Globe
King Lear, Shakespeare's Globe - Nancy Meckler's Globe debut is unusually subduedThursday, 17 August 2017![]() Every play is a Brexit play. This much we have learnt in the year since the referendum. But in Nancy Meckler’s hands the Globe’s new King Lear becomes the Brexit play – an unpicking of intergenerational responsibility and difference, of philosophies... Read more... |
Much Ado About Nothing, Shakespeare's Globe review - swaggering Shakespeare with a comic Spanish accentFriday, 21 July 2017![]() When I say that Matthew Dunster’s Much Ado is revolutionary I’m not talking about the many textual updatings and rewritings, not the lashings of PJ Harvey, nor even the gunfire – weaponised punchlines that cut through the colour and noise of the... Read more... |
Tristan & Yseult, Shakespeare's Globe review - terrific visual and musical élanFriday, 16 June 2017![]() This show feels like an end-of-the-exams party, and in a way that’s exactly what it is. If the fruits of Emma Rice’s short tenure as Artistic Director at the Globe were a series of tests that she is deemed to have failed, then Tristan & Yseult,... Read more... |
Twelfth Night, Shakespeare's Globe review - Emma Rice goes out with a bangThursday, 25 May 2017![]() The Globe’s artistic director Emma Rice has made no secret of her desire to go out with a bang, in this, the final season of her brutally truncated tenure at the company. With this Twelfth Night she stages a departure with bells (and whistles, and... Read more... |
Romeo and Juliet, Shakespeare's Globe review - 'too much brouhaha'Friday, 28 April 2017![]() “Everything in extremity”. That announcement that the Capulet party is about to begin could just as well serve to describe Daniel Kramer’s Romeo and Juliet as a whole. Opening the Globe's new season, it will provoke reactions as conflicting as the... Read more... |
10 Questions for Director Ellen McDougallThursday, 02 March 2017![]() In a few days' time, Ellen McDougall will become artistic director of the dynamic little Gate Theatre in Notting Hill where she is already an associate artist. She's not taking it easy in the run-up to her new responsibilities though: her production... Read more... |
The White Devil, Sam Wanamaker PlayhouseThursday, 02 February 2017![]() It's no accident that when the Globe's Sam Wanamaker Playhouse opened in 2014 it was with The Duchess of Malfi. This wooden womb, with its thick darkness and close-pressed audience is made for the stifling, claustrophobic horror of revenge tragedy.... Read more... |
The Little Matchgirl, Sam Wanamaker PlayhouseFriday, 02 December 2016![]() For anyone disposed to treat the Sam Wanamaker Playhouse as hallowed ground – and such issues have gained much currency at the Globe recently following the announced early departure of artistic director Emma Rice – The Little Matchgirl may seem like... Read more... |
'I am dismayed by the tone of the debate'Sunday, 30 October 2016![]() There is nothing more depressing than seeing people you like and admire lining up on opposing sides. Emma Rice’s parting from the Globe has resulted in some unedifying comment, often based more on prejudice than fact. I see value in the arguments of... Read more... |
10 Questions for Director Lucy BaileyWednesday, 26 October 2016![]() Theatre was not Lucy Bailey’s first target. At school she was a flautist, headed probably for music. Then, in her gap year, she took a job as a telephonist at Glyndebourne, and noticed a vigorous man with a beard – name of Peter Hall – moving people... Read more... |
Imogen, Shakespeare's GlobeSaturday, 24 September 2016![]() What's in a name? Imogen has a softer music to it than Cymbeline, the only one of Shakespeare's plays in which the title character is marginal, and the daughter certainly dominates in a way that her regal father doesn't. So Cymbeline Renamed, as... Read more... |
The Inn At Lydda, Sam Wanamaker PlayhouseFriday, 09 September 2016![]() Part Biblical melodrama, part Carry On Up The Colosseum, with a bit of Horrible Histories thrown in for good measure, it’s hard to see how John Wolfson’s wildly uneven The Inn at Lydda graduated from a rehearsed reading last season to a full-blown... Read more... |
