Donmar Warehouse
The Fear of 13, Donmar Warehouse review - powerful analysis of a gross injusticeFriday, 18 October 2024There is star casting, and there is casting the right star – not the same thing. The Donmar’s new production, The Fear of 13, succeeds in the latter category, in spades. The star in question is Adrien Brody, a child actor who left stage work... Read more... |
First Person: Lindsey Ferrentino on the play that has led Adrien Brody to the London stageFriday, 11 October 2024I turn 36 this year, while living in London and rehearsing my new play The Fear of 13 at the Donmar Warehouse. The cast places a cake on my desk, covered in script pages and 10 pairs of handcuffs. I video the cake, the handcuffs, the singing actors... Read more... |
Skeleton Crew, Donmar Warehouse review - slow burn that satisfyingly catches fireTuesday, 09 July 2024For a long stretch of its first half, Dominique Morrisseau’s 2016 award-winner, Skeleton Crew, seems a conventional workplace drama, though in a much gentler key than Lynn Nottage’s Sweat. But this slow burn catches fire.The first sign that... Read more... |
The Human Body, Donmar Warehouse review - Keeley Hawes and Jack Davenport excel in an intriguing stagingThursday, 29 February 2024Keeley Hawes onstage is something to look forward to, so rare are her appearances there. In Lucy Kirkwood’s new play, The Human Body, we are given a double treat: Hawes, plus her black and white screen image, projected all over the Donmar’s back... Read more... |
Clyde's, Donmar Warehouse review - high-octane comedy with a soft-centreThursday, 26 October 2023Lynn Nottage’s second London opening this year, the Donmar premiere of Clyde’s, is a comedy about a sandwich, the perfect sandwich. With just a little more punch to the plotting it would be another masterwork from this award-winning American... Read more... |
Next to Normal, Donmar Warehouse review - terrific cast in a punchy musicalFriday, 01 September 2023The journey from off-Broadway to central London has taken 15 years, but the multi-award-winning musical Next to Normal has finally made it. That time lag may lead to suspicions that its subject matter has become a tad outmoded, but this staging... Read more... |
When Winston Went to War with the Wireless, Donmar Warehouse review - lively, but messyWednesday, 05 July 2023Can things change, or must they always stay the same? The latest history play by Jack Thorne, a man of the moment whose Harry Potter and the Cursed Child is still in the West End and whose National Theatre hit The Motive and the Cue will transfer in... Read more... |
Private Lives, Donmar Warehouse review - Coward revival cuts to the quickFriday, 21 April 2023It's not often with Private Lives that you feel Amanda and Elyot are one step away from a visit to A&E. But such is the startling force of Michael Longhurst's Donmar Warehouse revival of arguably Noël Coward's most durable play that... Read more... |
Trouble in Butetown, Donmar Warehouse review - entertaining and warmheartedWednesday, 22 February 2023With the fast-approaching anniversary of the latest war in Europe, our culture’s continued fascination with World War Two gets a contemporary boost from Trouble in Butetown at the Donmar Warehouse.Written by Diana Nneka Atuona, this follow-up to... Read more... |
Watch on the Rhine, Donmar Warehouse review - Lillian Hellman's 1940 play is still asking awkward questionsWednesday, 11 January 2023We’re reminded, in a grainy black and white video framing device, that, as late as the summer of 1941, the USA saw World War II as just another European war. As brilliantly illustrated in Phillip Roth’s The Plot Against America, not only was such... Read more... |
The Band's Visit, Donmar Warehouse review - still waters run bittersweetMonday, 10 October 2022Not much happens but, in its way, everything does in The Band's Visit, the gentle, sweet-natured musical that rather unexpectedly stormed Broadway late in 2017 and is just now receiving a notably empathic London debut.Broadway... Read more... |
Silence, Donmar Warehouse review - documenting disasterThursday, 08 September 2022Partition equals trauma. It cannot have escaped anyone’s attention that the British Empire’s solution to intractable problems in three of its most important colonies and mandates – namely Ireland, India and Palestine – was the divisive device of... Read more... |
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