Mad As Hell review at Jermyn Street Theatre, London " 'engaging and well-constructed'
Race and class prejudice loom large in Adrian Hope and Cassie McFarlane's engaging Mad As Hell. While the stage adaptation of Paddy
Race and class prejudice loom large in Adrian Hope and Cassie McFarlane's engaging Mad As Hell. While the stage adaptation of Paddy
A dishevelled, basement-dwelling misanthrope spouts bile in his video diary in The Ungrateful Biped, writer and performer Philip Goodhew's update of Dostoyevsky's
Inspired, erratic and bewildering in equal measure, Ken Campbell was a mischievous master of experimental theatre who became notorious for his marathon
Tightly packed and highly ambitious, Callisto: A Queer Epic weaves together four heterogeneous stories of same-sex relationships from across the ages: 17th-century
Jerome K Jerome's name is indelibly linked to the uproarious Three Men in a Boat, but his 1908 play The Passing of
Based on the 1947 radio broadcast of the much-loved American classic, the Bridge House Theatre's Miracle on 34th Street is a super-sweet
Beginning like an interactive art installation, Lost Text/Found Space’s Til We Meet in England is both a meditation on the plight of
The post-apocalyptic future evoked in Devil You Know's Macbeth feels uncomfortably close to the present. Mike Lees' bare set, on which the
Marking the centenary of the Russian Revolution, SplitMoon’s staging of Dostoyevsky’s Demons is no small undertaking. While certain narrative threads resonate both
Written less than a decade after the Second World War, NC Hunter's A Day by the Sea explores the tribulations of Julian
Censored by the Lord Chamberlain, Joe Orton's uproarious farce of death and ill-gotten gains scandalised audiences in 1964. Today's theatregoers may be
Recounting a relatively unknown episode shortly before the death of a literary great, Mrs Orwell focuses on assistant magazine editor Sonia Brownell.
Originally produced 35 years ago, Kevin Elyot's Coming Clean receives its first major London revival as his final play, Twilight Song, premieres
Best known for his wittily elegiac My Night With Reg, Kevin Elyot completed Twilight Song before he died in 2014, which now
Re-imagining the allegorical world of a 14th-century epic poem for a modern audience is no mean feat, but Penned in the Margins'
London's Jermyn Street Theatre is to be 'relaunched' as a full-time producing house under new artistic director Tom Littler as he announces
Best known from the Danish film version, Karen Blixen's short story Babette's Feast traces the lives of two sisters living a remote
Infamously withdrawn from transmission by the BBC in 1976, Dennis Potter's Brimstone and Treacle remains a shocking and divisive piece. Silver-tongued Martin
As the haze subsides from a hedonistic bash with a suitably thumping soundtrack, a group of 20-something friends reconvene to pick up
More than 40 years after his untimely death, BS Johnson has acquired cult status as a singular voice in the British avant-garde.
Cameron Mackintosh's Music Theatre International is launching a musical theatre event for children and young people, featuring workshops, teaching and performances. The
Inspired by the true story of a clandestine love affair between a British prisoner of war and an internment camp translator, Lost
The skeleton puppet scrabbling in the dirt to unearth potatoes and bones during the prologue to Here Lies Shakespeare is a
Impeccably dressed in black tie, Ernest Andrew (Samuel Collings) steps up to make an announcement: Stanley De Pfeffel, star and creator of
Scrambling up through trapdoors, across the charcoal woodchip-strewn stage and teeming through the audience, the chorus of the Print Room's first Shakespeare