Barney Norris, Wiltshire’s unofficial contemporary chronicler, swaps dry earth and baking heat for chalky hills and the A350 in his new adaptation
SOURCE: The Stage Registration at 12:35PMAs the house lights dim, the audience is invited to take a small square of chocolate each – an amuse bouche to
SOURCE: The Stage Registration at 06:41AMThe Wardrobe Theatre Christmas show is something of a Bristol institution. Serving as an adult alternative to the usual festive fare, there
SOURCE: The Stage Registration at 05:58AMWith a tiled dance floor, festoons, crates and palettes strewn about and pillars wrapped with chains of leaves, Jean Chan’s design sets
SOURCE: The Stage Registration at 06:23AMOne of the striking features of Lucy Hughes’ touring revival of Posh, Laura Wade’s takedown of Oxford University’s elite, prime-minister-producing Bullingdon Club,
SOURCE: The Stage Registration at 07:11AMWritten and directed by, and starring, Vanessa Redgrave, Vienna 1934 – Munich 1938 stages diary entries, memoirs, poems and speeches by a
SOURCE: The Stage Registration at 08:43AMThe incredibly successful Horrible Histories books and its CBBC sketch show counterpart has taught us that world has tended to be a
SOURCE: The Stage Registration at 11:36AMLe Navet Bete means “the stupid turnip”: a great company name that feels like a grown-up evolution of a child’s joke, and
SOURCE: The Stage Registration at 11:44AMThey’ve assured their son that they love him more than anything else and that they’ll always put him first; that it’ll be
SOURCE: The Stage Registration at 05:24AMViolent pornography? Gone. Non-offensive insults? Stay. “God is gay”? That one’s up for debate. Debate is what the characters in Phil Porter’s
SOURCE: The Stage Registration at 09:20AMThe sum of its parts: Ben Kulvichit reviews Headlong's touring production, starring Tom Mothersdale on fine villainous form. The post Review: Richard III at Bristol Old Vic appeared first on…
SOURCE: exeuntmagazine.com at 12:48PMSet against the backdrop of the Bristol bus boycott in 1963, this homegrown play from Bristol playwright Chinonyerem Odimba is the second
SOURCE: The Stage Registration at 06:03AMA familiar family: Ben Kulvichit writes on Chippy Lane Production's new play and its echoes of 20th Century American playwrights The post Review: BLUE at Chapter Arts Centre, Cardiff appeare…
SOURCE: exeuntmagazine.com at 04:24AMA canny comedy crime caper: Ben Kulvichit reviews New Old Friend's latest addition to their popular touring murder mystery series. The post Review: Crimes on the Nile at The Ustinov, Bath ap…
SOURCE: exeuntmagazine.com at 07:15AMThe latest show by Green Ginger, the 40-year-old visual theatre company known for their intricate puppetry, is set in a near future
SOURCE: The Stage Registration at 08:47AMStarting a conversation: Eve Allin reviews a new collaboration between Andy Smith (UK) and Amund Sjølie Sveen (Sweden) The post Review: Commonism at Birmingham REP appeared first on Exeunt …
SOURCE: exeuntmagazine.com at 11:49AMDon’t kids just say the funniest things? Well, maybe not in Tim Etchells and Forced Entertainment’s show That Night Follows Day –
SOURCE: The Stage Registration at 05:37AMAt its best, panto can be a joyful shared experience in which the performers are truly present with, and constantly responding to,
SOURCE: The Stage Registration at 08:39AMImagine a world drained of colour – grey cereal, grey clothes, grey skies. That’s the austere world Chloe lives in, presided over
SOURCE: The Stage Registration at 05:41AMWith its wooden floors and low ceilings, Bristol’s Tobacco Factory feels like a natural home for Mary Norton’s story of tiny humans
SOURCE: The Stage Registration at 05:53AMA tribute to the South West via the Wild West, Carl Grose’s new comedy opens with the death of Jed Kneebone, an
SOURCE: The Stage Registration at 10:57AMPerformed on two seven-metre travelators, Stan’s Cafe’s latest show is as boldly conceived as we’ve come to expect from Birmingham’s much-loved experimental
SOURCE: The Stage Registration at 08:18AMFor Frantic Assembly’s latest co-production with Theatre Royal Plymouth, Anna Jordan has written a triptych about three men from Scarborough who return
SOURCE: The Stage Registration at 04:23AMYou may have heard the story. In one of mountaineering’s most audacious survival tales, Joe Simpson, climbing Siula Grande in the Peruvian
SOURCE: The Stage Registration at 06:09AMIn 1954, 17-year-old Geoffrey Patrick Williamson, questioned by police officers while on a train home from Exeter to Bristol, gave the names
SOURCE: The Stage Registration at 08:04AMNathan Ellis’ play for theatre company This Noise is obsessed with images, both in its form and its content. A man and
SOURCE: The Stage Registration at 10:41AMFrustrating and mesmerising: Ben Kulvichit reviews a powerful physical study of uniformity and movement. The post Edinburgh Review: Autóctonos II at ZOO Southside appeared first on Exeunt M…
SOURCE: exeuntmagazine.com at 10:08AMBased on interviews with working-class women in Bradford, Bloomin’ Buds Theatre Company’s play involves at two sisters. Amy is the first in
SOURCE: The Stage Registration at 05:42AMMillennials, eh? Guzzling their avocados and binging Netflix, expecting everything to be handed to them on a plate. Well, maybe not, argues
SOURCE: The Stage Registration at 11:45AMNot many people have heard of the tetra-decathlon, a hugely difficult race of 14 track and field events, and even fewer people
SOURCE: The Stage Registration at 07:46AMIn JG Ballard’s novel, Concrete Island, an architect is left stranded after a car accident in an area of overgrown wasteland in
SOURCE: The Stage Registration at 12:05PM