theatre reviews, news & interviews
Gary Naylor |

Settling into my seat in this most intimate of houses, I realised that I had never seen a play written by Nobel Laureate and Academy Award winner, George Bernard Shaw. Nor did I know what his very own adjective, Shavian, connoted with any certainty. Nor did I know why an actress chose to go by the distracting stage name, Mrs Patrick Campbell.

Rachel Halliburton |

To watch Deep Azure is to feel a double loss. The death of Prince Jones, the black student who was shot dead by a police officer in a case of mistaken identity, and the death of his friend, Chadwick Boseman, who wrote the play to commemorate him. Boseman, of course, would become world-famous as Marvel’s first black superhero, Black Panther’s King T’Challa, before dying of colon cancer aged 43.

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It's nearly eight years since Kåre Conradi first appeared at the Coronet in a revelatory, visceral Norwegian production of Ibsen's Little Eyolf. He's…
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To watch Cynthia Erivo delivering her stunning, technically complex one-woman performance of Dracula is not unlike watching a top athlete gunning for…
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In our society, old people are everywhere, but they are everywhere ignored. For while culture loves youth, it often scorns maturity. So the first…

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Helen Hawkins
The pathos of CS Lewis’s short-lived marriage is muted at the Aldwych
aleks.sierz
New play about the prehistoric past searches for relevance, but fails to find it
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Jim Hacker and Sir Humphrey reunite for a good-tempered stroll through cancel cuture
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Award-winning new play pins its blue and yellow colours to the mast
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A shady financier and even worse dad has one last roll of the dice in Rattigan’s late play
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Benji Akintuyosi, playing jazz legend Miles Davis, articulates belief in the genius of the music
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Richard Eyre’s adaptation gives Strindberg’s warring monsters a human dimension
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Elton John fights back, and wins a battle with Fleet Street
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Tom Stoppard's best play is unbeatable now as it was then
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Noel Coward never saw a staging of the play he wrote at 18, now exhumed at the Park
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Early Coward play 'The Rat Trap' gets kickstarted afresh at the Park Theatre
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New play about urban alienation is a beautifully acted and acutely emotional experience
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The production interrogates storytelling as a way of exerting power
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Accomplished new musical with folk and country roots
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Blackshirts seen off in a third outing for the bright new musical
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New play about a devastating event is an excruciatingly powerful piece of new writing
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One-pitch show has its heart in the right place
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Updated 2013 production is a unique, moving, funny insight into a messy wedding day
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Evergreen songs lift somewhat formulaic musical
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Super production that examines the price paid by a talented woman in a man's world
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Tendentious script bogs down well-intentioned adaptation
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Jamie Armitage's collaboration with sound giants Ben and Max Ringham is an adrenalised triumph

Footnote: a brief history of British theatre

London theatre is the oldest and most famous theatreland in the world, with more than 100 theatres offering shows ranging from new plays in the subsidised venues such as the National Theatre and Royal Court to mass popular hits such as The Lion King in the West End and influential experimental crucibles like the Bush and Almeida theatres. There's much cross-fertilisation with Broadway, with London productions transferring to New York, and leading Hollywood film actors coming to the West End to star in live theatre. In regional British theatre, the creative energy of theatres like Alan Ayckbourn's Stephen Joseph Theatre, Scarborough, the Bristol Old Vic and the Sheffield theatre hub add to the richness of the landscape, while the many town theatres host circling tours of popular farces, crime theatre and musicals.

lion_kingThe first permanent theatre, the Red Lion, was built in Queen Elizabeth I's time, in 1576 in Shoreditch; Shakespeare spent 20 years in London with the Lord Chamberlain's Men, mainly performing at The Theatre, also in Shoreditch. A century later under the merry Charles II the first "West End" theatre was built on what is now Theatre Royal Drury Lane, and Restoration theatre evolved with a strong injection of political wit from Irish playwrights Oliver Goldsmith and Richard Brinsley Sheridan. Catering for more populist tastes, Sadler's Wells theatre went up in 1765, and a lively mix of drama, comedy and working-class music-hall ensued. But by the mid-19th century London theatre was deplored for its low taste, its burlesque productions unfavourably contrasted with the aristocratic French theatre. Calls for a national theatre to do justice to Shakespeare resulted in the first "Shakespeare Memorial" theatre built in Stratford in 1879.

The Forties and Fifties saw a golden age of classic theatre, with Sir Laurence Olivier, Sir Ralph Richardson and Sir John Gielgud starring in world-acclaimed productions in the Old Vic company, and new British plays by Harold Pinter, John Osborne, Beckett and others erupting at the English Stage Company in the Royal Court. This momentum led in 1961 to the establishing of the Royal Shakespeare Company in Stratford, and in 1963 the launch of the National Theatre at The Old Vic, led by Olivier. In the late Sixties Britain broke the American stranglehold on large-scale modern musicals when Andrew Lloyd Webber and Tim Rice launched their brilliant careers with first Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat and then Jesus Christ Superstar in 1970, and never looked back. The British modern original musical tradition led on to Les Misérables, The Lion King and most recently Matilda.

The Arts Desk brings you the fastest overnight reviews and ticket booking links for last night's openings, as well as the most thoughtful close-up interviews with major creative figures, actors and playwrights. Our critics include Matt Wolf, Aleks Sierz, Alexandra Coghlan, Veronica Lee, Sam Marlowe, Hilary Whitney and James Woodall.

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