All stories by Michael Billington on BroadwayStars

Thursday, September 28, 2023

Sir Michael Gambon obituary by Michael Billington

Versatile actor with a magnificent presence who starred in The Singing Detective and the Harry Potter filmsThe word “great” is somewhat promiscuously applied to actors. But it wa…

SOURCE: The Guardian at 01:33PM
Tuesday, September 26, 2023

Is King Lear a mountain or molehill? How to play the tragic monarch and ‘stupid old fart’ by Michael Billington

Paul Scofield, Ian McKellen and Glenda Jackson have all redefined Shakespeare’s unpredictable ruler – a role in which actors usually succeed Kenneth Branagh is set to play, and…

SOURCE: The Guardian at 09:07AM
Wednesday, September 20, 2023

After Amadeus: Brian Cox as Bach is theatre’s latest orchestral manoeuvre by Michael Billington

Oliver Cotton’s The Score, a new drama about Bach’s confrontation with Frederick II, continues a rich tradition of plays about great composers You wait decades for a play about…

SOURCE: The Guardian at 03:13AM
Sunday, August 6, 2023

Sir Michael Boyd brought visionary gleam to Shakespeare and Stratford by Michael Billington

The Royal Shakespeare Company’s former artistic director was a great theatrical leader whose legacy includes proving the history cycle is at the centre of our national story News of t…

SOURCE: The Guardian at 08:04AM
Tuesday, July 18, 2023

The play’s the thing – but its success depends on the theatre too | Michael Billington by Michael Billington

Not all buildings are created equal. From sightlines to acoustics to the alchemy of actor-audience rapport, the physical facts of a dramatic space are fundamental What makes a good theatre? …

SOURCE: The Guardian at 01:37PM
Wednesday, July 5, 2023

Stephen Wood obituary by Michael Billington

Stephen Wood, who has died aged 73 after a stroke, was a press officer, administrator and former stage manager who worked closely with Alan Ayckbourn at Scarborough. He was at the National T…

SOURCE: The Guardian at 12:25PM
Friday, June 30, 2023

The new Accidental Death of an Anarchist is a riot of laughs – but does it make us angry enough? | Michael Billington by Michael Billington

Return of Dario Fo and Franca Rame’s political farce begs a question: can theatre ever be as potent as documentary? There is a fascinating role reversal going on in London theatre. Be…

SOURCE: The Guardian at 08:13AM
Thursday, June 29, 2023

Friends, Romans, Mr Speaker: can Shakespeare clean up parliament? by Michael Billington

An all-star cast arrived in Westminster on Monday with a potted Julius Caesar, partly in hopes of elevating public discourse. It’s good to have a dream … A murder took place in …

SOURCE: The Guardian at 12:55PM
Thursday, June 15, 2023

Rufus Norris has made the National Theatre more diverse – on both sides of the curtain | Michael Billington by Michael Billington

The director, who has announced he is stepping down, should be credited for opening up the organisation and steering it through the Covid crisis. Now, who’s next for the NT job? Every…

SOURCE: The Guardian at 11:43AM

Glenda Jackson was piercingly intelligent and unafraid to take risks by Michael Billington

The actor and former MP, who has died aged 87, displayed courage and a sharp mind, on stage and in politics Glenda Jackson, who has died aged 87, had a career unmatched by any of her contemp…

SOURCE: The Guardian at 07:19AM
Tuesday, May 16, 2023

Medea in mid-air: how Syracuse’s Greek theatre keeps the classics alive by Michael Billington

Playing in the vast ancient amphitheatre, imaginative new productions of Euripides and Aeschylus find fresh nuance even in this huge space How best to stage the great Greek classics? The fas…

SOURCE: The Guardian at 07:06AM
Sunday, May 7, 2023

The Coronation review – immaculately rehearsed, touching and Shakespearean by Michael Billington

A blend of pageantry, procession, music and mystery, with many private moments to savour A coronation is pure theatre. But how does one review it when there is so little to compare it with? …

SOURCE: The Guardian at 02:02PM
Monday, April 24, 2023

Somerset Maugham: a wily playwright of light dramas and weighty morals by Michael Billington

A new revival of The Circle is a reminder of a dramatist who smuggled vital messages into broad crowdpleasers Never trust what dramatists say about themselves. Noël Coward spent decades d…

SOURCE: The Guardian at 04:06AM
Monday, April 17, 2023

Murray Melvin obituary by Michael Billington

Actor, archivist of the Theatre Royal, Stratford East, and director, with a long career in theatre, film and televisionThe actor and director Murray Melvin, who has died aged 90, had a rich …

SOURCE: The Guardian at 11:02AM
Thursday, April 6, 2023

A wordless death, a dazzling new talent and a 50-day squat: is Athens the hotbed of European theatre? by Michael Billington

Thirty directors from all over Europe converged on Greece for a showcase of its fizzing new talent that even included a play about the Nazis by Tony Kushner. What did they learn on this five…

SOURCE: The Guardian at 06:24AM
Thursday, March 23, 2023

Musicals are having an exceptional moment – but classic plays are vanishing from our stages | Michael Billington by Michael Billington

There are invigorating versions of Guys and Dolls, Oklahoma! and Cabaret in London – and some enticing new dramas coming – yet theatre risks being cut off from its past David H…

SOURCE: The Guardian at 02:12PM
Tuesday, March 21, 2023

Noël Coward was not just an amiable jester but a scathing social satirist | Michael Billington by Michael Billington

He presented himself as a message-free entertainer but, 50 years after his death, it is time to reconsider the variety of the great playwright’s work Anniversaries offer a chance for …

SOURCE: The Guardian at 07:17AM
Sunday, January 22, 2023

Ted Whitehead obituary by Michael Billington

Dramatist and screenwriter whose best-known stage play, Alpha Beta, is a scorching study of marriage and morality As a passionate lover of football, in particular of Liverpool FC, Ted Whiteh…

SOURCE: The Guardian at 02:06PM
Monday, January 9, 2023

Heavenly powers or something rotten? When Richard Burton played Hamlet by Michael Billington

It was a box-office hit directed by John Gielgud and created turmoil on stage and off. Now, the 1964 Broadway staging has inspired The Motive and the Cue, a new play by Jack Thorne In 1964 R…

SOURCE: The Guardian at 03:00PM
Tuesday, January 3, 2023

A desire for Streetcar: the enduring allure of Tennessee Williams’s tantalising classic by Michael Billington

Paul Mescal and Patsy Ferran battle it out in the Almeida’s new production of a poetic drama whose ambiguity is enthralling Tennessee Williams’s old bus keeps on running. The A…

SOURCE: The Guardian at 01:48PM
Thursday, December 8, 2022

Depriving London’s theatres of funds is not ‘levelling up’ – it shortchanges us all | Michael Billington by Michael Billington

Pitting the capital against the regions is a cynical political ploy and the Arts Council’s cuts are a catastrophe for new writing – as well as the entertainment industry The re…

SOURCE: The Guardian at 06:54AM
Monday, October 17, 2022

Re:Imagining Musicals at the V&A celebrates the fantastical, famous and forgotten by Michael Billington

Costumes, props, posters and archive footage all feature in an exhibition that leaves you itching to see some shows again Weave your way round the new exhibition Re:Imagining Musicals at the…

SOURCE: The Guardian at 09:03AM
Tuesday, September 20, 2022

Daniel Evans and Tamara Harvey are an inspired duo to lead the RSC by Michael Billington

An immense task awaits the Royal Shakespeare Company’s new artistic directors who must attract top talent, prioritise verse-speaking and combine classic repertory and contemporary dra…

SOURCE: The Guardian at 07:55PM
Wednesday, September 14, 2022

The real mystery in See How They Run is its mishandling of The Mousetrap by Michael Billington

The whodunnit starring Saoirse Ronan is a fun spoof but tinkers with history and never captures the unique way Agatha Christie’s play fascinated audiences in the 50s The smell of grea…

SOURCE: The Guardian at 04:49PM
Monday, September 12, 2022

From King Charles III to King Lear: what theatre tells us about taking the throne by Michael Billington

Mike Bartlett’s 2014 play anticipated a constitutional crisis, while playwrights including Shakespeare and Chekhov have shown how traumatic a transfer of power can be What does the fu…

SOURCE: The Guardian at 09:03AM
Friday, September 9, 2022

On stage and when we met at the theatre, the Queen was a figure of quiet wisdom and humour by Michael Billington

The monarch was sympathetically depicted by dramatists and at a 1999 production of Oklahoma! her eyes lit up when she recalled her own theatrical outings “I’ve never been fond o…

SOURCE: The Guardian at 08:49AM
Thursday, September 8, 2022

Noises Off: the farce masterclass that is truly revealing by Michael Billington

Michael Frayn’s comedy is not just extremely funny but also acknowledges the fragile artifice of order – in theatre and the world beyond All plays, wrote critic John Lahr, are …

SOURCE: The Guardian at 03:33AM
Monday, August 8, 2022

Batting for Godot: the play about Beckett and Pinter teaming up for a game of cricket by Michael Billington

The two titans of modern drama were both cricket obsessives. What if they had faced the fast bowlers together? Playwright Shomit Dutta explains why he made it happen – with darkly com…

SOURCE: The Guardian at 03:54AM
Monday, July 25, 2022

David Warner was gentle, inquisitive – and stunning on stage by Michael Billington

An actor of innate tenderness and grace, Warner had a theatre career of two halves, each with superb performances at the RSC I have never forgotten my first sighting of David Warner, who has…

SOURCE: The Guardian at 02:18PM
Monday, July 4, 2022

Peter Brook was a theatrical pathfinder and a man of boundless curiosity by Michael Billington

In our many meetings, the director’s conversation was as invigorating as the way he led audiences through the night in his staging of The Mahabharata In 1979, Peter Brook made a film …

SOURCE: The Guardian at 12:03PM
Monday, June 13, 2022

Two shows dominated the Tony awards and proved Broadway’s debt to British taxpayers by Michael Billington

Sam Mendes’s The Lehman Trilogy and Marianne Elliott’s Company took 10 prizes between them and demonstrated the power of UK subsidised theatre “Brits Triumph on Broadway�…

SOURCE: The Guardian at 08:00AM

All that Chat

2025-2026 BROADWAY SEASON
Jun 12, 2025: Call Me Izzy - Studio 54
Sep 16, 2025: Art - Music Box Theatre
Oct 08, 2025: Beetlejuice - Palace Theatre
Nov 13, 2025: Oedipus - Studio 54
Nov 16, 2025: Chess - Imperial Theatre
Mar 23, 2026: Giant - Music Box Theatre
Apr 06, 2026: Becky Shaw - Hayes Theater
Apr 16, 2026: Proof - Booth Theatre
Apr 26, 2026: Drama Desk Cut-Off