“Crazy for You” – Chichester Festival Theatre
Jeremy Malies in West Sussex 23 July 2022 “With love to lead the way, I’ve found more clouds of gray
Read MoreJeremy Malies in West Sussex 23 July 2022 “With love to lead the way, I’ve found more clouds of gray
Read MoreSimon Thomas in Somerset 20 July 2022 Coming just days after the death of Peter Brook, the opening of Deborah
Read MoreCrysse Morrison in Somerset 20 July 2022 Back in the 1970s, in an era of exuberance unrecognisable to most in
Read MoreJeremy Malies on the South Bank 18 July 2022 There are three time periods in this reworking of Sheridan’s The
Read MoreNeil Dowden in north London 18 July 2022 Peter Morgan has made a successful career of imagining what went on
Read MoreMaggie Rose’s festival diary 15 July 2022 Reflecting on their second year at the helm of the Venice Theatre Biennale,
Read MoreAnnie Loui in Perugia 11 July 2022 History of Violence directed by Thomas Ostermeier, artistic director of the Schaubühne Theater
Read MoreDana Rufolo in north London 9 July 2022 Experiencing the vitality and emotional intensity of black British playwright Roy Williams’
Read MoreHans-Jürgen Bartsch at the Berlin Theatertreffen festival 6 July 2022 In 2020 and 2021, the annual Theatertreffen festival had fallen
Read MoreTom Bolton in south London 5 July 2022 It says something about national cultures that the French equivalent of The
Read MoreAnnie Loui in Perugia 5 July 2022 The Belgian-based choreography WEG by Ayelin Parolin comes to this Umbria festival framed by
Read MoreAnnie Loui in Perugia 22 July 2022 In the atmospheric Piazza del Duomo in Spoleto, a thousand Italians and visitors
Read MoreNeil Dowden on the South Bank 26 June 2022 Kathryn Hunter played King Lear in a landmark production directed by
Read MoreNeil Dowden on the South Bank 23 June 2022 Jitney is August Wilson’s first work in his epic Pittsburgh or
Read MoreNeil Dowden in Richmond 21 June 2022 The Orange Tree Theatre’s latest show in their adventurous mix of old and
Read MoreCrysse Morrison in the south-west 20 June 2022 August Strindberg considered this his best play, and the vicious marital hostility
Read MoreJeremy Malies in the West End 20 June 2022 As we take our seats for James Macdonald’s production with design
Read MoreLudovico Lucchesi Palli in Vienna 16 June 2022 One of the highlights of this year’s Theater im Park, which is
Read MoreSimon Jenner in Brighton 15 June 2022 “Where nothing happens. Twice.” Thus Vivian Mercier at this work’s Irish premiere in
Read MoreNeil Dowden in west London 8 June 2022 Jean Racine’s tightly structured neoclassical plays – obeying the unities of place,
Read MoreNeil Dowden in the West End 7 June 2022 Tennessee Williams famously described The Glass Menagerie – which made his
Read MoreNeil Dowden in north London 3 June 2022 Girl on an Altar is Irish playwright Marina Carr’s powerful new take
Read MoreLudovico Lucchesi Palli in Vienna After two cancellations in April 2020 and March 2021, the long-awaited Vienna premiere of Gruber
Read MoreJeremy Malies on the South Bank 31 May 2022 You don’t see a version of the life story of Mahatma
Read MoreNeil Dowden in east London 29 May 2022 The Arcola has finally reopened its indoor theatre – having previously staged
Read MoreJeremy Malies in the West End 23 May 2022 The action of Lerner and Loewe’s My Fair Lady begins at
Read MoreNeil Dowden in north London Beth Steel writes big, bold, ambitious dramas in which individuals are caught up in a
Read MoreNeil Dowden in north London 16 May 2022 Although based in the UK for many years, Naomi Wallace returns to
Read More16 May 2022 Jeremy Malies on the South Bank “O, that a man might know / The end of this
Read MoreTom Bolton on the South Bank 13 May 2022 The memory of repeated lockdowns may be fading now, but the
Read MoreJeremy Malies on the South Bank 12 May 2022 An unusual Skidmore Ranch this one; Jud Fry not only looks
Read MoreJeremy Malies in the West End 10 May 2022 It’s St George’s Day in an unspecified year at the village
Read MoreTom Bolton in Notting Hill, London 26 April 2022 Irish company Gare St Lazare were booked to perform at the
Read MoreNeil Dowden in west London 23 April 2022 Mike Bartlett has become one of the few contemporary living playwrights to
Read More22 April 2022 Das Zigarettenreich (Jeder Traum hat ein Ende), Werk X- Petersplatz Ludovico Lucchesi Palli in Vienna. The newest
Read MoreGlenda Frank in New York City Birthday Candles, a play by Noah Haidle, produced by Roundabout Theatre follows Ernestine from
Read MoreGlenda Frank on Broadway 17 April 2022 Take Me Out, a locker room dramedy by Richard Greenberg, now at the
Read MoreNeil Dowden in the West End 11 April 2022 Harper Lee’s classic 1960 novel To Kill a Mockingbird has been
Read MoreJeremy Malies in Waterloo 11 April 2022 The near future in vaguely Shakespearian blank verse appears to have plenty of
Read MoreCrysse Morrison in south-west England 8 April 2022 When Liam leaves his best friend Fletch on an upwardly mobile journey,
Read MoreGlenda Frank in New York 7 April 2022 Has Sarah Jessica Parker been miscast all these years? Yes, she was
Read MoreCrysse Morrison in Somerset 7 April 2022 “Never boring for a split second” was Noël Coward’s verdict on the plays
Read MoreNeil Dowden on the South Bank 30 March 2022 David Hare’s new play Straight Line Crazy at the Bridge Theatre
Read MoreJeremy Malies in north London 25 March 2022 Ethnicity and land grab. Reduce things down to how people really interact,
Read MoreNeil Dowden in the West End 24 March 2022 Jean Cocteau’s 1930 monodrama The Human Voice about a woman’s last
Read MoreDana Rufolo in Germany 18 March 2022 It is a relief that Franziska Autzen, the director of Katharina Blum oder:
Read MoreNeil Dowden in the West End 18 March 2022 Mike Bartlett made his name with the Olivier Award-winning Cock at
Read MoreLudovico Lucchesi Palli in Vienna 14 March 2022 Vienna’s Theater Nestroyhof Hamakom has joined forces with the acclaimed stage and
Read MoreCrysse Morrison in Bristol 14 March 2022 ‘A vision for the future of theatre’ is how director Tom Morris sees
Read MoreCrysse Morrison in Bristol Written by David Lane and directed by Sita Calvert-Ennals, this poignant two-hander follows an imagined reunion
Read MoreTom Bolton in London Borough of Newham 11 March 2022 Dennis Kelly’s 2005 play After the End is set inside
Read MoreTom Bolton on the South Bank 10 March 2022 The Merchant of Venice is seen as a problematic play but,
Read MoreTom Bolton in Notting Hill Gate 4 March 2022 Jonathan Kent opened his tenure as Artistic Director of the Almeida
Read MoreMaggie Rose in Milan 7 October 2022 M. Il figlio del secolo is a literary adaptation, based on Antonio Scurati’s
Read MoreMaggie Rose in Milan 21 September 2022 Milan’s Franco Parenti theatre has hosted La vita davanti a sé (The Life
Read MoreNeil Dowden on the South Bank 8 March 2022 Last staged in London 26 years ago, David Mamet’s 1977 play
Read MoreNeil Dowden on the South Bank 25 February 2022 Anthony McCarten’s new play focuses on a fascinating true episode in
Read MoreLudovico Lucchesi Palli at the Bronski & Grünberg Theater, Vienna Bronski & Grünberg Theater is a popular venue in the
Read MoreGlenda Frank in New York City2 February 2022 Prayer for the French Republic, Joshua Harmon’s (Significant Other) new play, directed
Read MoreNeil Dowden in north London15 February 2022 Over the last decade French playwright Florian Zeller has had a series of
Read MoreLudovico Lucchesi Palli in Vienna 30 September 2021 Kaja Dymnicki and Alexander Pschill are founding members of Vienna’s Bronski & Grünberg
Read MoreNeil Dowden in north London17 February 2022 The slippery ambivalence of absurdist playwright Eugène Ionesco’s works makes them tricky to
Read MoreTom Bolton on the South Bank4 February 2022 Sean Holmes’ production of Hamlet in the Globe’s indoor space opens with
Read MoreJeremy Malies in Surrey11 February 2022 A boozy Elsinore this – any critic (and we’re not noted for sobriety) playing
Read MoreJeremy Malies in Canterbury10 February 2022 “Hate the critics? I have nothing but compassion for them. How can one hate
Read MoreNeil Dowden on the South Bank11 February 2022 Bristol-based company Wise Children’s touring production of Wuthering Heights now blusters into
Read MoreCrysse Morrison in Bristol27 January 2022 Bristol Old Vic director Tom Morris pulled off what many will consider a coup when
Read More„Der Herr Rudi“ in Georg Danzers „ Sauna G’schichten“ Reviewed by Ludovico Lucchesi Palli in Vienna.7 February 2022 Following a
Read MoreJeremy Malies at the Old Vic2 February 2022 Caryl Churchill’s A Number is about cloning though the word is never
Read MoreNeil Dowden in Sloane Square, London.28 January 2022 Alistair McDowall’s new play The Glow is a strange brew. The first
Read MoreJeremy Malies in north London20 December 2021 Peggy for You, written by Alan Plater in 1999, is the last in
Read MoreJeremy Malies on the South Bank10 December 2021 Best of Enemies by James Graham was always going to be a
Read MoreDana Rufolo on a streamed Romanian theatre festival.13 December 2021 The National Theater of Cluj-Napoca, Romania’s streamed 2021 Theatre Festival
Read MoreLudovico Lucchesi Palli in Vienna atEin Sommernachtstraum am Wörthersee – oder Wann ist die Familie Lustig aus Graz verschwunden20 March
Read MoreLudovico Lucchesi Palli in Vienna12 January 2022 After the cancellation of the originally scheduled premiere about a year ago, the
Read MoreNeil Dowden in Southwark14 December 2021 Alan Bennett may be cherished for his subtle melancholic comedy but in 1973 he
Read MoreDana Rufolo in Constance 2 October 2021 In the Spring 2019 issue of Plays International & Europe, the new artistic
Read MoreJulie Sorokurs in Covent Garden21 October 2021 Love and Other Acts of Violence serves as the Donmar’s inaugural production after
Read MoreBen Brooker at the Bakehouse Theatre11 September 2021 When an actress friend of mine recently asked if I was going
Read MoreJeremy Malies in West Sussex14 October 2021 David Storey’s amazing play Home has been produced by the Chichester Festival Theatre
Read MoreNeil Dowden in Newham, London.24 September 2021 One of Ireland’s leading playwrights, Conor McPherson is probably best known for The
Read MoreNeil Dowden on the South Bank1 October 2021 The National Theatre’s revival of Larry Kramer’s groundbreaking 1985 play The Normal
Read MoreAlice Grahame on the South Bank3 September 2021 Winsome Pinnock’s powerful drama looks at the impact of the unfinished business
Read MoreAlice Grahame on the South Bank13 October 2021 The American playwright Suzan-Lori Parks has built up an impressive body of
Read MoreMargaret Rose in Milan20 November 2021 Theatreland is once again bustling with companies scrambling to open productions, some of which
Read MoreNeil Dowden on the South Bank13 September 2021 Actor turned playwright Ayub Khan Din is best known for his semi-autobiographical
Read MoreDana Rufolo in Constance29 October 2021 Extracting a two-hour long play out of a one thousand-page novel is always a
Read MoreNeil Dowden in Southwark19 September 2021 The Menier Chocolate Factory finally reopened in September with Paula Vogel’s Indecent, which had
Read MoreAlice Grahame in north London12 September 2021 At a time when many of us are preoccupied with illness, hospitals and
Read MoreTom Bolton in the City of London24 November 2021 Like all theatre companies, the Royal Shakespeare Company has experienced a
Read MoreJeremy Malies in Waterloo 5 October 2021 The Young Vic’s Hamlet starring Cush Jumbo was one of the hottest tickets
Read MoreJakob Hingst in Hamburg One of the productions of the Thalia Theater’s new season, which began in August, truly deserves
Read MoreNeil Dowden on the South Bank 10 December 2021 The African-American actor/playwright/novelist/activist Alice Childress made a significant impact in her
Read MoreNeil Dowden in outer London3 September 2021 Athol Fugard’s 1972 play Statements after an Arrest under the Immorality Act is
Read MoreHans-Jürgen Bartsch in Berlin15 August 2021 The Berliner Ensemble started the new [post-2021 lockdown] season with a revival of Die
Read MoreJeremy Malies in north London 15 September 2021 Kiln Theatre in Kilburn has commissioned and produced NW Trilogy, a set
Read MoreJeremy Malies in west Sussex 9 September 2021 The cliché is that Martin McDonagh was enthused to write plays about
Read MoreJeremy Malies in west London 28 June 2021 Race runs through each of a trio of monologue plays by leading
Read MoreJeremy Malies in the London Borough of Havering 8 September 2021 David Eldridge’s Beginning is a play for two people
Read MoreCrysse Morrison in the west of England 10 October 2021 Open-air theatre has always formed a strong strand of live
Read MoreJeremy Malies in Berkshire14 October 2021 It’s a truism among Anton Chekhov diehards that Firs in The Cherry Orchard should
Read MoreNeil Dowden at Happy Days 18 June 2021 Happy days are here again with Trevor Nunn’s sixtieth anniversary production of
Read MoreJay Paul Skelton in the West End 13 December 2020 In the nineteenth century, the Norwegian violinist Ole Bull attempted
Read MoreNeil Dowden in north London 9 July 2021 Ayad Akhtar is an American writer of Pakistani heritage with his finger
Read MoreGlenda Frank on Broadway 23 August 2021 Pass Over is perfect for a newly active Broadway. Playwright Antoinette Chinonye Nwandu
Read MoreJulie Sorokurs on the South Bank 12 August 2021 Kae Tempest’s Paradise, premiered in the round at the National Theatre’s
Read MoreNeil Dowden on the South Bank 4 July 2021 The Bridge Theatre — which boldly led the way in London
Read MoreJeremy Malies in the West End 7 October 2021 The Mirror and the Light is the third of Hilary Mantel’s
Read MoreJohn Russell Taylor on the South Bank. 23 June 2021 The National Theatre opened its doors to audiences again in
Read MoreJohn Russell Taylor in the West End 2 July 2021 Nick Payne’s award-winning two-hander Constellations (starring Rafe Spall and Sally
Read MoreJef Hall-Flavin in south London 31 July 2021 Hearing the song “Wrapped Around Your Finger” as I was coming down
Read MoreNeil Dowden in the London Borough of Newham 5 July 2021 Theatre Royal Stratford East reopened in the early summer
Read MoreJeremy Malies in Lambeth, London 1 August 2021 Changing Destiny is the Young Vic’s much-trumpeted post-Covid return to live drama.
Read MoreJef Hall-Flavin in north London 27 July 2021 If The Two Character Play is one of Tennessee Williams’s problematic plays,
Read More2 August 2021 Neil Dowden in the West End Often labelled as Britain’s greatest living playwright, the eight-two-year-old Tom Stoppard
Read MoreHans-Jürgen Bartsch in Berlin17 June 2021 Simon McBurney, the co-founder of the British theatre company Complicité and an internationally renowned
Read MoreTom Bolton on the South Bank4 December 2021 For her last production in the Globe’s candlelit Sam Wanamaker Playhouse, Ben
Read MoreJohn Russell Taylor in outer London 22 May 2021 The other day I was watching one of those Rediscovering programmes
Read MoreJay Paul Skelton 29 May 2021 Sonia Friedman, the well-known British producer, has not only led the charge as theatres
Read MoreHans-Jürgen Bartsch in Berlin 8 April 2021 The Vaganten Bühne, an intimate hundred-seat theatre tucked away at the end of
Read MoreJeremy Malies at the Hampstead Theatre 4 June 2021 Alfred Fagon’s rarely staged 1975 play The Death of a Black
Read MoreMargaret Rose in Milan 5 June 2021 As I write this report in early June [2021], lockdown is gradually easing.
Read MoreJulie Sorokurs on the South Bank24 November 2021 Moira Buffini’s Manor was initially set to have its premiere in 2020
Read MoreSite-specific theatre is among the most modish developments in UK drama with numerous companies courting avant-garde audiences among the theatrical
Read MoreHow a Fringe Performance Led to the Trial of the Decade 26 August 2022 No theatrical event has been
Read MoreLudovico Lucchesi Palli at Werk X-Petersplatz 10 January 2023 Even though all of Vienna’s theatres are currently shut, Werk
Read MoreNatalia Isaeva in Paris 9 January 2021 7 Deaths of Maria Callas is a co-production with the Bayerischen Staatsoper,
Read MoreRoxana Silbert, artistic director of Hampstead Theatre, has found a lovely way to burnish the reputation of this venerable playhouse
Read More14 February 2021 Dana Rufolo The Kreation Kollektiv’s Recherche Show (Research Show), a co-production with the Vienna Volkstheater and Theater
Read MoreJay Paul Skelton at Alan Bennett’s Talking Heads: The Bridge Theatre It’s notable how the Bridge Theatre’s production of Talking
Read MoreJeremy Malies at the Chichester Festival Theatre (Minerva) 4 November 2020 My trip to Chichester for Sarah Kane’s Crave began
Read MoreJay Paul Skelton on the South Bank 1 September 2020 Alan Bennett’s celebrated Talking Heads monologues were first broadcast by
Read MoreJeremy Malies on the South Bank 1 September 2020 Has Alan Bennett’s A Lady of Letters fared well since it
Read MoreJeremy Malies on the South Bank 1 September 2020 As with the other pair of plays I review from the
Read MoreJulie Sorokurs on the South Bank 1 September 2020 The Bridge Theatre tentatively opened its doors in late August for
Read MoreHans-Jürgen Bartsch at the Berliner Ensemble 1 September 2020 The Berliner Ensemble premiered Gott (God), Ferdinand von Schirach’s latest work
Read MoreNeil Dowden in west London 1 June 2020 Mike Bartlett’s 2012 play Love, Love, Love is a wickedly entertaining comedy-drama
Read MoreNeil Dowden in the West End 1 June 2020 Prospero’s epilogue in The Tempest in which he renounces his magic
Read MoreJohn Russell Taylor in the West End 2 April 2020 I suppose we all have our own particular bêtes noires
Read MoreNeil Dowden on two Caryl Churchill plays1 March 2020 During six decades as a playwright, Caryl Churchill has not only
Read MoreJeremy Malies in Surrey 1 March 2020 I thought I’d seen everything in 40 years of theatre reviewing but Macbeth
Read MoreJeremy Malies in the West End 1st March 2020 It may be a signature throughout Anton Chekhov that his characters
Read MoreJulie Sorokurs on the South Bank 23 January 2020 If Lucy Kirkwood’s previous projects are anything to go by —
Read MoreNeil Dowden on the South Bank 1 December 2019 Athol Fugard considers his 1982 play Master Harold… and the Boys
Read MoreBill Grantham in Dublin 1 December 2019 This year’s Dublin Theatre Festival was as packed with plays as ever, so
Read MoreJeremy Malies on the South Bank1 December 2019 There seem to be two current styles of presenting Chekhov: making the
Read MoreBill Grantham in Dublin and Galway 1 November 2019 I’ve long been an admirer of the Italian film director Pier
Read MoreJo Briggs in central London In his 1927 essay on humour, Sigmund Freud considered the ways in which comedy might
Read MoreJeremy Malies on the South Bank 26 September 2019 Yaël Farber is on record as saying that: “Directing is asking
Read MoreJeremy Malies in west London 12th September 2019 Two productions of A Doll’s House in a month (the second a
Read MoreNeil Dowden on the South Bank 6 September 2019 Lucy Prebble’s brilliantly inventive new play A Very Expensive Poison is
Read MoreNeil Dowden in the West End 1 September 2019 There was much hype ahead of the world premiere of David
Read MoreMohammad Reza Aliakbari 1 September 2019 Life in the metropolis of Tehran is characterized by a combination of overcrowding, rushing,
Read More1 September 2019 I am immediately surrounded by mystical, seemly unearthly sounds that make me feel suspended in space when
Read MoreJo Briggs on the South Bank1 June 2019 Ten minutes before this play begins, we have the opportunity to investigate
Read MoreEva de Valk in central London1 June 2019 The characteristically to-the-point announcement: “This play is called Our Town” is
Read MoreIran report1 June 2019 Iranshahr Theatre is one of the oldest and most popular theatres in Tehran. From its two
Read MoreHenry IV Parts 1 and 2 and Henry V Eva de Valk on the South Bank 1 June 2019 A
Read MoreJeremy Malies in north London17 April 2019 At most productions of Chekhov’s Three Sisters I end up longing for the
Read MoreJeremy Malies in Cumbria 4 April 2019 Cumbria-based Theatre by the Lake is touring a production of Willy Russell’s Educating
Read MoreNeil Dowden on the South Bank 7 March 2019 Ironically, in the all-female “Richard II” at the Sam Wanamaker Playhouse,
Read More7 March 2019 Jeremy Malies’s feature covers Simon Stone’s lnternationaal Theater Amsterdam’s Medea which was at London’s Barbican Theatre from
Read MoreJeremy Malies on the South Bank 14 February 2019 Twice in less than a year I’ve seen bankers during the
Read MoreJo Briggs at The Royal Court14 December 2018 I am old enough to remember a cane at my village primary
Read MoreJeremy Malies on the South Bank1 December 2018 There is theatre critic equivalent of locker room gossip suggesting that director
Read MoreNeil Dowden sees two productions of Richard II at the Almeida Theatre and Sam Wanamaker Playhouse. 1 December 2018 This
Read MoreJeremy Malies in Essex 26 October 2018 You hardly needed to be a scheduling genius to realize that a prolonged
Read MoreJeremy Malies on the South Bank 25 October 2018 Martin McDonagh’s new play A Very Very Very Dark Matter depicts
Read MoreJeremy Malies on the South Bank 10 October 2018 Sir David Hare’s I’m Not Running which had its world premiere
Read MoreJeremy Malies in East Sussex 13 September 2018 In his The Habit of Art, Alan Bennett uses a play within
Read MoreMichael Ajzenstadt in Tel Aviv 1 September 2018 In the autumn of 1993, the newest play of the time by
Read MoreJeremy Malies in West Sussex 26 August 2018 The best theoretical physicists, notably Lawrence Krauss and the late Stephen
Read MoreJo Briggs in Covent Garden14 August 2018 The only son among the last of the O’Donnells of Ballybeg Hall
Read MoreJeremy Malies on the South Bank 21 October 2018 Emma Rice’s adaptation of Angela Carter’s Wise Children at the Old
Read MoreJeremy Malies on the South Bank 17 July 2018 “It lit a match and the explosion was Trump.” This is
Read MoreJeremy Malies on the South Bank 8 June 2018 The style of playwright Polly Stenham has been compared to Tennessee
Read MoreJeremy Malies on the South Bank23 October 2019 Orson Welles said that writers hit peak popularity two or three years
Read MoreDana Rufolo in Constance In 1776, Adam Smith wrote An Inquiry into the Nature and Causes of the Wealth of
Read MoreJeremy Malies on the South Bank 8 May 2018 End-on, in-the-round with a promenade option and now a thrust. The
Read MoreChristine Eccles on the South Bank 13 May 2018 The Old Vic’s version of Ingmar Bergman’s celebrated semi-autobiographical 1982 film
Read MoreJeremy Malies in Covent Garden 7 April 2018 If William Congreve’s The Way of the World is the jewel in
Read MoreJeremy Malies in Hampshire 5 June 2018 In her programme notes, director Chelsea Walker says: “This is a play which
Read MoreNeil Dowden in the West End 6 February 2018 Eugene O’Neill’s masterpiece Long Day’s Journey into Night was not staged
Read MoreNeil Dowden in North London 17 December 2017 The 1995 West End premiere of Simon Gray’s play Cell Mates was
Read MoreHans-Jürgen Bartsch in Berlin Last November, the Theater am Schiffbauerdamm, one of Berlin’s oldest playhouses in the historic city centre,
Read MoreRobert Schneider in Connecticut 28 January 2018 Nick Payne’s two-hander Constellations at Hartford Theatre Works is an invitation to imagine
Read MoreJeremy Malies in West Sussex 13 February 2018 Observing the substantial number of school children at the Chichester Festival Theatre
Read MoreJeremy Malies on the South Bank 28 January 2018 Pulitzer Prize-winning Annie Baker has seen her 2015 play John premiered
Read MoreJeremy Malies in West Sussex 28 April 2014 Rival meteorologists squabble for 72 hours over the most important weather forecast
Read MoreGlenda Frank in New York 6 February 2018 What kind of stories do theatre artists choose to dramatize: stories about
Read MoreDavid Cowan in Paris 23 January 2017 Provincial life features on the main stage of the Comédie Française in Le
Read MoreDoron Elia in Jerusalem 11 December 2017 The ruler of the underworld Samedi says, “Only here in the theatre, every
Read MoreJeremy Malies in north London8 March 2018 Writers from Virgil through to Sylvia Plath have obsessed about the relationship between
Read MoreDavid Cowan in Paris 1 February 2018 Jean-Luc Lagarce’s play J’étais dans ma maison et j’attendais que la pluie vienne,
Read MoreJeremy Malies in Covent Garden 14 February 2018 Peter Gill’s The York Realist depicts two men falling in love during
Read MoreNeil Dowden in Kensington and Chelsea 17 February 2018 Dennis Kelly may have had a lot of popular success writing
Read MoreJeremy Malies in Surrey 7 February 2018 The feud between the two families in Romeo and Juliet often tempts young
Read MoreJohn Russell Taylor in the West End 18 January 2018 In 1958 when The Birthday Party was first performed, apparently
Read MoreJohn Russell Taylor in the West End 23 January 2018 Oh dear! Alas, what a fall is here. The opening
Read MoreChristine Eccles in Kensington and Chelsea 16 October 2017 In reviewing Rita, Sue and Bob Too it has become almost
Read MoreJeremy Malies in Covent Garden 24 February 2017 One of the numbers in George and Ira Gershwin’s An American in
Read MoreMargaret Leask in Sydney 10 August 2017 The Bell Shakespeare Company’s production of The Merchant of Venice, directed by Anne-Louise
Read MoreChristine Eccles on the South Bank 17 February 2017 It is always a bit uncomfortable for me to watch a
Read MoreChristine Eccles in west London 2 August 2017 This is a fantastic and very well-timed revival of Jim Cartwright’s ground-breaking
Read MoreVera Liber in north London 6 July 2017 The stain and stink of ink leaves hands and souls black. The
Read MoreVera Liber on the South Bank 24 May 2017 Influenced by Shakespeare. Goethe, and the Sturm und Drang movement, Georg
Read MoreJohn Russell Taylor on the South Bank and in City of London 7 November 2016 Breeches role or Queen Lear?
Read MoreChristine Eccles on the South Bank 5 August 2016 Yerma is not the name of Lorca’s heroine in this version,
Read MoreJeremy Malies in the West End 12 March 2018 “Extraordinary how potent cheap music is” comes from another Noël Coward
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