16th century
Cymbeline, Sam Wanamaker PlayhouseWednesday, 09 December 2015There’s a happy, cyclical logic to this first production of Cymbeline – Shakespeare’s late tragicomedy of love and jealousy – at the Globe’s Sam Wanamaker Playhouse. The first play Shakespeare wrote for the candle-lit, indoor Blackfriars Playhouse,... Read more... |
Pericles, Sam Wanamaker PlayhouseThursday, 26 November 2015Pericles is a play of voyages. Lands and landscapes crowd in, one after the other – Tyre, Tarsus, Ephesus, Antioch, Mitylene – until our dramatic sea-legs are decidedly unsteady. The demands are great for any theatre, but for the Globe’s tiny... Read more... |
Thomas Tallis, Sam Wanamaker PlayhouseSunday, 08 November 2015Jessica Swale’s Thomas Tallis is the first new play commissioned for the Sam Wanamaker Playhouse – the beginning, hopefully, of the same relationship the Globe itself has always had with new writing. In concept, it’s everything this unique space... Read more... |
The Image of Melancholy, Eike, Sam Wanamaker PlayhouseMonday, 21 September 2015“Sounds a bit depressing,” said several friends when I urged them to attend the theatrical incarnation of The Image of Melancholy, inspirational violinist Bjarte Eike’s award-winning CD with his stunning Norwegian-based group Barokksolistene.... Read more... |
Anne Boleyn's Songbook, Alamire, Sam Wanamaker PlayhouseMonday, 14 September 2015Later this week David Skinner’s Alamire ensemble will collect the Early Music Gramophone Award for The Spy’s Choirbook, but last night it was the group’s follow-up album that was in the spotlight (or rather the candlelight) in a performance at the... Read more... |
Extract: The Time Traveller’s Guide to British TheatreThursday, 23 July 2015Theatre is one of the glories of British culture, a melting pot of creativity and innovation. Beginning with the coronation of Elizabeth I and ending with the televised crowning of the current Queen Elizabeth, our The Time Traveller’s Guide to... Read more... |
Measure for Measure, Shakespeare's GlobeFriday, 03 July 2015If Simon McBurney’s Measure for Measure for the National Theatre and Declan Donnellan’s recent Cheek By Jowl production mined deep for darkness, Dominic Dromgoole’s for the Globe is content to skim the play’s sunny surface – the comedy manqué that... Read more... |
Betrayal, I Fagiolini, The Village UndergroundFriday, 15 May 2015It’s not often in classical music that you find yourself queuing under a railway bridge in Shoreditch at 9pm (and still less often that the artistic experience inside merits the endeavour). But get past the door staff and the effortful East London... Read more... |
The Merchant of Venice, Shakespeare's GlobeFriday, 01 May 2015There’s a certainty, a reassurance that comes with attending a Globe show. You know that however bad things get, however bloodied the stage at final curtain, however bruised the relationships on stage, everyone – corpses and all – will rise and come... Read more... |
The Mastersingers of Nuremberg, English National OperaSunday, 08 February 2015After seven glorious Welsh National Opera performances in the summer of 2010, it looked like curtains for Richard Jones’s Mastersingers (or Meistersinger, as it then was, sung in German): no DVD, no co-productions. The director seemed happy with... Read more... |
Rubens and His Legacy, Royal AcademySunday, 25 January 2015What does it mean to be a great artist? Is it enough for your work to be admired, studied, emulated and quoted by contemporaries and subsequent generations, or is the value of art judged by a more complex set of criteria? By considering the extent... Read more... |
The Merchant of Venice, Almeida TheatreTuesday, 16 December 2014All that glisters is not gold in the casino and television game-show world of Rupert Goold’s American Shakespeare, first staged by the Royal Shakespeare Company in 2011. Not all the accents are gold either, though working on them only seems to have... Read more... |