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322 stories by "John Morrison"

Temple by John Morrison

Here's a question for the next pub quiz. Who was Graeme Knowles and why did he resign? Don't all shout at once. Yes, you, the gentleman in the dog collar -- I thought you might have the righ…

SOURCE: John Morrison at 8:37am on June 21, 2015

Robert Icke's Oresteia by John Morrison

Rupert Goold's promise to 'take the Greeks out of the attic' (pun intended, I think) has got off to a spectacular start at the Almeida. His longtime collaborator Robert Icke, largely respons…

SOURCE: John Morrison at 1:00pm on June 18, 2015

Harvest by John Morrison

Anyone worried about low productivity in the British economy will be heartened to learn that things are far worse elsewhere. If this play by Pavel Pryazhko at the Soho theatre is telling the…

SOURCE: John Morrison at 6:54am on May 31, 2015

The Beaux' Stratagem by John Morrison

The vast auditorium of the Olivier theatre isn't always the best place to stage comedy; it relentlessly exposes actors who can't adjust to its demands, and it makes exceptional demands of di…

SOURCE: John Morrison at 6:26pm on May 28, 2015

Crouch Touch Pause Engage by John Morrison

What do you need to stage a successful play ? Six actors, six rugby shirts, a rugby ball and a good story, plus an excellent writer and an even more excellent director. It all looks deceptiv…

SOURCE: John Morrison at 5:44am on May 27, 2015

The Merchant of Venice at Shakespeare's Globe by John Morrison

This excellent production by Jonathan Munby, with Jonathan Pryce as Shylock, couldn't be more different from the last one I saw -- Rupert Goold's hyped-up version set in a Las Vegas casino. …

SOURCE: John Morrison at 6:46am on May 23, 2015

Michelle Terry as Rosalind in As You Like It by John Morrison

This is undoubtedly Michelle Terry's show. Whenever she's on stage as Rosalind, you just don't want her to exit. If there's a catalogue of famous Rosalinds whose performances shine on in the…

SOURCE: John Morrison at 11:53am on May 21, 2015

The Father by John Morrison

If Florian Zeller's The Father was just a realistic play about a man with Alzheimer's, it would be well worth seeing for that alone. But there are several other elements in this production a…

SOURCE: John Morrison at 6:51am on May 14, 2015

The Angry Brigade and The Vote by John Morrison

I greatly admire James Graham as a playwright, and not just because almost everyone else does. He has the knack of turning really unpromising material into entertaining drama, something he s…

SOURCE: John Morrison at 2:49pm on May 10, 2015

Matchbox Theatre by John Morrison

Michael Frayn is the author of Noises Off, the funniest play ever penned by a British dramatist. So Hampstead Theatre no doubt jumped at the chance to put on a selection of his unperformed s…

SOURCE: John Morrison at 5:57am on May 1, 2015

Oppenheimer by John Morrison

Any show with John Heffernan in the lead is worth seeing, but despite his excellent performances, this is a play that somehow never quite gets into top gear. Perhaps the ugly surroundings of…

SOURCE: John Morrison at 5:47am on April 30, 2015

Carmen Disruption by John Morrison

I've been to see seven plays in the last ten days, more through coincidence than deliberate design. In six of those shows I enjoyed what I consider to be the essential quality of drama -- th…

SOURCE: John Morrison at 5:19am on April 26, 2015

Everyman by John Morrison

'Happy Fucking Birthday!' they shout as Everyman's friends and hangers-on surround him, whipping up an orgy of shots-and-coke-fuelled celebration. The lights flash and the music is turned up…

SOURCE: John Morrison at 1:18pm on April 25, 2015

A View From The Bridge by John Morrison

Buying theatre tickets long before a show opens isn't an exact science, and sometimes I get it wrong. My biggest mistake recently was not to book ahead for what turned out to be the revival …

SOURCE: John Morrison at 5:37am on April 24, 2015

The Nether by John Morrison

Better late than Nether, I suppose. I finally caught up with this play in the last week of its run at the Duke of York's theatre long after it transferred from the Royal Court. Like Mike Bar…

SOURCE: John Morrison at 4:49am on April 24, 2015

Measure for Measure in Russian by John Morrison

In the hands of Declan Donnellan as director, very little can go wrong. I've been many times to the Barbican and elsewhere to see his Cheek By Jowl company perform Shakespeare, Chekhov and o…

SOURCE: John Morrison at 4:58am on April 23, 2015

Light Shining in Buckinghamshire by John Morrison

While many theatres are staging election-related plays in the next three weeks, the National Theatre has shown a flash of genius by reviving a work that confronts all the big questions which…

SOURCE: John Morrison at 9:35am on April 19, 2015

Clarion by John Morrison

Do any of these headlines ring a bell? HORROR AS IMMIGRANTS BARBECUE LLAMA AT PETTING ZOO WHITES IN MINORITY BY 2020 NOW PAEDOPHILES IN BURQUAS STALK OUR KIDS WHITE SUICIDE BOMBER IN BLACKBU…

SOURCE: John Morrison at 5:47am on April 17, 2015

Lampedusa by John Morrison

Today's reports of hundreds of migrants drowned off the Italian island of Lampedusa lend a horrifying topicality to Anders Lustgarten's new play at the Soho Theatre. But while applauding the…

SOURCE: John Morrison at 2:49pm on April 15, 2015

The Cutting of the Cloth by John Morrison

I'm tempted to call this production at Southwark Playhouse a revival, but it isn't. It's the world premiere of an unperformed play by Michael Hastings, who died in 2011. While the play has o…

SOURCE: John Morrison at 11:51am on April 3, 2015

Radiant Vermin by John Morrison

This is the most audience-friendly Philip Ridley play that I've seen. That's not because of the subject matter, which is every bit as disturbing as in his other plays; nor has it anything to…

SOURCE: John Morrison at 10:55am on April 3, 2015

Catalina by John Morrison

Framing a story on stage can be a way of bridging the gap between performers and audience; but the play-within-the-play, though a very powerful device, can be overdone. Shakespeare's framing…

SOURCE: John Morrison at 7:27am on April 2, 2015

The Mysteries by John Morrison

South Africa's Isango Ensemble delivered the outstanding production of the 'Globe to Globe' international series in 2012 with Venus and Adonis, which they brought back to Shakespeare's Globe…

SOURCE: John Morrison at 10:29am on April 1, 2015

Princess Ida by John Morrison

'They've done away with King Hildebrand!' my companion the Gilbert & Sullivan Expert (GSE) whispered to me in shocked tones as she read the programme at the Finborough Theatre. It was tr…

SOURCE: John Morrison at 9:56am on March 28, 2015

Multitudes by John Morrison

Multitudes at the Tricycle theatre had its last performance yesterday, and I saw the penultimate show in the afternoon. It's a debut play by actor John Hollingworth, set in Bradford in the n…

SOURCE: John Morrison at 1:49pm on March 22, 2015
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