo ed Euridice, but a cornucopia of invention in the shape of the first Italian opera for the French court. When the Ensemble Correspondances presented its... Read more... |
Il ritorno d' Ulisse in patria, AAM, Egarr, BarbicanWednesday, 30 September 2015![]() And so the Academy of Ancient Music’s triptych of Monteverdi operas at the Barbican comes to an end, three years after it began with Orfeo. If 2014’s Poppea was the cycle’s sexually-charged climax, then this Ulisse is the dark, contemplative coda –... Read more... |
Nell Gwynn, Shakespeare's GlobeFriday, 25 September 2015![]() “Comedy, love and a bit with a dog,” counselled Henslowe in Stoppard’s Shakespeare in Love, and his populist advice is taken to heart in this broad, bawdy, big-hearted farce untroubled by nuanced characterisation or context. Jessica Swale’s ... Read more... |
The restoration of Nell GwynnTuesday, 22 September 2015![]() I never thought I’d be a writer. Writers are people with something to say, big ideas, agendas. I was a director, through and through. I love working with actors, playing with music and text, thinking in three dimensions. The solitary confinement of... Read more... |
The King Who Invented Ballet, BBC FourMonday, 14 September 2015![]() Someone more unlike Louis XIV than David Bintley is hard to imagine. The latter comes across on TV as the most pleasant, unthreatening, mild-mannered of Everymen; unthinkable that he would order the massacre of Protestants or proclaim, “l’État, c’... Read more... |
