National Theatre
Dear Octopus, National Theatre - period rarity is a real pleasureFriday, 16 February 2024Sisters are doing it for themselves, just as families as a whole are, too, on the London stage these days. Dear Octopus follows Till the Stars Come Down and The Hills of California as the third domestic drama I've seen in the last 10 days and... Read more... |
Till the Stars Come Down, National Theatre review - exuberant comedy with a dark edgeSaturday, 03 February 2024The National Theatre is meant to represent the whole nation – and not just the metropolitan middle classes. So it’s really good to see that Beth Steel – who comes from an East Midlands working-class background and was once writer in... Read more... |
Kin, National Theatre review - heartfelt show makes its demands, but yields its rewardsWednesday, 17 January 2024Waiting in the National Theatre’s foyer on press night, a space teeming with people speaking different languages, boasting different heritages – London in other words – news came through that leading members of the government had resigned because... Read more... |
The Motive and the Cue, Noel Coward Theatre - National Theatre transfer excels in the West EndWednesday, 20 December 2023Plays about the theatre tend to go down well with audiences. Why wouldn’t they? The danger is that they become too cosy as actors and audience smugly agree on the transcendence of the artform. Jack Thorne’s The Motive and the Cue comes perilously... Read more... |
Infinite Life, National Theatre review - beguiling new comedy about a world of painMonday, 04 December 2023A sun deck with seven pale-green padded loungers is the latest setting for the latest National Theatre premiere from American playwright Annie Baker to people in her inimitable way. In her hands this banal space is as dramatically charged as... Read more... |
The House of Bernarda Alba, Lyttelton Theatre review - dazzling darknessThursday, 30 November 2023Rebecca Frecknall opened 2023 with a youthful, visceral, and brutal Streetcar Named Desire at the Almeida; she ends it with another startlingly vigorous adaptation, again of a play in which women are abused by men both physically and... Read more... |
The Witches, National Theatre review - fun and lively but where's the heart?Monday, 27 November 2023The National Theatre these days seems to be going from hit-to-hit, with transfers aplenty and full houses at home. And there's every reason to expect that this fizzy adaptation of Roald Dahl's 1983 creep-out, The Witches, has the West End and... Read more... |
The Confessions, National Theatre review - rich mix of the personal and the epicWednesday, 25 October 2023How to describe Alexander Zeldin’s latest, The Confessions? It is almost a kitchen-sink drama, but also a picaresque trawl through the life of an Australian woman that’s verging on epic, spanning most of her 80 years. And it’s stirring stuff,... Read more... |
Dear England, Prince Edward Theatre review - still a winner in its new West End homeSaturday, 21 October 2023It was interesting, in the same week that the England football team trounced Italy 3-1 in a Euros qualifier, to see Dear England again, the National Theatre smash that has just embarked on a West End run at the Prince Edward Theatre.One of the three... Read more... |
Death of England: Closing Time, National Theatre review - thrillingly and abundantly aliveTuesday, 10 October 2023It’s closing time somewhere in the East End. Nah, not the pub, but at a small local shop. Inside, Denise is banging around with some big pans, while Carly is packing up the flowers. Their business is coming to an end and they are about to hand over... Read more... |
The Father and the Assassin, National Theatre review - Gandhi's killer given an outstanding star turnSaturday, 16 September 2023From the moment that the blood-stained Nathuram Godse rises out of the floor of the National Theatre's Olivier stage and demands ‘What are you staring at? Have you never seen a murderer up close before?’, we are locked into a queasy, teasing... Read more... |
The Odyssey: The Underworld, National Theatre review - community effort with real heart and a great stagingWednesday, 30 August 2023One of the great wonders of Western literary history is one of the earliest, Homer’s The Odyssey, an epic poem with all the thrills and spills of an Indiana Jones outing, with added Olympians. The National’s version turned out not to be The Odyssey... Read more... |