Joanne, Soho Theatre, London, review: Tanya Moodie is terrific in this powerful collaboration
Moodie is as big-heartedly there as Joanne herself seems to be defined by elusiveness and absence
Moodie is as big-heartedly there as Joanne herself seems to be defined by elusiveness and absence
It will be a crime against life if Young Chekhov doesn't transfer
In an unnamed Eastern country, Tom Hughes's twitchy, selfish, privileged Simon is awaiting execution for the alleged murder of a prostitute
Interpretation of the Bard's self-thwarting problem comedy revs into a kind of an elating parody
The story is partly based on the real-life case of a young man who took his own life when he discovered that his room mate was spying on his actual erotic encounters with men via a webc…
The experience of this trilogy throngs with satisfyingly rounded performances
Perfectly attuned production earns its five stars despite arguably a terrible mishap with plot and tone towards the end
The Wolf Hall actor's Philippe V is wrong-footlingly whimsical but buffeted with gusts of violent paranoia
Gregory Doran has crafted an impressive addition to his English histories project
Erica Whyman's splendid Swan Theatre production is potently restrained
Laura Wade's stage adaptation of the Sarah Waters novel is worth the admission price for certain sequences alone