'Surreal & almost cosmic': THE GLOW " Royal Court Theatre
Alistair McDowall's The Glow at the Royal Court is a play I've had to ponder - a lot - and I still don't have any firm conclusions.
Alistair McDowall's The Glow at the Royal Court is a play I've had to ponder - a lot - and I still don't have any firm conclusions.
About 500, which takes its title from the number of ovulations a woman is likely to have in her life, finally gets its live premiere this month, rescheduled after two Vault Festival cancella…
The London production has truly settled into its home at the Theatre Royal Drury Lane and Emma Clarendon recently paid the production a second visit.
In the second of our two-part Lost in Blue interview, writer and performer Debs Newbold discusses how Vincent Van Gogh's art inspired both the play and her own experiments with painting. Tim…
The story is told in 90 riveting minutes in conversations between just four actors who portrayed their characters with impeccable dynamism.
Kerbs, a new comedy about dating whilst disabled, receives its world premiere this month at the Belgrade Theatre, Coventry, in a co-production with Graeae, the UK's leading disabled-led thea…
Female-led theatre company Plain Heroines "make funny plays about difficult subjects". That's an apt description of Kate Reid's The 4th Country.
Waitress offers a sweet slice of Americana, well-balanced with fleshed-out, morally-compromised characters and topped with a belter of a ballad in 'She Used To Be Mine'.
About 500, Simona Hughes' acclaimed play about women's infertility, finally gets its live premiere this month with limited dates at London's Union and Omnibus Theatres. Time to get booking!
Beautiful, sexy and luminous are words most associated with Hollywood starlets of the 1940s, 50s and 60s, and indeed they were, but they were also talented and savvy movie actors who command…
Matthew Parker's revival of the popular off-Broadway musical based on the story of teenage murderers Nathan Leopold (1904-1971) and Richard Loeb (1905-1936) is now is residence at the tiny J…
Instructions for a Teenage Armageddon, the acclaimed one-person show written and performed by BAFTA winner Rosie Day, transfers to London's Southwark Playhouse for a strictly limited season …
During one's formative years, it's not uncommon to 'fall in love' with a pastime or something that inspires a lifelong 'passion'. For some, it is Britney Spears.
"As the lead in the first London production of the censorship-smashing 1968 rock musical Hair, Paul, unlike many of his co-stars, did not reveal all. In a manner of speaking, he does now…"
I cannot understand why they decided to try to adapt the story of The Da Vinci Code to the letter. The novel did not fend well as a film and it appears to have suffered the same fate as a li…
There aren't many touring shows where fire, confetti and belts that melt your faces off are the key selling points, but that's what makes Bat Out of Hell such a unique and refreshing additio…
SpitLip's comedy musical about one of the most insane World War II operations is a triumph.
Actor Lizzie Crarer stars in Eastern Angles' acclaimed production of The Ballad of Maria Marten, which returns to the stage in a tour that opens at Colchester's Mercury Theatre on 8 February…
Arrows & Traps return to live performance in customary ambitious style with Holst " The Music In The Spheres at the Brockley Jack Theatre.
Electrifying new musical Jagged Little Pill commands attention, breaks hearts and, ultimately, inspires hope in this thrilling Australian premiere season.
The musical based on the hit Baz Luhrmann film makes for spectacular viewing in the West End.
Stephen Dolginoff's 2003 musical Thrill Me: The Leopold and Loeb Story was the latest in a long line of cultural products inspired by this infamous murder case in 1920s America.
Sigmund Freud, one of the most renowned neurologists of his time, changed the way the world thinks with his views and published works on, love, god and sex.
There is a lot to love with the production; the energy is next level throughout, the variety of performers is wonderful to see and the classic songs from the movies are excellent.
History is a prison. Often, you can't escape. It imprints its mark on people, environments and language. And nowhere is this more true that in Northern Ireland.