Theatre
I See You, Royal Court TheatreMonday, 07 March 2016![]() An innocently-intended Friday night out turns into something fearsome indeed in I See You, a Royal Court co-production with the Market Theatre, Johannesburg, that puts the tensions of post-apartheid South Africa under a sorrowful microscope.At the... Read more... |
Welcome Home, Captain Fox!, Donmar WarehouseThursday, 03 March 2016![]() It’s often remarked that are no new stories, only old stories retold. The French playwright Jean Anouihl got the idea for his first play from a French newspaper report of 1919, about a young man who turned up on a railway platform with no knowledge... Read more... |
The Solid Life of Sugar Water, National TheatreTuesday, 01 March 2016![]() Hurray, the two-part epic wizard-fest Harry Potter and the Cursed Child lands in the West End this summer, and its playwright is the ever-versatile Jack Thorne (who also successfully adapted the vampire romance Let the Right One In for the stage).... Read more... |
The Maids, Trafalgar StudiosTuesday, 01 March 2016![]() “Murder is hilarious,” quips Zawe Ashton’s scheming maid, and in Jamie Lloyd’s high-octane, queasily comic revival of Jean Genet’s radical 1947 play, it really is. It’s also lurid, strange, bleak and powerfully transcendent, as befits a piece that... Read more... |
The Tempest, Sam Wanamaker PlayhouseSaturday, 27 February 2016![]() A prevailing sense of farewell ripples through this closing production in the Sam Wanamaker Playhouse's hugely welcome season of Shakespeare's final quartet of plays. That valedictory feel is traditionally true of The Tempest, a text commonly... Read more... |
A Midsummer Night's Dream, Lyric HammersmithSaturday, 27 February 2016![]() Shakespeare’s plays have proved remarkably resilient to everything that’s been thrown at them down the years, including – in the case of A Midsummer Night’s Dream, with its flowery bowers and fairies – cloying Victorian whimsy. Peter Brook’s white... Read more... |
The Patriotic Traitor, Park TheatreSaturday, 27 February 2016![]() Theatregoers suffering from First World War fatigue may want to pass on Jonathan Lynn’s merely competent historical drama about two mythic figures: Charles de Gaulle and Philippe Pétain. It’s a fascinating subject – de Gaulle had his former mentor... Read more... |
Hamlet, Tobacco Factory, BristolFriday, 26 February 2016Alan Mahon’s Hamlet in Andrew Hilton’s production for Shakespeare at the Tobacco Factory bristles with teen spirit and this is no bad thing. The Prince of Denmark, even before his father dies, is beset with the angst that goes with the territory of... Read more... |
Cleansed, National TheatreWednesday, 24 February 2016![]() Although everyone agrees that Sarah Kane was one of the most influential British playwrights of the 1990s, revivals of her work have been few and far between. Now, at last, some 17 years after her suicide at the age of 28 in 1999, our flagship... Read more... |
Cyrano de Bergerac, Southwark PlayhouseWednesday, 24 February 2016![]() Given that Edmond Rostand’s 1897 tragicomic verse play Cyrano de Bergerac gave the word "panache" to the English language, it’s an irony that panache is the quality most woefully lacking in Russell Bolam’s production of Glyn Maxwell’s adaptation. It... Read more... |
Bon voyage, Jean Anouilh!Sunday, 21 February 2016![]() In the icy early hours of 1 February 1918 a bizarre figure was seen wandering aimlessly along the platform of a railway station in Lyon. A solider. Lost. When asked his name he answered, “Anthelme Mangin”. Other than that he had no memory of who he... Read more... |
A Girl Is a Half-Formed Thing, Young VicFriday, 19 February 2016![]() Eimear McBride’s debut novel, the provocatively titled A Girl Is a Half-Formed Thing, won the first Goldsmiths Prize in 2013, as well as the Baileys Women’s Prize for Fiction a year later. This phenomenal book, which was written when McBride was 27... Read more... |
