Theatre
The Crucible, Shakespeare's Globe review - stirring account of paranoia and prejudiceThursday, 22 May 2025![]() A society ruled by hysteria. Lurid lies that carry more currency than reality. There’s no shortage of reasons that Arthur Miller’s 1953 drama about witchcraft and revenge resonates so strongly today.In an article in the New Yorker he described how... Read more... |
The Fifth Step, Soho Place review - wickedly funny two-hander about defeating alcoholismTuesday, 20 May 2025![]() The plays of David Ireland have a tendency to build to an explosion, after long stretches of caustic dialogue and very funny banter. The Fifth Step, though, is a gentler beast whose humour ends with a simple visual gag. Maybe because this is more... Read more... |
The Deep Blue Sea, Theatre Royal Haymarket review - Tamsin Greig honours Terence RattiganSaturday, 17 May 2025![]() The water proves newly inviting in The Deep Blue Sea, Terence Rattigan's mournful 1952 play that some while ago established its status as an English classic. Lindsay Posner's production, first seen in Bath with one major change of cast since then,... Read more... |
The Brightening Air, Old Vic review - Chekhov jostles Conor McPherson in writer-director's latestSaturday, 17 May 2025![]() It's one thing to be indebted to a playwright, as Tom Stoppard and Harold Pinter have been at different times to Beckett, or Sondheim's latest musical is to Sartre. But Conor McPherson's The Brightening Air – the title itself is derived from Yeats... Read more... |
1536, Almeida Theatre review - fast and furious portrayal of women in Henry VIII's EnglandThursday, 15 May 2025![]() Ava Pickett’s award-winning début play, 1536, is a foul-mouthed, furious, frenetically funny ride through the lives of three young women living in Henry VIII’s England in the year of Anne Boleyn’s execution. It’s less Wolf Hall than a wolf howl of... Read more... |
The Comedy About Spies, Noel Coward Theatre review - 'Goes Wrong' team hit the spot againThursday, 15 May 2025![]() From the creative team that brought you The Play That Goes Wrong in 2012 (and assorted sequels) comes this spy caper. As ever with Mischief productions, their latest work is a lot of fun and pays its dues to the great age of British farce (and... Read more... |
House of Games, Hampstead Theatre review - adapted Mamet screenplay entertains but is defangedWednesday, 14 May 2025![]() There is so much that is right about Jonathan Kent’s new production of House of Games – the casting, the staging, the direction. But the flaw it can’t overcome is that the 1987 David Mamet screenplay on which Richard Bean based this stage version in... Read more... |
Here We Are, National Theatre review - Sondheim's sensational swan songFriday, 09 May 2025![]() You don't have to be greeting the modern day with a smile unsupported by events in the wider world to have a field day at Here We Are. The last musical from the venerated Stephen Sondheim has only grown in import and meaning since I caught its New... Read more... |
Giant, Harold Pinter Theatre review - incendiary Roald Dahl drama with topical biteFriday, 09 May 2025![]() When Mark Rosenblatt was preparing his debut play, the miseries of the assault on Gaza were still over the horizon. Now they are here, another terrible moment in human history that resonates all through Giant. Since the play opened at the Royal... Read more... |
Einkvan, Det Norske Teatret, The Coronet Theatre review - alienation times sixFriday, 09 May 2025![]() Watching the stricken faces on the split screen, I felt at times like callow Farfrae in Hardy’s The Mayor of Casterbridge: when faced with Henchard’s account of his blackest misery, the young man replies “Ah, now, I never feel like it”. Well,... Read more... |
The Gang of Three, King's Head Theatre - three old Labour ghosts resurrected to entertain and educateThursday, 08 May 2025![]() There was a time when the only daytime TV (ex-weekends and ex-Wimbledon fortnight) comprised the annual party conferences and the Trade Union Congress. A seemingly endless parade of indistinguishable middle-aged balding white men, with Barbara... Read more... |
Conversations After Sex, Park Theatre review - pillow talk proves a snoozeWednesday, 07 May 2025![]() In Dublin, a city that has changed more than most in the last 30 years, a young woman, with an English accent that is expensive to acquire, is cycling through sexual partners. We eavesdrop on their conversations, witness the physical intimacy fade... Read more... |
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