fri 13/09/2024

Reviews

The Real Ones, Bush Theatre review - engrossing, enjoyable and quietly inspiring

Aleks Sierz

Platonic love should be simple — basically you’re best mates. And without the complications of sex, what could go wrong? Waleed Akhtar, whose big hit The P Word was also performed here at the Bush, takes this idea and complicates it — by making it about a gay boy and a straight girl.

Prom 71, Seong-Jin Cho review - refined Romantic journeys

Boyd Tonkin

Out of emergencies may come revelations. Sir András Schiff has broken his leg, and we wish him a super-speedy recovery. At the Proms, his promised Art of Fugue will have to wait. Korean pianist Seong-Jin Cho, a past winner of the Chopin Prize, stepped in yesterday with a late-night recital programme that at first glance could hardly have looked more alien to the austere grandeur of Bach’s contrapuntal epic.

Frang, LSO, Pappano, Barbican review - a concerto...

Alexandra Coghlan

Hauntings, memories, echoes: Antonio Pappano has started his official tenure as chief conductor of the London Symphony Orchestra by looking back in...

The Perfect Couple, Netflix review - an...

Adam Sweeting

Based on the novel by Elin Hilderbrand, The Perfect Couple is an expensively-dressed fable about a lavish wedding in Nantucket, the desirable island...

Lee review - shaky biopic of an iconic...

Saskia Baron

Anyone who has seen Lee Miller’s photographs – those taken of her in the 1920s when she was a dazzling American beauty, those she took as a...

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Our Country's Good, Lyric Hammersmith review - lively but patchy revival

Helen Hawkins

Timberlake Wertenbaker's updated version takes particular aim at colonialism

Why Am I So Single?, Garrick Theatre review - superb songs in Zeitgeist surfing show

Gary Naylor

Marlow and Moss are back with deeply personal exploration of how lives are lived today

Reawakening review - a prodigal daughter returns, or does she?

Markie Robson-Scott

Virginia Gilbert's gripping drama stars Jared Harris and Juliet Stevenson

LSO, Pappano, Barbican review - singular adventures for a new era

David Nice

A quick-change MacMillan premiere finds correspondences in singular Sibelius

Prom 68, A Midsummer Night's Dream, Garsington Opera review - eerie beauty sometimes faintly glittering

David Nice

Strong cast and top orchestra project as best they can in a fine company's first Proms visit

The Mad Hatter's Tea Party, ZooNation, Linbury Theatre review - a joyous celebration of differentness

Jenny Gilbert

Kate Prince's hip hop take on Lewis Carroll is energetic, charming and moving by turns

La traviata, Royal Opera review - a charismatic soprano in a serviceable revival

Alexandra Coghlan

Richard Eyre's classic production looks great but lacks fizz

Red Rooms review - the darkest of webs

Harry Thorfinn-George

Writer-director Pascal Plante has a cult hit on his hands with this skilful cyber-thriller

Sambre: Anatomy of a Crime, BBC Four review - satisfying novelistic retelling of a French true crime saga

Helen Hawkins

Compelling story of a rapist who hid in plain sight for 30 years

Beetlejuice Beetlejuice review - a lively resurrection

James Saynor

Tim Burton gets the old gang back from the dead

Starve Acre review - unearthing the unearthly in a fine folk horror film

Justine Elias

Matt Smith and Morfydd Clark play a couple hexed by an ancient evil

Proms 63-65, Choral Day review - from Harris to Handel/Mozart via Alabama, with love

David Nice

British and American beauties crowned by a cornucopial 'Messiah'

Album: Juniore - Trois, Deux, Un

Kieron Tyler

Parisian trio showcase an elegant if deliberate retro-futurist garage-pop

Music Reissues Weekly: Lee 'Scratch' Perry and Friends - People Funny Boy: The Upsetter Singles 1968-1969

Kieron Tyler

Meticulous investigation of the early self-determined years of the eminent sonic architect

Prom 62, Mahler's Sixth Symphony, Bavarian RSO, Rattle review - sound over momentum

David Nice

Near-perfect playing, but something missing in the overall drama

Ballet Nights #006, Cadogan Hall review - a mixed bag of excellence

Jenny Gilbert

Gala enterprise, 12 months on, will be a stayer if it keeps up this level of excitement

Kaos, Netflix review - playing fast and profuse with the Greek myths

David Nice

A rainbow of acting talent, but too many ideas thrown into the labyrinth

The Allergies, Hare & Hounds, Birmingham review - funky hip-hoppers fire up the weekend

Guy Oddy

Breaks, funky basslines, horns and plenty of dancing

The Silver Cord, Finborough Theatre review - Sophie Ward is compellingly repellent

Gary Naylor

Beautifully staged and acted revival of Sidney Howard’s century-old black comedy

Prom 61, Bavarian Radio Symphony Orchestra, Rattle review - Bruckner without tears

Boyd Tonkin

A lithe, smooth journey around a craggy masterpiece

Gossip, SWG3, Glasgow review - powerhouse voice provokes only an intermittent party

Jonathan Geddes

Beth Ditto was on superb form, but her band's sound struggled to find a groove

Firebrand review - surviving Henry VIII

James Saynor

Another of his marriages goes down the privy

Art, Theatre Royal Bath review - Yasmina Reza's smash hit back on tour 30 years after Paris premiere

Gary Naylor

Male friendships buckle as egos clash, with a resonance for today's culture wars

The Real Thing, Old Vic review - Stoppard classic keeps on giving

Demetrios Matheou

James McArdle is immense as Stoppard’s true romantic

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latest in today

The Real Ones, Bush Theatre review - engrossing, enjoyable a...

Platonic love should be simple — basically you’re best mates. And without the complications of sex, what could go wrong? Waleed Akhtar, whose big...

Prom 71, Seong-Jin Cho review - refined Romantic journeys

Out of emergencies may come revelations. Sir András Schiff has broken his leg, and we wish him a super-speedy recovery. At the Proms, his promised...

Frang, LSO, Pappano, Barbican review - a concerto performanc...

Hauntings, memories, echoes: Antonio Pappano has started his official tenure as chief conductor of the London Symphony Orchestra by looking back...

The Perfect Couple, Netflix review - an inconvenient death r...

Based on the novel by Elin Hilderbrand, The Perfect...

Lee review - shaky biopic of an iconic photographer

Anyone who has seen Lee Miller’s photographs – those taken of her in the 1920s when she was a dazzling American beauty, those she took as a...

Our Country's Good, Lyric Hammersmith review - lively b...

The latest Greatest Hit to land at the Lyric is Timberlake Wertenbaker’s 1988 award-winning play about a performance of Farquhar’s ...

Why Am I So Single?, Garrick Theatre review - superb songs i...

Going to the theatre can be a little like going to church. One communes on the individual level, one’s faith in the stories...

Reawakening review - a prodigal daughter returns, or does sh...

“I’d know her. Bone of my bone, flesh of my flesh. Would I know her? Would I?” John (a brilliant Jared Harris, who’s also an executive producer)...

Album: Floating Points - Cascade

I made a terrible mistake when I first got this LP: I played it on my laptop speakers. That’s not the straight up foolishness you might think,...

LSO, Pappano, Barbican review - singular adventures for a ne...

Somehow those of us required to translate the musical experience into words look for the moments which defeat us. One such was the extraordinary...