Our race is a mistake. South African/British actor, writer and director, Janet Suzman, directs the first London production in 35 years of Athol Fugard’s A Lesson From Aloes
It has been nearly 80 years since Aimée Stuart’s enchanting and whimsical comedy, Jeannie, has been performed in London so thank god for the Finborough Theatre in staging
It’s been 26 years since Tony Harrison’s anti-war polemic, Square Rounds baffled and amused audiences and it has lost none of its bite. The original National Theatre crowd
It’s hard for people in England to fully comprehend the strength of feeling that exists – going back generations – in Northern Ireland. We’d be naive to think
“They said I was violent. You’re the ‘victim’ – what do you think?” Set over a single evening, Matt Parvin’s Jam is a relentless, incendiary new drama that
People have different ways of coping with grief. Nikolai Koslov, in Matthew Wilkinson’s powerful two-hander, My Eyes Went Dark, is consumed with rage, guilt and pain. His is
Nikolai Koslov avenges the death of his family in a plane crash – by killing the air traffic controller he holds responsible. “I’m not saying he wasn’t put
The bombing of Sheffield in 1940 saw the city reduced to rubble and more than 600 people killed, but the steely fortitude of its people remained as strong
Commemorating the 75th anniversary of the Sheffield Blitz, and the 70th anniversary of the end of the Second World War, Kieran Knowles’ debut play Operation Crucible, returns for
Alan Seymour’s controversial drama, The One Day of the Year, comes to London’s Finborough Theatre next week and its producers are hoping for a quiet opening. It large