Reviewer's Rating Jacques Brel Is Alive and Well and Living in Paris Richard Voyce 19/10/2014rench popular music from the middle of the Twentieth Century never really travelled, certainly in terms of artistes. OK, you...
Reviewer's Rating East is East Kate Mounce 19/10/2014s a semi-autobiographical look at the particular challenges faced by Pakistani immigrants and mixed-race children, living in whatmight be described...
Reviewer's Rating The Cherry Orchard Rivka Jacobson 18/10/2014atie Mitchell’s production of The Cherry Orchard embraces melancholy, alienation and erratic-neurotic characters, who behave and talk as if they...
Reviewer's Rating Uncle Vanya Patrick Skipworth 18/10/2014n her latest adaption of Chekhov, Anya Reiss has relocated Uncle Vanya to a rusted, corrugated iron farmhouse in 21st...
Tartuffe Katerina Yannouli 17/10/20147th century playwright Molière, is considered one of the masters of literary comedy. One of the greatest exponents of the comedy...
Reviewer's Rating The Trials of Oscar Wilde Richard McKee 16/10/2014s there anything we don’t know about Oscar Wilde? asks John O’Connor, who – with Wilde’s grandson, Merlin Holland –...
Reviewer's Rating Jasmin Vardimon’s Park S.A. McCracken 15/10/2014eworked ten years after it was first produced, Park overreaches itself as a chaotic, multi-media, inter-disciplinary performance. Thankfully there are...
Reviewer's Rating Stones In His Pockets Mel Cooper 14/10/2014tones in his Pockets is a wonderful example of Brecht’s “alienation effect” working as it should. Two men: one short,...
Reviewer's Rating The Trial Owen Davies 12/10/2014here is every reason why the strange and unsettling fate of Joseph K, the central character of Franz Kafka’s novel,...
Reviewer's Rating The Distance Tom Aitken 12/10/2014his is an amazing evening. The play is serious and thought-provoking, yet for most of its running time is side-splittingly...