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La finta semplice, Classical Opera, QEH review - consummate musicianship stokes early MozartThursday, 07 June 2018![]() You can always be sure of impeccable casting and spirited playing as Ian Page takes his Classical Opera through Mozart year by year. Just don't expect more than the glimmer of genius to come in 1768, though. It doesn't matter in those admirable... Read more... |
The Prudes, Royal Court review - hilarious but frustrating sex showWednesday, 25 April 2018![]() Playwright Anthony Neilson has always been fascinated by sex. I mean, who isn’t? But he has made it a central part of his career. In his bad-boy in-yer-face phase, from the early 1990s to about the mid-2000s, he pioneered a type of theatre that... Read more... |
DVD: QueeramaTuesday, 27 March 2018![]() Last year, the BFI commemorated the 50th anniversary of the partial decriminalisation of homosexuality with the release of Queerama, part of its Gross Indecency film season. Now available on DVD, the documentary from Daisy Asquith eschews standard... Read more... |
Lisa Halliday: Asymmetry review - unconventional and brilliantSunday, 04 March 2018Lisa Halliday’s striking debut novel consists of three parts. The first follows the blooming relationship between Alice and Ezra (respectively an Assistant Editor and a Pulitzer Prize-winning writer) in New York; the middle section comprises a... Read more... |
Harold and Maude, Charing Cross Theatre review - Sheila Hancock serene in thin productionWednesday, 28 February 2018![]() The practice of mining the rich seam of popular movies to turn them into stage plays or musicals seemingly never grows tired in theatreland. And sometimes it produces a gem but all too often it’s just a cynical ploy to attract ticket sales by piggy-... Read more... |
Julian Barnes: The Only Story review - passion, pain and sorrow in SurreySunday, 28 January 2018![]() From his debut Metroland, right up to the Man Booker-winning The Sense of an Ending, the prospect of a road not taken has haunted the mild and mediocre narrators of Julian Barnes’s novels. Like Tony Webster in The Sense of an Ending, “average at... Read more... |
The Flying Lovers of Vitebsk, Kneehigh on tour review - sweetest musical ChagallianaThursday, 25 January 2018![]() Time flies so much more beguilingly in Daniel Jamieson and Emma Rice's 90-minute musical fantasia than it ever has, for me, in Bock and Harnick's Fiddler on the Roof – and the songs aren't bad, either. The inspiration here – and inspiration's the... Read more... |
The Melting Pot, Finborough Theatre review - entertaining moralsThursday, 07 December 2017![]() Israel Zangwill’s 1908 play The Melting Pot characterises Europe as an old and worn-out continent racked by violence and injustice and in thrall to its own bloody past. America, on the other hand, represents a visionary project that will “melt... Read more... |
Han Kang: The White Book review - between what is, what was, what might have beenSunday, 05 November 2017![]() A woman gives birth alone two months early in a frost-bound village in the Korean countryside. In Poland, a solitary woman washes down white migraine pills and concludes she must write. The child that is born dies. The finished book commemorates her... Read more... |
Heisenberg: The Uncertainty Principle, Wyndham’s Theatre review – paradoxically predictableTuesday, 10 October 2017Playwright Simon Stephens and director Marianne Elliott are hyped as a winning partnership. Their previous collaborations include The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time, a massive Olivier award-winning hit, and her sensitive revival of... Read more... |
Coming soon: trailers to the next big filmsFriday, 11 August 2017![]() Summer's here, which can only mean Hollywood blockbusters. But it's not all Spider-Man, talking apes and World War Two with platoons of thespians fighting on the beaches. There's comedy, a saucy menage-à-trois, a film about golf and even a ghost... Read more... |
Tristan und Isolde, Longborough FestivalFriday, 09 June 2017![]() The Longborough Festival was started, essentially, to perform Wagner, and Wagner is still what it does best. This revival of Carmen Jakobi’s production of Tristan und Isolde is the strongest argument imaginable for small-theatre Wagner. For once the... Read more... |
