'Revels in its power to challenge perceptions & prejudice': MY JERUSALEM " Applecart Arts (Online review)
A solo show presented by Avital Raz, My Jerusalem is a fiercely personal and deeply political show 'developed from a song'.
A solo show presented by Avital Raz, My Jerusalem is a fiercely personal and deeply political show 'developed from a song'.
Quentin Crisp: Naked Hope is a fitting tribute to a complex and elegant man who celebrated his own brand of queerness. "I am notorious," is the cry of this survivor.
Friend rushes through ten series in an hour bringing you the highlights, the lowlights, the supporting cast, the big storylines, and more. It is very funny, wickedly affectionate, and utterl…
Benedict Lombe's new play Lava is semi-autobiographical and full of activism and difficult moments, alongside a story railing against Kafkaesque bureaucracy.
From Here is a new British musical with music and lyrics by Ben Barrow and Lucy Ireland. Written entirely on Zoom for a four-person cast, this show is a mix of songs and spoken word pieces, …
Apphia Campbell's show Black is the Color of My Voice, based on the life and works of Nina Simone, comes to digital theatre. This version was recorded this summer at Wilton's Music Hall and …
Streaming until 28 July through Camden People's Theatre, presented by Carolyn Defrin in collaboration with film-maker Rosie Powell, 28 Days Greater " total running time 46 minutes " comprise…
Possible is a 'playful and profound piece of storytelling', written and performed by Shôn Dale-Jones. Before Covid lockdown hit, Dale-Jones was thinking of and developing a show all about…
Biblical comedy Going Ape! by Andrew Corbet Burcher returns to the Union, directed by Evan Ensign. The premise is what might happen if the Creationist and Evolutionist stories came together …
We're taking about love here in Starting Here, Starting Now. The thrill of it, the romance and ridiculous of it, the crushing disappointment of it. Some of the tunes are from musicals which …
Recorded in June 2021 before a socially-distanced audience at Wilton's Music Hall, A Super Happy Story (About Feeling Super Sad) brings Silent Uproar's show back to the stage following previ…
Sweet Sorrow Theatre Company brings Edward Loboda's play The System to Brighton Fringe in a Zoom re-recording of a show they originally streamed in 2020.
Ant Lightfoot's Am I A Terrible Person? takes an honest look at OCD and mental illness. At just 23 minutes it's a tough call to get through all the issues but there isn't a wasted moment her…
The Theatre Cafe, in collaboration with the Open Air Theatre Regent's Park, have created this salute to the timeless duo Rodgers and Hammerstein for The Theatre Channel's Episode 7.
Australian collective Pony Cam has created a fringe show unlike any other, with sex, violence, a lost child, and the perils of being an actor, all played out by the central character, A Red …
Marlowe Productions brings a 70-minute livestream to Brighton Fringe (now available on demand until 27 June) which dips into the world of 1940s noir and pulp detective novels to take us into…
Lemon Squeeze Productions and Feegle Films return to the Brontë family, following At Home With The Brontës, for their latest production online at the Brighton Fringe, Charlotte BrontÅ
A new spin from Blue Devil Productions on the Oscar Wilde novel puts the story of Dorian Gray in the art, theatre and music world of the 1960s.
In Lita Doolan's new play The Wyre Lady of Fleetwood, the Wyre Lady refers to a real-life pleasure boat in the seaside fishing port of Fleetwood, just down the promenade from the holiday res…
Heavily promoted on the strength of Robert Lindsay's involvement in the cast, this audio-animated adaptation of The Three Musketeers owes more to parody and pastiche than any serious attempt…
Jerk is Nick Edgeworth's curious and original sci-fi-influenced drama from Mudlarks Theatre, a company based in Hampshire. It's currently showing in the Brighton Fringe and is written by Nic…
There's serious material in Sally Ann Hall's Half-Baked Alaskan, but delivered with a wry, confessional, style which makes its point without getting too heavy.
Commissioned by Curve Leicester, produced by the Gramophones Theatre Company and directed by Hannah Stone, Aidy the Awesome is currently part-way through a digital tour.
Quiet Little Things, a very clever, well-crafted and moving non-verbal piece from OddHouse Theatre Company (an emerging feminist collective), is currently available to stream at the Brighton…
Jessie Cave's show Sunrise was recorded in the empty venue in April, but still retains the comedy of a professional mum navigating the thorny paths of a postpartum love life.