Reviews
Spamilton, Menier Chocolate Factory review - fun if overstuffedThursday, 26 July 2018![]() If it's possible to have somewhat too much of a good thing, that would seem to be the case with the British premiere at the Menier Chocolate Factory of Spamilton. The latest in the indefatigable catalogue of New York songwriter-satirist Gerard... Read more... |
The Bletchley Circle: San Francisco, ITV review - the ludicrous in search of the preposterousThursday, 26 July 2018![]() Belatedly picking up from where series 2 of The Bletchley Circle left off in 2014, this comeback version has a go at transporting a couple of the original characters to the Californian West Coast, where they embroil themselves in the hunt for that... Read more... |
Prom 12, Weilerstein, BBCSO, Canellakis review - energetic 20th century classicsTuesday, 24 July 2018![]() Shostakovich’s First Cello Concerto combines the composer’s usual angst and nerviness with a sardonic humour, right from the opening bars, where the cello and orchestra seem to be playing in contradictory keys. At last night’s Prom, cellist Alisa... Read more... |
Proms at...Roundhouse / Proms 9 & 11 review - rituals from Messiaen to MahlerMonday, 23 July 2018Once the Proms season is under way, you soon regret dissing the prospectus. Connections become apparent, long-term programming a merit, especially this weekend just gone, which took us from elegies and meditations on two world wars heavenwards at... Read more... |
Mission: Impossible - Fallout review - brilliant summer blockbusterMonday, 23 July 2018![]() This is the second Mission: Impossible movie written and directed by Christopher McQuarrie, the first time any director has been called back for an encore on the series. He did a smart job on 2015’s Rogue Nation, but this time he has pulled out... Read more... |
Stella Tillyard: The Great Level review – reason and passion in the Fens and VirginiaSunday, 22 July 2018![]() The Fens of East Anglia, and the lonely coasts that skirt them, usually sit well below the horizon of mainstream culture. Yet when England’s flatlands and their maritime margins do find a literary voice – in Graham Swift’s Waterland, say, or WG... Read more... |
Reissue CDs Weekly: Max RichterSunday, 22 July 2018![]() When The Blue Notebooks was originally released in February 2004, it did not seem to be an album which would have the afterlife it has enjoyed. It had little context. Max Richter’s second album was his first for the 130701 label which, at that point... Read more... |
Pity, Royal Court review - whacked-out and wearingSaturday, 21 July 2018![]() The apocalypse arrives as a series of collegiate sketches in the aptly-named Pity, the Rory Mullarkey play that may well prompt sympathy for audiences who unwittingly find themselves in attendance. Less provocative by far than this same writer's... Read more... |
Allelujah!, Bridge Theatre review - hilarious but dark, darker, darkestFriday, 20 July 2018![]() The NHS is us. For decades our national identity has been bandaged together with the idea, and reality, of a health service that is free at the point of delivery. Such an object of myth and pride cries out for comic treatment, and now the spritely... Read more... |
Saul, Glyndebourne review - from extravaganza to phantasmagoriaFriday, 20 July 2018![]() It's swings and roundabouts for Glyndebourne this season. After the worst of one director currently in fashion, Stefan Herheim, in the unhappy mésalliance of the house's Pelléas et Mélisande, only musically gripping, comes the already-known best of... Read more... |
Mamma Mia! Here We Go Again review - sweet, silly, and, best of all, CherFriday, 20 July 2018![]() Mamma Mia! has a habit of bursting upon us at crucially restorative moments. The Broadway production opened just after 9/11 and provided necessary balm to a city in shock. Now comes the celluloid prequel of sorts and, lo and behold, what could have... Read more... |
Gary Numan, Assembly Hall, Worthing review - hot and hammeringFriday, 20 July 2018![]() Arriving back onstage for an encore a broadly smiling Gary Numan bathes in roared football chants of “Numan! Numan!”. He tells us it’s just over 40 years since he released his first single, “That’s Too Bad”, but that he and his tight four-piece band... Read more... |
