I’ve never seen Peter Strickland’s 2012 film of Berberian Sound Studio, so I didn’t really know what to expect from this stage adaptation which has opened at London’s
If you want to understand why working class Americans voted for Donald Trump or even why people in Sunderland voted for Brexit then look no further than Lynn
Borrowing a technique from American long-form TV drama, The Tragedy of King Richard The Second which opened this week at London’s Almedia Theatre, begins in medias res. The wonderful
Imagine the worst, dreariest episode of Eastenders. Then sprinkle on some additional cliché, poor production values and a plodding pace. This will give you some idea of what
Love’s Labour’s Lost at The Globe’s stunning Sam Wanamaker Playhouse, had me at ‘Hello’. A solitary figure enters in complete darkness with a single candle and sits on
It’s definitely back to basics at The Globe Theatre in Blanche McIntyre’s excellent stripped down and beautifully spoken production of The Winter’s Tale, which opened last night. After
Beirut, Alan Bowne’s short dystopian AIDS drama, first seen off-Broadway in 1987 and now revived at London’s Park Theatre, is the quarantine zone in New York City where
Mussolini never killed people, just sent them to holiday camps. So says the tagline, borrowed from Silvio Berlusconi, for San Domino, Tim Anfilogoff and Alan Whittaker’s curious little