“Rhinoceros”, The Almeida Theatre
This Guardian pick of the year 2025 recently closed at London’s Almeida theatre, but it is...
Read MorePosted by Duška Radosavljević | 14th May 2025 | Review, Theatre and Politics, United Kingdom
This Guardian pick of the year 2025 recently closed at London’s Almeida theatre, but it is...
Read MorePosted by Ahram Online | 7th May 2024 | Interview, Theatre and Politics, United Kingdom
In a darkly lit arts studio in London, five young actors highlight their scripts and go over...
Read MorePosted by Mert Dilek | 19th Feb 2024 | London, Review, United Kingdom
A solo performance in theatre may often trap us inside a single dramatic character, taking us deep...
Read MorePosted by Mert Dilek | 4th Feb 2024 | London, Review, Theatre and Politics, United Kingdom
“This play is a lie,” boldly declares the poster of Sam Holcroft’s new play A Mirror, now playing...
Read MorePosted by Mert Dilek | 20th Dec 2023 | London, Review, United Kingdom
How to render Macbeth anew—and how to do it well? It’s a question that has undoubtedly preoccupied...
Read MorePosted by Mert Dilek | 17th Dec 2023 | London, Review, Theatre and Politics, United Kingdom
An American actor, an English director, and a Northern Irish playwright walk into a house in...
Read MorePosted by Mert Dilek | 25th Jul 2023 | Review, Theatre and Science, United Kingdom
Today’s obvious was most likely yesterday’s incredible. This is the conceit at the heart of Dr...
Read MorePosted by Mert Dilek | 29th Jun 2023 | Review, Theatre and Politics, United Kingdom
Martin McDonagh is perhaps better known today globally for his recent accomplishments on screen as...
Read MorePosted by Aleks Sierz | 13th Jun 2023 | Latest, London, Review, United Kingdom
Polymath Philip Ridley has a rare superpower — he able to consistently astonish both audiences and...
Read MorePosted by Aleks Sierz | 3rd May 2023 | Adaptation, London, Review, United Kingdom
Imagine yourself in a remote place: it could be a mountaintop, or a lost village, or the Amazon....
Read MorePosted by Aleks Sierz | 13th Apr 2023 | London, Review, Theatre and Politics, United Kingdom
Some plays are instantly forgettable, others leave a tender fold in the memory. I well remember...
Read MorePosted by Penelope Woods | 11th Apr 2023 | London, Review, United Kingdom
The Winter’s Tale is one of Shakespeare’s great “hospitality plays” — a tragicomedy about what...
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 Aleks Sierz | 25th Dec 2022 | London, Playwriting, Review, Theatre and Religion, United Kingdom
Pain is, at one and the same time, something to avoid, and also something you can use. Kahlil...
Read MorePosted by Aleks Sierz | 17th Dec 2022 | London, Playwriting, Review, Theatre and Politics, United Kingdom
What is the best way of talking about the Middle East? Should plays take a documentary or verbatim...
Read MorePosted by Mert Dilek | 8th Dec 2022 | Documentary Theatre, London, Review, Theatre and Politics, United Kingdom
TV is a strange medium, but James Graham is no stranger to its toxic charm. London audiences have...
Read MorePosted by Grace J. Ioppolo | 27th Nov 2022 | Books, Education, Essay, United Kingdom
Most of what we know about the beginnings of English professional theater as a financial...
Read MorePosted by Aleks Sierz | 22nd Nov 2022 | Acting, London, Review, United Kingdom
Last night, at the Arcola, I witnessed the return of The Poltergeist, Philip Ridley’s blazing...
Read MorePosted by Aleks Sierz | 23rd Oct 2022 | London, Playwriting, Review, United Kingdom
Therapy is inherently dramatic. After all, it’s all about character — and it has the aim of...
Read MorePosted by Aleks Sierz | 18th Jul 2022 | Directing, Musical Theatre, Review, United Kingdom
Is gig theater the latest sugar rush? Okay, it ups the brain’s serotonin levels and charges around...
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