“La Regenta” as Opera: a Coruscating Portrait of Smalltown Community Abuse
It is not an easy prospect to adapt into opera one of the most acclaimed social realist novels of...
Read MorePosted by Maria Delgado | 30th Oct 2023 | Review, Spain
It is not an easy prospect to adapt into opera one of the most acclaimed social realist novels of...
Read MorePosted by Trevor Mukholi | 22nd Aug 2023 | Adaptation, Review, Uganda
When considering Okot p’Bitek’s perspective on African tradition, it becomes evident that change is inevitable. If African tradition is lived in the midst of the battle of life, then Lawino is not the character to focus on, as she refuses to acknowledge the possibility of change. Similarly, Ocol negates everything about himself to accommodate the other, but his transformation is ultimately revealed to be superficial. Opio and Clementine, however, require a more nuanced examination, as their experiences shed light on the agency of individuals in this exchange of aesthetics and epistemology.
Read MoreGillo Repertory Theatre presented the play, Rangchor, Ek Rakshas Ki Anokhi Kahani (The Colour...
Read MorePosted by Maria Delgado | 21st Apr 2023 | Adaptation, Review, Spain, Theatre and Disability
There is nothing easy about Alberto San Juan’s Lectura fácil. His adaptation of Cristina Morales’...
Read MorePosted by Maria Delgado | 18th Apr 2023 | Adaptation, Review, Spain
Alejandro Palomas has transformed his acclaimed 2005 novel La isla del aire (The Island of Air)...
Read MorePosted by Aleks Sierz | 23rd Jan 2023 | Adaptation, Nigeria, Review, Theatre and Decolonization, Theatre and Politics, United Kingdom
Earlier in the week, I enjoyed a rainy afternoon at home by watching Inua Ellis’s 2019 adaptation...
Read MorePosted by Rhiannon Ling | 10th Oct 2022 | Adaptation, New York, Review, Theatre and Gender, United States of America
“Patriarchy is a judge that judges us for being born” proclaims the banner wrapped above our...
Read MorePosted by Rhiannon Ling | 22nd Aug 2022 | Adaptation, New York, Review, Theatre and Gender, United States of America
I went to theatre school. Know this before reading on. I went to theatre school, trained as an...
Read MorePosted by Jonathan Kalb | 10th Aug 2022 | Adaptation, Afghanistan, Directing, Review, United States of America
Khaled Hosseini’s 2003 novel The Kite Runner is a vividly descriptive and often gripping tale of...
Read MorePosted by Vanessa Smith | 29th Jul 2022 | Adaptation, Australia, Review, Theatre and Gender
Review: The Tenant of Wildfell Hall, directed by Jessica Arthur for the Sydney Theatre Company...
Read MorePosted by Scena.ro | 26th May 2022 | Adaptation, Belgium, News
In 1999, Viviane De Muynck and Jan Lauwers set to work with the last chapter of James...
Read MorePosted by Duška Radosavljević | 19th May 2022 | Adaptation, Netherlands, Review, United Kingdom
Ivo van Hove’s production of Age of Rage is sourced from six plays by Euripides and one by...
Read MorePosted by Irem Yasar | 22nd Mar 2022 | Musical Theatre, Review, Turkey
Adapted from Hugo’s popular novel, the musical presents sections from the post-revolutionary dark...
Read MorePosted by Nobuko Tanaka | 30th Nov 2021 | Adaptation, Interview, Japan
Rena Matsui always knew she wanted to enter the acting world, and launching her career by...
Read MorePosted by Alexander Nderitu | 19th Nov 2021 | Adaptation, Denmark, Kenya, Review, Theatre and Decolonization, Transcultural Collaborations
Miss Julie’s Happy Valley is the most recent work by playwright Michael Omoke. The new play...
Read MorePosted by Kate Cantrell and David Burton | 14th Oct 2021 | Adaptation, Australia, Essay, Theatre and Politics
The stage adaptation of Charlie and the Chocolate Factory has opened in Brisbane. Charlie, like...
Read MorePosted by Nobuko Tanaka | 12th Oct 2021 | Japan, Musical Theatre, News
It was enough for theater fans to learn that after more than 50 years, the Tony Award-winning...
Read MorePosted by Urszula Pysyk | 23rd Aug 2021 | Adaptation, Poland, Review, Transmedia
Have the worlds of Samuel Beckett’s plays become our reality? The creators of Beckett Planet seem...
Read MorePosted by Alexa Alice Joubin | 12th Jun 2021 | Adaptation, Essay, Hong Kong, Japan, Singapore, South Korea
During the AAPI (Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders) heritage month, let us explore the...
Read MorePosted by Ziwen Gao | 6th Jun 2021 | Adaptation, China, Poland, Review
Written in 1918, Lu Xun’s A Madman’s Diary marked the advent of modern Chinese literature....
Read More
David Yazbek: The Master of Adapting Films into… by Lisa Monde 2nd April 2026
Maxim Sukhanov – About The “Brew”… by Sergey Elkin 1st May 2026
“Broken Melody” at MITEM: A Music That Finds Its Way Home by Emiliia Dementsova 13th May 2026
Waking Up in the Spotlight with “The Unusual… by Alexander Fatouros 24th March 2026 

Theatre – Creating Conditions For What Has… by Ivanka Apostolova Baskar 16th May 2026 

