Hampstead Theatre, London: Roy Williams is one of British theatre's most gifted and prolific playwrights. Although some of his plays have examined black issues, his output is wide-reach…
SOURCE: The Stage Registration at 05:29AMThis venue’s current programming is devoted to examining the state of Britain’s public services, with a revival of Nina Raine’s Tiger Country, about the NHS, coming next month and, pla…
SOURCE: The Arts Desk at 05:01PMJerwood Theatre Downstairs, Royal Court, London: In about a year's time, the governments of the world will meet in Paris to act against climate change. This new collaboration between Ch…
SOURCE: The Stage Registration at 05:57AMWhen science and the arts combine they form a new genre, which has the unlovely name of “artsci”. But although there have now been several plays about climate change in recent years, can…
SOURCE: The Arts Desk at 04:01PMPark Theatre, London: This revival, of a play first seen at Manchester's Royal Exchange in 2008, reunites playwright Robert Holman with director Tim Stark, who directed Rafts and Dreams…
SOURCE: The Stage Registration at 05:52AMAlmeida Theatre, London: The award-winning American actor-director David Cromer brings his 2009 Off-Broadway hit revival of this classic play about small-town life to north London. In the pr…
SOURCE: The Stage Registration at 06:55AMStudio 1, Trafalgar Studios, London: Jamie Lloyd's second Trafalgar Transformed season, which began with Martin Freeman as Richard III, continues with the first major London revival of …
SOURCE: The Stage Registration at 07:21AMWhen it first opened in October 1996, Ayub Khan Din’s East Is East was hyped as the best Asian play since, well, ever. And audiences flocked to see this 1970s migrant story both in Birming…
SOURCE: The Arts Desk at 06:01PMAre there any real taboos left? I mean, there have been scores of plays about incest, about abuse and about paedophilia. Have all proverbial stones been turned over? According to Deborah Bru…
SOURCE: The Arts Desk at 06:02PMWriting is a tedious activity, usually requiring a great deal of time spent alone at a desk with a pen, typewriter or laptop. Since a literal representation of this would be death on any sta…
SOURCE: The Arts Desk at 06:01PMIn the context of recent events in Iraq and Syria, the spectre of the ill-fated Iraq War of 2003 looms large once more. What better time for a revival of master-playwright David Hare’s sto…
SOURCE: The Arts Desk at 06:01PMJerwood Theatre Downstairs, Royal Court, London: Tim Price specialises in telling true stories about radicals that end badly. After The Radicalisation of Bradley Manning (2012) and Protest S…
SOURCE: The Stage Registration at 07:37AMCurrently, the Royal Court is exploring the theme of revolution and resistance. In its studio space it is staging The Wolf from the Door, Rory Mullarkey’s excellent absurdist fantasy of a …
SOURCE: The Arts Desk at 06:01PMBush Theatre, London: Just as constitutional reform is being discussed in the wake of the Scottish referendum, Chris Thompson's follow-up to his debut Carthage examines the ugly side of…
SOURCE: The Stage Registration at 05:50AMOpening on the day after the Scottish Referendum, playwight Chris Thompson’s new play has a timely, even incendiary, title. It also recalls the sad little song ‘Albion’ by Pete Doherty…
SOURCE: The Arts Desk at 06:01PMThe number of plays commemorating the outbreak of the First World War continues to grow, with some already falling casualty to critical fire or to rapidly waning audience interest. Taking th…
SOURCE: The Arts Desk at 06:01PMFew contemporary playwrights have enjoyed as many revivals as polymath Philip Ridley. The first two of his 1990s gothic East End trilogy — The Pitchfork Disney and The Fastest Clock in the…
SOURCE: The Arts Desk at 06:01PMWyndham's Theatre, London: Mike Bartlett's wonderfully imaginative "future history play" is the fourth West End transfer for the Almeida Theatre inside a year. Its artistic di…
SOURCE: The Stage Registration at 05:57AMDramatic national events such as riots tend to attract verbatim theatre practitioners like smashed shop windows attract looters. In this new play, Alecky Blythe — who specialises in record…
SOURCE: The Arts Desk at 04:01PMThere is so much public anxiety about paedophiles on the internet that it’s surprising that so few plays tackle the issue. Now Los Angeles playwright Jennifer Haley brings her new play on …
SOURCE: The Arts Desk at 05:01PMWhile it is something of a cliché to be reminded that forgetting the past is a sure way of repeating it, the problems of the Middle East are so acute that this thought might be worth taking…
SOURCE: The Arts Desk at 06:01PMOlivier, National, London: Helen McCrory returns to the National Theatre in the title role of Euripides' play about a woman who kills her children in revenge for her husband Jason'…
SOURCE: The Stage Registration at 05:39AMPlays about religious belief present something of a problem. How can theatre-makers, who tend to be very secular-minded, convey the mindset of believers without being patronising? And once t…
SOURCE: The Arts Desk at 06:01PMWhen, before the great Miners’ Strike of 1984-85, Britain still had a coal industry, the miner was at the centre of a never-ending class war: you saw him either as an honest proletarian, i…
SOURCE: The Arts Desk at 06:01PMThe National Theatre delayed the opening of this play about newspapers for two weeks as it waited for the results of the phone-hacking trial. Is this what a tabloid would call “legal healt…
SOURCE: The Arts Desk at 06:01PMRoyal Court Jerwood Theatre Downstairs, London: Theatremaker Tim Crouch makes his main-stage debut at this venue with a new play that explores the world of contemporary art and questions the…
SOURCE: The Stage Registration at 05:52AMTheatre-maker Tim Crouch has a thing about art. One of his plays, ENGLAND, was performed in art galleries across the world; another was called An Oak Tree, after the 1973 conceptual art piec…
SOURCE: The Arts Desk at 05:01PMSome days, I feel very sorry for playwrights, especially those that become notorious through no fault of their own. If their most famous play causes enough controversy, it can take decades b…
SOURCE: The Arts Desk at 05:01PMNational Theatre, London: Polly Stenham makes her National Theatre debut, after her runaway success at the Royal Court with That Face and its follow ups, Tusk Tusk and No Quarter. This time,…
SOURCE: The Stage Registration at 06:27AMPosh hotels are good settings for drama. They look cool, feel alien and can soon acquire a sense of claustrophobic intensity. Most importantly, in real life they feel like stage sets. Playwr…
SOURCE: The Arts Desk at 05:01PMNew writing for British stages has recently delivered several punchy plays that, having made their points, don’t hang around for long afterwards. With a running time of 70 minutes, Rachel …
SOURCE: The Arts Desk at 05:01PM