playwrights
Pygmalion, Garrick TheatreWednesday, 25 May 2011![]() With The Cherry Orchard just opened at the National Theatre and The School for Scandal at the Barbican, summer is quickly proving itself the season for classic theatrical revivals. The latest to join the London line-up is Shaw’s perennially beloved... Read more... |
The Acid Test, Royal Court TheatreMonday, 23 May 2011![]() Anya Reiss must be the most precocious playwright in London. Her 2010 debut, Spur of the Moment, written while she was just 17 and still studying for her A levels, won two Most Promising Playwright awards, from the London Evening Standard and the... Read more... |
I Am the Wind, Young VicTuesday, 10 May 2011![]() Today’s Britons are a minor miracle of globalised taste. Typically, we are amazingly eclectic: we eat curry and sushi, read Swedish novels or South American magic realists, dress like Italians, drive German cars, listen to world music. Our houses... Read more... |
Remembrance Day, Royal Court TheatreWednesday, 23 March 2011![]() The political background is vital to the play, so pay attention: during the Second World War, the small Baltic state of Latvia was threatened by its two big neighbours, Nazi Germany and Soviet Russia. In fact, when these countries signed the Molotov... Read more... |
Ecstasy, Hampstead TheatreTuesday, 15 March 2011![]() Film-maker and playwright Mike Leigh simply doesn’t do revivals. His method of working - which involves a group of actors improvising characters and situations until a story emerges - runs contrary to any notion of returning to a play after its... Read more... |
Mogadishu, Lyric HammersmithMonday, 07 March 2011![]() Recently, some British playwrights have gone back to school, and found that it feels very much like a war zone. All the old tensions between teachers and pupils have escalated into open conflict: knives are drawn, punches thrown and arguments are... Read more... |
Honest, Queen’s Head Pub, LondonThursday, 03 March 2011![]() Dave is a bomb, waiting to go off. He’s dangerous because he seems so ordinary. Late-twenties, he’s nothing much to look at. He wears a suit. Works as a civil servant in some absurdly obscure government department. No girlfriend. If truth be told, a... Read more... |
Moment, Bush TheatreMonday, 28 February 2011![]() At the moment, most of the energy in British new writing seems to be coming from American and Irish playwrights. This is such a regular phenomenon, one that comes around every few years, that it seems idle to speculate on the reasons for it; surely... Read more... |
Winterlong, Soho TheatreFriday, 25 February 2011![]() In contemporary British drama, kids are usually either suffering or doomed innocents. But Winterlong's Oscar is different. He is a loner who was abandoned by his schoolgirl mum and his scary dad at the age of four years old, and tries to make his... Read more... |
Penelope, Hampstead TheatreThursday, 17 February 2011![]() Men. They say these strange creatures never leave the playground. Even when the years have passed, boys stubbornly remain boys, chatting rubbish, competing manfully and finally burning out. In Enda Walsh’s Penelope, which was a hit at the Edinburgh... Read more... |
The Heretic, Royal Court TheatreThursday, 10 February 2011![]() The story revolves around the character played by Stevenson, Dr Diane Cassell, an academic who specialises in sea-level rises, and works at an Earth Sciences university department. Although she is seen by some as a climate change sceptic, a heretic... Read more... |
Interview: Playwright Enda WalshFriday, 04 February 2011![]() No prizes for guessing what the future holds for the four Irishmen ensconced in the empty swimming pool in Enda Walsh’s latest play, Penelope, which opens at Hampstead Theatre next week. For these unfortunate creatures are the last of Penelope’s... Read more... |
