Category : Theatre

The Roof at Lift 2014

Someday you will die. And you can’t escape. So, you go out and find stuff. You attach meaning to the stuff. You keep the stuff. You need more stuff. You meet people. You get to know them. They’re weird. You like them. You give them your stuff or share it with them. You have a

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Handbagged at the Vaudeville

“Mrs Thatcher has got eyes like a psychotic killer, but a voice like a gentle person. It is a bit confusing.” This could have been a line uttered by one of the characters in Moira Buffini’s new play but it’s actually taken from Adrian Mole’s Secret Diary. It is fitting to quote Adrian today not

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Mozart Undone at the Barbican

Quite what they were expecting when attending a theatre-concert based on Mozart, the audience at the Barbican didn’t seem to know. There was promise to take the ennui out of a concert experience and add some visual spice to it. The delivery on that promise turned out to be a little more daring than simply

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Doctor Faustus at the Rose Bankside

420 years after its first performance, Christopher Marlowe’s Doctor Faustus returns to The Rose Playhouse, Bankside. In this version the original text has been cut down to an 80-minute one-man piece. It’s a bold move that unfortunately doesn’t pay off. At the core of what has made Doctor Faustus a universal play and often quoted

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Jumpers for Goalposts at the Bush Theatre

Tom Wells (author of the acclaimed The Kitchen Sink) creates a poignant and funny story about dealing with grief, gay life and having the balls to overcome adversity. Produced by Plaines Plough, Hull Truck and Watford Palace Theatre, Jumpers For Goalposts is somewhere between Gregory’s Girl and Bend It Like Beckham. At the Bush Theatre.

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Glittery, hot mess: The Lightning Child at Shakespeare’s Globe

With their latest Season of Plenty offering the Globe invites to a trippy celebration of the Dionysian spirit. In The Lightning Child Ché Walker and Arthur Darvill have reworked Euripides’ The Bacchus into a sprawling joyride spiced with musical numbers. At Shakespeare’s Globe. Everything starts out so promisingly. The colourful Globe stage is draped completely

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