Haunting Julia review at Queen's Theatre, Hornchurch " 'Ayckbourn's ghostly reflection on grief'
Far more than any supernatural scariness, the simple inability to move on from the death of a loved one is at the
Far more than any supernatural scariness, the simple inability to move on from the death of a loved one is at the
Beneath the war-torn fields of France, a desperate soldier becomes trapped in the mythic labyrinth of The Trench in this dark, compelling
Exploring the limitations of language and the vacuity of political discourse, Summit imagines an unlikely, optimistic butterfly effect which begins when international
Sprawling, cerebral, and at times unflinching in its dissection of radicalism at both ends of the political spectrum, Maydays tells an epic,
Stuck on an international flight when she learns that her life has been spectacularly derailed, data analyst Lisa grapples with overwhelming feelings
Chafing against retirement and a lingering alcohol problem, Ian Rankin's maverick detective John Rebus cracks open a cold case in this latest
With our current crop of world leaders often seemingly beyond parody, Trial by Laughter is a timely reminder that political incompetence, corruption,
Opening with a bone-rattling blast of Black Sabbath, it's clear from the outset that the Royal Shakespeare Company's new adaptation of Moliere's
Just before midnight on New Year's Eve, 1937, a couple surviving tenuously in the Soviet Union are visited by the devil in
Charting the shared journey of a newly married couple from 1950s India to present-day Britain, An Adventure is a sprawling, impressionistic study
The unpleasant feeling of chewing while wearing headphones does little to detract from the immersive, experiential quality of genre-blurring multimedia piece Gastronomic.
Commissioned as a companion piece to Mike Leigh's acerbic drama Abigail's Party " a remount of which runs alongside this production at
As a 1977 Play for Today, Mike Leigh's waspish comedy-drama Abigail's Party became an impactful and influential examination of the suburban underbelly.
The fourth instalment of Birmingham Stage Company's long running sketch show based on the delightfully nasty children's franchise, Horrible Histories: Barmy Britain
Based on Dick King-Smith's beloved children's book, the story of bright, polite and ambitious piglet Babe, the Sheep-Pig, is given a creaky
Weaving five starkly different stories into the text of Oscar Wilde's haunting ballad, Reading Gaol is an ambitious but often unfocused exploration
Shot, strangled, bludgeoned, and buried under a barn in men's clothes, Maria Marten's murder was one of the 19th century's most infamous.
Exploring the echoingly empty gulfs between intimacy and isolation, between yearning for truth and the need to keep some secrets unspoken, Charlotte
Balancing warmth, wit, and a large dose of the ridiculous, Guildford Shakespeare Company's Love's Labour's Lost manages to be both moving and
Quietly horrifying and laced with bitterly black comedy, Fat Jewels is a moody, miserable study of psychosexual abuse. Set in one room
Flawed, stalling, but occasionally extraordinary, At Home in Gaza and London is an ambitious multimedia piece combining simultaneous performances in the UK
There's a real sense of dynamism built into this year's Greenwich and Docklands International Festival programme, which spreads its line-up of eclectic
In a secluded copse of trees, Guildford Shakespeare Company have created a miniature Sherwood Forest, decorated with wanted posters and draped with
Inspired by recent high-profile bullying cases, The Little Pony revolves around 10 year old Timmy, whose talismanic attachment to a pink backpack
After a writing career spanning 50 years, celebrated playwright David Edgar makes his professional debut as a performer in a measured and