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89 stories by "Claire Armitstead"

The Grinning Man review " the greatest freakshow in town by Claire Armitstead

Trafalgar Studios, LondonBristol OId Vic's bewitching musical adaptation of Victor Hugo's L'Homme qui rit makes a witty West End transferVictor Hugo was one of the great myth-makers of 19th-…

SOURCE: The Guardian at 3:33am on December 31, 2017

White Fang review " in need of more lupine vigour by Claire Armitstead

Park theatre, LondonJethro Compton's take on Jack London's fable conjures up the snowswept Yukon but fails to focus on the central relationship between girl and wolfAn improvisation on Jack …

SOURCE: The Guardian at 3:33am on December 31, 2017

Grimly Handsome review " Santa's grotto meets Starsky and Hutch by Claire Armitstead

The Site, Royal Court, LondonVictims, cops and robbers all come out to play in Julia Jarcho's thrilling, chilling three-handerAround the side of the Royal Court, through a yard filled with C…

SOURCE: The Guardian at 4:24am on December 17, 2017

The Open House review " black humour in a beige living room by Claire Armitstead

Will Eno offers a telling vision of suburban horror as a nuclear family goes criticalWill Eno's bleakly comic reflection on the nuclear family, The Open House, is set in the impeccably beige…

SOURCE: The Guardian at 3:33am on December 3, 2017

Goats review " an agonisingly bleak small-town Syrian tale by Claire Armitstead

This collaboration with writers from Syria and Lebanon offers no glib solutions to atrocities, and little hope eitherFathers are having a hard time of it at the Royal Court, where a generati…

SOURCE: The Guardian at 3:33am on December 3, 2017

A Christmas Carol review " a love song to Christmas by Claire Armitstead

Old Vic, LondonRhys Ifans stars in a joyous, psychoanalytical reading of Dickens that celebrates the redeeming power of theatreSince its publication as a novella in 1843, Charles Dickens's A…

SOURCE: The Guardian at 3:33am on December 3, 2017

Daisy Pulls It Off: Pauline McLynn, Anna Shaffer and more on a spiffing school assembly by Claire Armitstead

Denise Deegan had a West End hit with her parody of 1920s boarding-school novels. Now, Paulette Randall is staging an age-blind revival with a crack cast of actors. They share their teenage …

SOURCE: The Guardian at 10:54am on November 28, 2017

Feast of words: Yomi Sode and the theatre poets stirring a new style by Claire Armitstead

Like Kate Tempest and Inua Ellams, the Nigerian-born performer is breaking new ground with Coat, his tale of two cultures, told while he cooks up a stew on stage'It's amazing how not-so-simp…

SOURCE: The Guardian at 9:12am on October 5, 2017

The Ferryman's Laura Donnelly on how her uncle's murder inspired the IRA drama by Claire Armitstead

The star of Jez Butterworth's acclaimed play grew up thinking her uncle had died in a car crash. Then one day she was told the truth: he had been 'disappeared' by the IRAOn New Year's Day in…

SOURCE: The Guardian at 3:05am on August 8, 2017

Diamond dame: Marcia Gay Harden on hellish roles, washed-up stars and nipple clamp tweets by Claire Armitstead

From Miller's Crossing to Fifty Shades of Grey, Marcia Gay Harden has always played hard-boiled women. Her UK stage debut, in Sweet Bird of Youth, is no exceptionMarcia Gay Harden is a fortn…

SOURCE: The Guardian at 2:06am on May 22, 2017

Edinburgh 2014 review: Letters Home reinvents the short story for the stage by Claire Armitstead

Edinburgh international book festivalChimamanda Ngozi Adichie, Kamila Shamsie and other authors push the theatrical boundaries of narrative Continue reading...

SOURCE: The Guardian at 11:12am on August 12, 2014

The Smile off Your Face - review by Claire Armitstead

Dunstan Playhouse, AdelaideAll over Adelaide whispered half-conversations have been taking place: how did you … ? What was it … ? So strong was the consensus against revealing what happ…

SOURCE: The Guardian at 8:16pm on March 3, 2013

Thursday - review by Claire Armitstead

Norwood Concert Hall, Adelaide FestivalHow do you dramatise an event so indescribably terrible as losing both legs in an underground bomb attack? In telling the story of Gill Hicks, an Austr…

SOURCE: The Guardian at 9:02am on March 1, 2013

Who should play Hilary Mantel's Thomas Cromwell? by Claire Armitstead

The RSC is set to stage Wolf Hall and Bring Up the Bodies. But who should play the ruthless master politician at the novels' core?So the deal is done and the Cromwellian bandwagon has embark…

SOURCE: The Guardian at 9:32am on January 24, 2013
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