“Betrayal” By Harold Pinter, And Our Betrayal Of Ourselves
Some plays are ruled by a single word. It burns through their action, dark as pitch. Watching them...
Read MorePosted by Julian Meyrick | 26th Aug 2015 | Australia, Review, Theatre and Politics
Some plays are ruled by a single word. It burns through their action, dark as pitch. Watching them...
Read MorePosted by Beatriz Cabur | 19th Aug 2015 | News, United Kingdom
The Theatre Times interviews Ola Animashawun, Artistic Associate at The Royal Court Theatre and...
Read MorePosted by Christine Lambrianidis | 18th Aug 2015 | Adaptation, Australia, Essay, Melbourne
When you hear the words Greek tragedy, you might think of white masks, or even the ongoing...
Read MorePosted by Caitlin Connell and Patrick Connelly | 18th Aug 2015 | Essay, Russia, Theatre and Politics
Caitlin Connell and Patrick Connelly have spent the summer in Moscow looking at the current...
Read MorePosted by Magda Romanska | 18th Jul 2015 | Essay, Theatre and Disability
The connection between humor and disability is perhaps one of the most challenging and...
Read MorePosted by Catherine Grant and Matthew Harper | 12th Jul 2015 | Australia, Cambodia, Essay, Theatre and Politics, Transcultural Collaborations
What we really need in this capitalist, power-driven, exploitative, consumerist world, according...
Read MorePosted by Marina Shimadina | 10th Jul 2015 | Directing, Review, Russia
The world premiere of a groundbreaking new production by Robert Wilson took place at Moscow’s...
Read MorePosted by Peter Tregear | 5th Jul 2015 | Essay, London, Theatre and Opera, United Kingdom
As an art form routinely accused of contemporary irrelevancy, opera rarely makes headline news....
Read MorePosted by Megan Geigner | 22nd Jun 2015 | Chicago, Interview, United States of America
I’m sprinting down Milwaukee Avenue in Chicago, Illinois. It’s nearly two o’clock on a sunny April...
Read MorePosted by Oleg Serdobolsky | 21st Jun 2015 | Review, Russia, Theatre and Opera
The troupe of the Mariinsky Theater will present a new version of Giuseppe Verdi’s La...
Read MorePosted by Maria Pilatowicz | 18th Jun 2015 | Essay, Los Angeles, Poland, Polish Theatre Abroad
“Does anyone still read Jan Kott?” asked Michael Billington, theatre critic, in his article in The...
Read MorePosted by Aleena Karim | 18th Jun 2015 | Essay, Playwriting, Russia
Aleena Karim interviews John Freedman, an acclaimed American critic, translator and playwright, on...
Read MorePosted by Jessica Rizzo | 16th Jun 2015 | Directing, Interview, Iran
An Interview with Iranian Director Mohammad Aghebati Most young Americans would be hard-pressed to...
Read MorePosted by Bernard Gallagher | 12th Jun 2015 | Review, Theatre and Politics, United Kingdom
In October 2012 ITV broadcast The Other Side Of Jimmy Savile, in which several women alleged that...
Read MorePosted by Agnieszka Tworek | 12th Jun 2015 | Directing, Essay, Poland
Today, Monique Stalens often directs her theater adaptations of Gombrowicz and Witkacy in Polish,...
Read MorePosted by Marina Shimadina | 7th Jun 2015 | News, Russia, Theatre and Politics
Russia is witnessing a worrying increase in attacks on avant-garde art. A series of recent bans on...
Read MorePosted by Xavier Symons | 4th Jun 2015 | Australia, Review, Theatre and Science
Kylie Trounson is a writer and playwright–and the daughter of Melbourne IVF pioneer Alan Trounson....
Read MorePosted by Claire Hansen | 25th May 2015 | Australia, Review, Theatre and Politics
The Merchant Of Venice (first published in 1600) boasts a problematic and sometimes controversial...
Read MorePosted by Amelia Parenteau | 19th May 2015 | Essay, New York, Theatre and Gender, Translation, United States of America
Our correspondent Amelia Parenteau attended a “consciousness-raising” discussion of...
Read MorePosted by The Theatre Times | 18th May 2015 | Australia, News
Australian theatre-maker, Olivia Satchell, explores the subjectivity of risk, and how artists...
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