A review of Paradise and Rockets and Blue Lights, both currently on at the National Theatre. Adapted by Kae Tempest and featuring Lesley Sharp, Paradise is a mostly successful modern version of a work by Sophocles. While Rockets and Blue Lights is a layered story exploring the historic trauma of enslavement and its legacy in […]
A review of Salomé, a Lazarus Theatre Company production now on at the Southwark Playhouse. Some clever modern flourishes bring this challenging work by Oscar Wilde to life. Salomé “The piece is written in French – half Biblical, half pornographic – by Oscar Wilde himself. Imagine the average British public’s reception of it.” That was […]
A review of Overflow, a witty and energetic new play at the Bush Theatre. Through stories of friendships and toilets, Travis Alabanza encourages us to really think about the meaning of these spaces for trans women and transfeminine people. Overflow Overflow, by Travis Alabanza and currently being performed by Reece Lyons at the Bush Theatre, […]
A review of several events at the 2021 Greenwich + Docklands International Festival (GDIF). Theatre, dance and light installations: merely tasters of the full programme. Greenwich + Docklands International Festival I’m so excited that arts festivals have had a slightly easier time getting off the ground this year. Up next after this post is Open […]
A review of Constellations, currently on in a Donmar production at the Vaudeville Theatre with not one but four alternating casts. What better way to explore the multiverse than by exponentially multiplying the ‘what ifs’? “Everything You’ve Ever, And Never, Done.” Constellations is an interesting and pretty intellectual play. Written by Nick Payne and first […]
A last minute dash to two very different exhibitions. Charlotte Perriand: The Modern Life reveals just how big a debt we owe to this influential mid-century designer. While Epic Iran is a sweeping survey of millennia of history, from earliest archaeology to contemporary art. The Luxury Of Being Busy I am counting my blessings right […]
A review of When Darkness Falls, now on at the Park Theatre. A ghostly tale which improves as it reaches its spooky climax. When Darkness Falls There are a couple of ghost stories on stage in London at the moment – as well as this paranormal offering at the Park Theatre, there is 2.22: A […]
A review of an exhibition of photography by James Barnor at the Serpentine Gallery. A fascinating look at life between London and Ghana in the mid-20th Century. James Barnor at the Serpentine Gallery Another week, another first for me. This time was my first visit to the Serpentine Gallery in Hyde Park. I even made […]
A review of As You Like It at Shakespeare’s Globe. My first time as a groundling in many years, and certainly since the pandemic. I’m getting too old for this… A Late Summer Trip To The Globe I have made the most of the reopening season at the Globe; as well as a guided tour, […]
A review of the multi-sensory installation of work by Ryoji Ikeda, on now at 180 The Strand. In which I am reminded that I am an art enthusiast more than a cool art insider. Disclaimer: this is really not a great art exhibition for anyone who is sensitive to strobe/flashing/bright lights. This includes some of […]