AS FLIES TO WANTON CLOWNS… You don’t often see Queen Gertrude in Hamlet played by a short bearded Spaniard in a rainbow unitard with flamenco frills. But this is the Br…
SOURCE: theatrecat.com at 05:54PMSUPERNATURAL, PHILOSOPHICAL, YET YORKSHIRE ALL THE WAY… Of all the lessons theatre has taught us about the backwash of WW1, some of the most fascinating are in 1930’s p…
SOURCE: theatrecat.com at 06:01PMSuppose neuroscience could cure creeping brain deterioration by taking out whole networks of decaying neurons and replacing them with silicon, guaranteeing functionality, but wiping years of…
SOURCE: mytheatremates.com at 06:30PMA MODERN MASTERPIECE This is that finely balanced thing: a comedy built around a tragedy. Six summers ago, a newfledged critic for the Times, I wrote about its British premiere: “Br…
SOURCE: theatrecat.com at 06:56PMROLLING ALONG, CARRYING ALL BEFORE IT Fish gotta swim, birds gotta fly – you gotta laugh and you gotta cry. And believe me, you won’t help loving this stunning, flawless, cele…
SOURCE: theatrecat.com at 07:54PMGRIME AND GRACE IN THE URBAN JUNGLE You never know what you’ll get from Poppy Burton-Morgan’s Metta Theatre. I can’t claim to have spotted every venture of her ten years, but de…
SOURCE: theatrecat.com at 01:52PMMISCHIEF THEATRE STRIKES AGAIN. HURRAH! Years ago, a famous US television show called Rowan and Martin’s Laugh-In hit on the strategy – as Ken Dodd had decades earlier,…
SOURCE: theatrecat.com at 07:14PMLIGHTS! CAMERA! SLOW BUT FASCINATING ACTION! We sit as if we are the cinema screen of a run-down fleapit in Massachusetts: we confront the back wall at projector windo…
SOURCE: theatrecat.com at 06:31PMSIXTY YEARS, FOUR GENERATIONS: WHAT THE WOMEN DID Say, first of all, that Maureen Lipman was born to play Doris, the Lancashire matriarch at the heart of Charlotte Keatley’s …
SOURCE: theatrecat.com at 06:17PMELLE WOODS IS BACK, PINKER THAN EVER Full disclosure: transport , domesticity and a hacking cough meant that on this two-show day in the lovely Curve I had to skip out at the inter…
SOURCE: theatrecat.com at 04:38AMThere are actually only about thirty, out of Craig Taylor’s rather wonderful collection of 94 first seen in The Guardian. But the sense of our millions is there, as Laura Keefe’s joyful,…
SOURCE: mytheatremates.com at 07:36AMTHE HEROES FROM THE EAST A hundred years ago, a Punjabi gunner in the 129th Baluchi regiment, Khudadad Khan, stayed at his post in the machine gun nest, injured and at bay , his comma…
SOURCE: theatrecat.com at 01:11PMSTREETS OF LONDON, SNAKING TO NOWHERE… The boy of the title is Liam: gormless and runty, lost and unnoticed , scion of a demographic much discussed right now. For he’s a whi…
SOURCE: theatrecat.com at 05:01PMThis play is not about the American backwash from the slave era, but a shattering, important take on Colonial Africa, an unnamed country on the edge of revolution and independence. It is by …
SOURCE: mytheatremates.com at 10:56AMTHE STATE OF ENGLAND: FUNNY, BEAUTIFUL, SAD AND TOURING! Some issues do best as satirical or farcical comedies: English class division, illicit sex, misunderstanding. Othe…
SOURCE: theatrecat.com at 04:40AMSPALL, SQUALOR, AND 1960 I do not routinely worship at the shrine of Harold Pinter. I can study, appreciate and accept the menace, the unspoken, the rhythmic near-poetry of dialogu…
SOURCE: theatrecat.com at 06:31PMTO BOLDLY GO OFF YOUR HEAD, IN SPACE We are in the melamine mess-room of a space pod on the dead, black planet Pluto, with a crew of five. Unless one of them is a delusion of the nervy seco…
SOURCE: theatrecat.com at 05:23PMTHE CLASSIC COMEDY OF CLASS AND CONFUSION We’re back in the 1960’s, and how! Beyond the jolly geometric curtain a bygone world revives. Shiny pink plastic boots, a rid…
SOURCE: theatrecat.com at 06:16PMA CREEPY BRILLIANCE FROM QUEBEC What’s going on? Who are the people in the next flat, why are they so friendly and yet so odd? Are they commonplace swingers, murderers, or a delus…
SOURCE: theatrecat.com at 06:14PMHEAD, HEART, AND HOPEFULNESS “God” says Christopher Riley, donnishly, “has a severely limited intellect”. Jack Lewis, his Magdalen colleague, demurs with affectionate impatien…
SOURCE: theatrecat.com at 01:33PMREASONS TO BE UNREASONABLE… I had almost forgotten seeing the first in this Neil laBute trilogy – Reasons to be Pretty – until the looming, hapless figure of Tom Bur…
SOURCE: theatrecat.com at 08:16PMBRANAGH AND BRYDON GO BANG Well, you’ll never see our Kenneth Branagh more exuberantly violent, nor tumbling into more compromising positions; nor so crazedly drugged, veering f…
SOURCE: theatrecat.com at 07:50PMTHE TRUTH GAME. OR NOT. Its’ a while since so many shrieks, barks and snorts of laughter shook the seats around me: don’t take your drink in, you’ll risk doing the nose trick in …
SOURCE: theatrecat.com at 08:21PMNOTAHIT On the banks of the Nile, the princess of Egypt lifts a Jewish baby from the Nile waters, but changes her mind, chucks him back and chooses a prettier one. The reject survives…
SOURCE: theatrecat.com at 09:42AMGUEST REVIEWER CHARLOTTE VALORI WATCHES MOZART WIPE THE FLOOR WITH THE COMPETITION – AS USUAL Pairing a copper-bottomed opera classic (Mozart’s Così fan tutte) with an imported Aus…
SOURCE: theatrecat.com at 07:19AMPLENTY OF ACTIVITY, NOT QUITE ENOUGH RADIANCE This theatre is certainly fearless about potentially tasteless names – Bad Jews, Urinetown, now Miss Atomic Bomb: the first two of those, …
SOURCE: theatrecat.com at 07:10PM“OVERPAID, OVERSEXED, OVER HERE”…AND NOT AT EASE... In 1942 the Americans came to rural Britain: the US Eighth Air Force, its members often outnumbering local villagers 50 …
SOURCE: theatrecat.com at 04:33PMTHE ANGRY YOUNG MAN RANTS AGAIN, THEN CHANGES SEX This is a sharp bit of work by Derby, marking 60 years since John Osborne’s splenetic debut blew the lid – so theatre legen…
SOURCE: theatrecat.com at 02:55PMA TWO-WHEELED CHARIOT OF FIRE I suppose there must be some lazy, vacillating, unfocused Yorkshirewomen, but I’ve not met one yet. And of that tribe of gritty, unselfpitying, f…
SOURCE: theatrecat.com at 06:42PMIT GLITTERS! IT SINGS! IT MAKES SENSE. EVEN IN MAD TROUSERS! I expected a big splashy jukebox musical, a-glitter with tearful Broadway sentiment and popster pizzazz. And indeed …
SOURCE: theatrecat.com at 06:39PMTHE DAWN OF WAR, 1914 World War I and its aftermath are being well served by theatre (my last year’s reflections, http://tinyurl.com/q53tp5p). But Jeremy James’ play is the firs…
SOURCE: theatrecat.com at 05:11PM