tragedy
Romeo and Juliet, Royal BalletSunday, 11 March 2012![]() Better late than never. It took till Act 3 for a new Juliet to fledge her wings and shed the nervous caution, but Melissa Hamilton, debuting yesterday afternoon in probably the Royal Ballet’s most coveted ballerina role, suddenly did what we all... Read more... |
The Changeling, Young VicFriday, 03 February 2012![]() The murder drama is a staple of television schedules. And for every Miss Marple or Rosemary and Thyme there are many more trickling from the Lynda La Plante vein, whose currency of gore, horror and perversion seem to suffer permanently from... Read more... |
Romeo and Juliet, Royal BalletMonday, 16 January 2012![]() How far would you go, if you were utterly in love? Till death you do part? Kenneth MacMillan’s 1965 ballet Romeo and Juliet remains a magnet for audiences and for performers all playing that ritual game with their own feelings. Marianela Nuñez and... Read more... |
Hamlet, Young Vic TheatreThursday, 10 November 2011![]() First come the strip-lit corridors, the stained breeze blocks, the locked doors; later there are restraints, drugs, needles. The time is out of joint, and we are all imprisoned in a nightmare of confusion, paranoia, guilt and despair. Who are the... Read more... |
Edward II, Royal Exchange, ManchesterTuesday, 13 September 2011![]() This is not exactly Edward II the musical. There’s no singing, but music plays a leading role. It is the food of love of the sort that dared not speak its name – and there is excess of it for my taste. The idiom is jazz of the edgy sort fashionable... Read more... |
Chilean Miners: 17 Days Buried Alive, BBC TwoSaturday, 13 August 2011![]() On 5 August last year, a cave-in at Chile's 121-year-old San José copper mine left 33 workers trapped more than 2,000ft underground. Their subterranean ordeal would last 69 days, but this documentary concerned itself with the first 17 of those, the... Read more... |
A Woman Killed With Kindness, National TheatreTuesday, 19 July 2011![]() Can Thomas Heywood's prosy Jacobean drama of country folk hunting, card playing, screwing around, sliding aristocratically into debt and harrowing one another to death translate successfully to the aftermath of the First World War? Only, perhaps, as... Read more... |
DVD: MacbethThursday, 30 June 2011![]() Your Macbeth opens in the round, tailored to a small studio theatre. In entrusting it to television, do you engage someone experienced in the medium to render faithfully the spaces and the talking heads, as Trevor Nunn did for the deservedly... Read more... |
Madama Butterfly, Royal OperaSunday, 26 June 2011![]() Directors of Madama Butterfly are spoilt for choice when it comes to visual imagery. At their disposal are the vast aesthetic resources of at least one, or, if they're clever, two great cultural superpowers. Thus, Moshe Leiser and Patrice Caurier's... Read more... |
Doctor Faustus, Globe TheatreThursday, 23 June 2011![]() There be dragons aplenty, angels, demons and ghastly creatures both fleshy and feathered in the Globe Theatre’s inaugural production of Doctor Faustus. Christopher Marlowe’s take on the familiar Faust legend, bold in its religious content, was a... Read more... |
Luise Miller, Donmar WarehouseTuesday, 14 June 2011![]() Time lurches when you see a historical play. But is it a case of autre temps, autres moeurs, or of plus ça change, plus c’est la même chose? Either way, the history needs to slap your face hard with recognition. Schiller’s Luise Miller is a 1784... Read more... |
Tristan und Isolde, Opéra de LyonMonday, 13 June 2011![]() Travelling by Eurostar, or plane, to the continent and buying a ticket, all for less than the cost of a Covent Garden stalls seat, might entice if you wanted to see a certain opera, singer or conductor. But to go so far for the look of a staging?... Read more... |
