Unmanly Griefs: Robert Icke’s “Hamlet”
The first ten minutes of Robert Icke’s 3 ¾-hour Hamlet had me worried. Icke is a British directing...
Read MorePosted by Jonathan Kalb | 19th Jul 2022 | Adaptation, New York, Playwriting, Review, United States of America
The first ten minutes of Robert Icke’s 3 ¾-hour Hamlet had me worried. Icke is a British directing...
Read MorePosted by Aleks Sierz | 9th Aug 2020 | Review, Theatre and Politics, United Kingdom
The strength of the response to the re-emergence of the Black Lives Matter campaign has encouraged...
Read MorePosted by Jonathan Kalb | 15th Jan 2019 | Immersive Theatre, Review, United Kingdom, United States of America
“Immersive theater” is a gimmicky term that can be just an indiscriminate pitch nowadays for any...
Read MorePosted by Aleks Sierz | 11th Jan 2018 | Immersive Theatre, London, Review, Theatre and Politics, United Kingdom
Refugees, it is said, have no nationality—they are all individuals. This new docu-drama, The...
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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
Waking Up in the Spotlight with “The Unusual… by Alexander Fatouros 24th March 2026
Michael Frayn’s “Copenhagen” at the Hampstead… by Aleks Sierz 14th April 2026 



“Broken Melody” at MITEM: A Music That Finds Its Way Home by Emiliia Dementsova 13th May 2026 