Category : Theatre

Everybody’s problem: As Is at the Finborough Theatre

The great American play about the AIDS epidemic might be the 1990s Angels in America, but William M. Hoffman’s *As Is*, having premiered six years before Angels, is more raw and shows the initial anger connected with the outbreak of the disease. It highlights the immediacy of a time in which a whole city seemed

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Waiting on jokes: A Bit of A Hitch/Waiting on Shakespeare at the Courtyard Theatre

Writer-director Michael Harry takes on two of the greatest British storytellers, one classic and one more recent, to create homages that throws their characters into the deep end and drown them in a sea of knowing references and silly costumes. At the Courtyard Theatre. Silly slapstick, knowing glances and audience interaction make the perfect recipe

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The Banality of Evil: The Hothouse at Trafalgar Studios

It takes a masterful playwright and confident direction to turn a dark tale about the abuse of power into a funny and entertaining romp. The new production of The Hothouse at Trafalgar Transformed only just stops short of dunking Pinter’s piece into custard and pie. The result is uncomfortably chilling, twisted and a joy to

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Preach to the winds: Godspell at the Bridewell Theatre

With The Book of Mormon being the hottest selling ticket in town and shows like Jesus Christ Superstar even taking over our television casting shows, religiously-themed musicals seem to be in high demand. Now amateur company Sedos takes on the 1971 musical Godspell and puts Jesus on a skateboard. At the Bridewell Theatre. Conceived in

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Digging deeper: Facts at Finborough Theatre

A murder in the West Bank and two cops, one Palestinian, one Israeli, must work together to solve the case. Facts is a tense play that sets out to uncover the underlying historical, cultural and political frameworks for one of the most gridlocked conflicts of our time. At the Finborough Theatre. An American is murdered

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Journey’s End at Greenwich Theatre

Set in a British infantry dugout in the World War I trenches, Journey’s End centres around young Captain Stanhope and his officers who are all waiting for something meaningful to happen. At the Greenwich Theatre. An impending German attack provides the time frame to clearly guide the plot, but the play is much more about

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