Modern Britain. Moral chaos. Total nightmare. A South African gun runner turned Buddhist monk. A gullible start-up millionaire. His radical feminist ex-wife. Their aid worker daughter. The young
From the title alone I was expecting a gritty drama about the effects on a generation of young people who have grown up with the police’s controversial policy
An international cast os flying in for Marion Bott’s Moormaid which opens at London’s Arcola Theatre next month. Iranian screen actor Moe Bar-El (Le Bureau Des Legendes, Canal+;
Patrick Marmion takes a swing at Will Self’s surreal modern satire, Great Apes, for a new play heading to London’s Arcola Theatre next month. Directed by RSC and
London’s Arcola Theatre is to stage the first London revival in over 20 years of Insignificance by two-time Olivier Award winner Terry Johnson. Insignificance centres on an imagined
There is no doubt in most people’s minds of Richard III’s unbridled lust for power and his murderous and Machiavellian plotting and conniving for the crown, no matter
King Edward is on the throne, and England is at peace. But don’t worry – it won’t be that way for long. Gripping and outrageous, Shakespeare’s Richard III
The appearance of The Plague, at London’s Arcola Theatre, seems uncannily prescient, coming at a time when the world holds its breath as the gung-ho superpowers muscle up
Shakespearean actor Greg Hicks plays the villainous king in Richard III and Neil Bartlett is set to direct his new adaptation of Albert Camus’ modern classic, The Plague,
Modern warfare is terrifying. Okay, yes, all war is terrifying. But it’s sickening to think that people, communities, towns and cities can be wiped out by a drone
As Barack Obama prepares to leave office, London’s Arcola Theatre premieres a double bill under the umbrella title of Drones, Baby Drones that probes behind the scenes of