It’s impossible to comprehend the unbelievable pain and complete disbelief of being told your child has been murdered. Parents raise their offspring being constantly alert for the trip-hazards
Ralph’s a woman! Whoa! One of the drawbacks to supporting modern ideas about gender fluidity in the theatre is that it can be confusing for some parts of
Great writers respond to times of major conflict or global upheaval by taking pen to paper and usually knocking out a satire or polemic against warmongering. Siegfried Sassoon
Advice columns have often suggested lonely hearts should take up dog walking as a sure fired way of finding romance. They may be barking up the wrong tree
If we’re to believe the rumours, dog lover, Queen Elizabeth I, insisted on William Shakespeare writing a mutt into his plays because it entertained her so. Working on
The Arts are notorious for attracting eccentrics. It’s the nature of the beast. But, seekers, there are some oddballs whose brilliance and genius for originality and innovation have
The rags-to-riches story of the Rothschild family is a remarkable and fascinating one – but is it right for a musical? Jerry Bock and Sheldon Harnick came up
“Fuck this for a laugh!” Shocking, provocative and poetic. Steven Berkoff’s punchy verse play, East, has returned to its roots. No, not Bethnal Green or the Mile End
It’s probably the Poldark Effect but we can’t get enough of period dramas and, even more so, if they’re seaworthy adaptations of literary classics. Put the hero, or
At one time Billy Haines, the subject of Claudio Macor’s play, The Tailor-Made Man, was as big as Clark Gable, Ramon Novarro and Montgomery Clift (look ’em up