Theatre
When Hamlet came to a Syrian refugee campSunday, 01 November 2015It would have been impossible to go to Syria. Our plan to perform Hamlet in every nation in the world faced its biggest obstacle to date and the Globe producers were left pondering a Plan B. We considered performing in a Syrian embassy - technically... Read more... |
Dinner With Friends, Park TheatreSaturday, 31 October 2015![]() After 12 seemingly idyllic years, Tom and Beth’s marriage is over. That’s a concern for Gabe and Karen, partly because they care for their friends, and there’s the ugly business of choosing sides, but mainly because it causes them to call into... Read more... |
The Hairy Ape, Old VicFriday, 30 October 2015![]() Never use one word when you can get away with two: that seems to have been the maxim of Eugene O’Neill even in one of his shorter plays. After all, when is an ape not hairy, and why does stoker Robert “Yank” Smith, a natural hulk brought low by... Read more... |
The Moderate Soprano, Hampstead TheatreFriday, 30 October 2015![]() Remember back when David Hare was left-wing? I’m not sure that he does. Between the affectionate, bittersweet nostalgia of South Downs and now The Moderate Soprano – a stroll through the verdant history of England’s most... Read more... |
Husbands & Sons, National TheatreWednesday, 28 October 2015![]() If the thought of three hours of DH Lawrence fills you with dread, fear not. Ben Powers’ inspired melding of Lawrence’s trio of mining plays births a spellbindingly intimate epic with atmosphere thick as the coal dust engulfing this cloistered 1911... Read more... |
First Person: Writing about the transgender experienceTuesday, 27 October 2015![]() My play Rotterdam opens this week at Theatre503 (I’m getting the plug in early). It’s about two women who are in a relationship and how that relationship changes when one reveals that he has always identified as male. Their names are Alice and... Read more... |
10 Questions for Director Roger MichellMonday, 26 October 2015![]() It’s not easy to see the pattern in Roger Michell’s career. More than most British directors, he has zigzagged between the stage and the screen. He was the one who first rehearsed such contemporary classics as Kevin Elyot’s My Night with Reg and Joe... Read more... |
Plaques and Tangles, Royal Court TheatreWednesday, 21 October 2015![]() Once upon a time, quite recently, you couldn’t move for plays about youth. Now, there’s been an avalanche of dramas about ageing, usually in the context of dementia and family life. Maybe all of our main playwrights have suddenly grown up, or maybe... Read more... |
An Open Book: David LanSaturday, 17 October 2015![]() This year’s Olivier Awards saw the Young Vic trounce its South Bank neighbours, with Ivo van Hove’s revolutionary A View from the Bridge leading 11 nominations and four wins; the production opens on Broadway next week. It reflects an extraordinary... Read more... |
Joanne, Soho TheatreSaturday, 17 October 2015![]() On my way to see this show, I had to walk across Soho. No fewer than five people asked me for money; one was a real hassle. Yes, I know that the government says that the economy is booming, but the record number of homeless in the capital tell a... Read more... |
The Crucible, Bristol Old VicFriday, 16 October 2015![]() Tom Morris has a strong feel for drama that explores the personal implications of fanaticism: his production of John Adams’s powerful opera The Death of Klinghoffer for New York's Met and the ENO, used a language of great simplicity that allowed the... Read more... |
A Wolf in Snakeskin Shoes, Tricycle TheatreFriday, 16 October 2015Molière’s 1664 comedy Tartuffe transplanted to present-day Atlanta, Georgia: it sounds like an inspired idea. The hypocritical religious devotee becomes a charlatan preacher fleecing his flock, offering salvation in exchange for hard cash and a... Read more... |
