Some excellent talent on show; the second piece is very funny but the first is mismatched and misjudged.
Read More »Off West End
A Fool’s Proof, The Vaults – Review
A witty, refreshing production on the media’s emphasis on sensation over truth that beautifully combines acting with live music, movement and puppetry.
Read More »Half A Person: My Life As Told By The Smiths, Kings Head Theatre – Review
Belying the show’s title, ‘Half a Person’ would appeal to not only Smiths fans, but also those not so familiar with their music.
Read More »Doing the Business and Blind – A Double Bill, The Courtyard – Review
Visceral, angry monologues express strong points of view about money in the art world. Both plays are heartfelt and well-acted, but corner themselves in extremes.
Read More »Shang-a-Lang, King’s Head Theatre – Review
A funny show with great acting and comic timing. Deals with coming to terms with ageing without sentimentality.
Read More »We, Macbeth, Theatro Technis – Review
This is a play about the men behind the curtain. It gives an alternative, and deeply disturbing theory on events that have shaken American politics since the 60s. A must if you’re a fan of conspiracy theories, and the secret games of the powerful.
Read More »Huis Clos (No Exit), Rosemary Branch Theatre – Review
This is a superb rendition of a classic philosophical drama.
Read More »A World Elsewhere, Theatre503 – Review
An interesting play which captures a moment in history through the eyes of the privileged.
Read More »The Keepers of Infinite Space, Park Theatre – Review
A play full of pathos, rage and loss; riveting to watch. If you want something both cerebral and dramatic with some polemic thrown in too, go and see it.
Read More »The Ugly Sisters, Soho Theatre – Review
More than just a reinterpretation of a classic and familiar tale, this is a highly original and complex story of its own.
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