Light, bright, and cheerful, Andrew Pollard’s Robinson Crusoe is a breezy adventure with a few subversive twists. After a boilerplate first half
SOURCE: The Stage Registration at 05:54AMBursting with energy and colour, Liam Steel’s Wizard of Oz in an inventive but faithful take on L Frank Baum’s beloved yarn.
SOURCE: The Stage Registration at 09:57AMFinding the tricky balance between spectacle and sincerity, the Marlowe Theatre’s Cinderella is a finely-tuned fairytale. Written and directed by Paul Hendy,
SOURCE: The Stage Registration at 05:59AMPieced together from what author and poet Nick Makoha describes as fragments of “memory and imagination,” The Dark is a richly textured
SOURCE: The Stage Registration at 07:26AMDaft and rambling though it is, the Watermill Theatre’s madcap crack at the story of Robin Hood has a certain chaotic appeal.
SOURCE: The Stage Registration at 03:22AMThe Big House is gaining a solid reputation for making raw, powerful work with at-risk young people, and Bullet Tongue is no
SOURCE: The Stage Registration at 03:05AMThe need to find meaning in the face of mortality is at the heart of Love-Lies-Bleeding, a swaggeringly bleak story of assisted
SOURCE: The Stage Registration at 11:41AMHighly successful in its own time, George Farquhar’s The Recruiting Officer is a wry restoration sex comedy with a subversive streak that
SOURCE: The Stage Registration at 12:47PMMarking the centenary of the Armistice, Return of the Unknown is a clumsy but undeniably ambitious interrogation of the act of remembrance.
SOURCE: The Stage Registration at 12:13PMActor, puppeteer, and author Charlotte Charke was an intriguing but often overlooked historical figure, a woman who, in the early 1700s regularly
SOURCE: The Stage Registration at 07:52AMFar more than any supernatural scariness, the simple inability to move on from the death of a loved one is at the
SOURCE: The Stage Registration at 11:29AMBeneath the war-torn fields of France, a desperate soldier becomes trapped in the mythic labyrinth of The Trench in this dark, compelling
SOURCE: The Stage Registration at 05:29AMExploring the limitations of language and the vacuity of political discourse, Summit imagines an unlikely, optimistic butterfly effect which begins when international
SOURCE: The Stage Registration at 09:54AMSprawling, cerebral, and at times unflinching in its dissection of radicalism at both ends of the political spectrum, Maydays tells an epic,
SOURCE: The Stage Registration at 09:02AMStuck on an international flight when she learns that her life has been spectacularly derailed, data analyst Lisa grapples with overwhelming feelings
SOURCE: The Stage Registration at 09:36AMChafing against retirement and a lingering alcohol problem, Ian Rankin’s maverick detective John Rebus cracks open a cold case in this latest
SOURCE: The Stage Registration at 05:38AMWith our current crop of world leaders often seemingly beyond parody, Trial by Laughter is a timely reminder that political incompetence, corruption,
SOURCE: The Stage Registration at 07:50AMOpening with a bone-rattling blast of Black Sabbath, it’s clear from the outset that the Royal Shakespeare Company’s new adaptation of Moliere’s
SOURCE: The Stage Registration at 06:13AMJust before midnight on New Year’s Eve, 1937, a couple surviving tenuously in the Soviet Union are visited by the devil in
SOURCE: The Stage Registration at 08:42AMCharting the shared journey of a newly married couple from 1950s India to present-day Britain, An Adventure is a sprawling, impressionistic study
SOURCE: The Stage Registration at 05:58AMThe unpleasant feeling of chewing while wearing headphones does little to detract from the immersive, experiential quality of genre-blurring multimedia piece Gastronomic.
SOURCE: The Stage Registration at 04:59AMCommissioned as a companion piece to Mike Leigh’s acerbic drama Abigail’s Party – a remount of which runs alongside this production at
SOURCE: The Stage Registration at 06:10AMAs a 1977 Play for Today, Mike Leigh’s waspish comedy-drama Abigail’s Party became an impactful and influential examination of the suburban underbelly.
SOURCE: The Stage Registration at 05:50AMThe fourth instalment of Birmingham Stage Company’s long running sketch show based on the delightfully nasty children’s franchise, Horrible Histories: Barmy Britain
SOURCE: The Stage Registration at 05:29AMBased on Dick King-Smith’s beloved children’s book, the story of bright, polite and ambitious piglet Babe, the Sheep-Pig, is given a creaky
SOURCE: The Stage Registration at 06:24AMWeaving five starkly different stories into the text of Oscar Wilde’s haunting ballad, Reading Gaol is an ambitious but often unfocused exploration
SOURCE: The Stage Registration at 12:37PMShot, strangled, bludgeoned, and buried under a barn in men’s clothes, Maria Marten’s murder was one of the 19th century’s most infamous.
SOURCE: The Stage Registration at 11:05AMExploring the echoingly empty gulfs between intimacy and isolation, between yearning for truth and the need to keep some secrets unspoken, Charlotte
SOURCE: The Stage Registration at 04:16AMBalancing warmth, wit, and a large dose of the ridiculous, Guildford Shakespeare Company’s Love’s Labour’s Lost manages to be both moving and
SOURCE: The Stage Registration at 10:51AMQuietly horrifying and laced with bitterly black comedy, Fat Jewels is a moody, miserable study of psychosexual abuse. Set in one room
SOURCE: The Stage Registration at 07:54AMFlawed, stalling, but occasionally extraordinary, At Home in Gaza and London is an ambitious multimedia piece combining simultaneous performances in the UK
SOURCE: The Stage Registration at 12:01PM