Theatre
Blue Heart, Orange Tree TheatreWednesday, 19 October 2016![]() Q: How do you review a show that includes lines that ask “can my mouth swallow my mouth”? A: With difficulty, but I should be okay as long as I resist the temptation of being as surreal as Caryl Churchill is in this double bill of two short, but... Read more... |
The Red Barn, National TheatreTuesday, 18 October 2016![]() At first, I was a bit confused by the play’s title. After all, David Hare gave his 1998 adaptation of Arthur Schnitzler’s La Ronde the moniker of The Blue Room, which coincidentally is the same title as Mathieu Amalric’s very recent adaptation of a... Read more... |
One Night in Miami..., Donmar WarehouseTuesday, 18 October 2016![]() Kemp Powers’s play is set in a motel room in Miami on the night of 25 February 1964, after Cassius Clay (as Muhammad Ali then was) had earlier beaten Sonny Liston to gain the world heavyweight title. He is joined by two friends, the singer Sam Cooke... Read more... |
Oil, Almeida TheatreMonday, 17 October 2016![]() Ambition trumps (if you'll forgive that verb) achievement in Ella Hickson's new play, a long-aborning exercise in time-travel whose audacity of vision can't override one's impression that the final result is an effortful slog. Tracing a mother-... Read more... |
First Person: 'Schizophrenia is still a taboo subject'Sunday, 16 October 2016![]() On 10 October 2016, World Mental Health Day, the team of Belarus Free Theatre came back together to start the final stages of production for Tomorrow I Was Always a Lion, a new theatre show based on Arnhild Lauveng’s autobiographical book. Arnhild... Read more... |
A Man of Good Hope, Young VicFriday, 14 October 2016![]() The first thing you hear are the marimbas – music that’s pounded, punched out of the air by hundreds of fists. Later the instruments give us dances and songs, but this musical violence is never truly absent from an orchestra made up entirely of... Read more... |
Shopping and F***ing, Lyric HammersmithThursday, 13 October 2016![]() Playwright Mark Ravenhill’s 1996 Royal Court debut was not the decade’s most shocking piece of theatre, but its title was, and still is, certainly the most annoying for producers and publicists. Under a Victorian law – the Indecent Advertisements... Read more... |
Crude, Shed 36, Port of DundeeThursday, 13 October 2016![]() It’s not often you need a passport to get into a theatre show. But then the journey required to get to Scottish site-specific experts Grid Iron’s Crude does feel like something of a pilgrimage – first get yourself to Dundee, then find the Science... Read more... |
The Dresser, Duke of York’s TheatreThursday, 13 October 2016![]() The best way to line up the stars is to offer them a chance to act in a play about the theatre. For this, Ronald Harwood’s The Dresser has a good track record: its original West End outing starred Tom Courtney; the 1983 film version had Albert... Read more... |
Lunch/The Bow of Ulysses, Trafalgar StudiosWednesday, 12 October 2016![]() The perception of Steven many-hats Berkoff as “one of the major minor contemporary dramatists in Britain” makes sense when you see this. Here are two chamber pieces, both two-handers, written 20 years apart, which gain hugely from being run together... Read more... |
First Person: A Man of Good HopeSunday, 09 October 2016To begin writing a book is to start something over which you are going to lose control. As it comes to life, a book acquires its own quiddity, its own interior authority, and if the writer does not obey this authority she ruins the book. A Man of... Read more... |
Murder Ballad, Arts TheatreFriday, 07 October 2016![]() Ye olde love triangle returns, this time as the centrepiece of a rock chamber musical that premiered Off-Broadway in 2013 and now makes its UK premiere. There’s a good guy, a bad boy, and the promise of a violent end, but despite the oft-referenced... Read more... |
