The Tin Drum, Shoreditch Town Hall

https://theatreweekly.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/10/TAN11841.jpg

Oskar is a child of myth and legend. Or maybe he’s just bad-tempered and noisy. Either way, he comes into a fictional world of darkening shadows that’s clearly pre-WWII Europe. Born with a fully adult brain, he looks down on most people around him but has simple, childish request – that his mother buys him a tin drum.

Continue reading

The Lost Boy Peter Pan, Pleasance Theatre

https://www.londontheatre1.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/12/The-Lost-Boy-Peter-Pan-courtesy-The-Other-Richard600-min.jpg

Think of your favourite stories as a young child. What did they have in common? Adventure. Youth. Fantasy. Foreign lands. Probably at least one good fight. Stories like Alice in Wonderland, Treasure Island and Peter Pan are still popular, and for good reason. They’re compelling, well told stories.

But as a proud killjoy feminist, returning to these childhood favourites as an adult has proved troublesome. Action to the Word’s fairly solid reinvention of Peter Pan for seven actor-musicians is a fun, inventive adventure story that stays close to the original.

Continue reading

Parliament Square, Bush Theatre

https://www.bushtheatre.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2017/07/02-RET-Parliment-Square-Esther-Smith-Kat-Photo-Richard-Davenport-2000x1334.jpg

by guest critic Nastazja Somers

James Fritz’s Parliament Square, the winner of 2015 Bruntwood Prize Judges Award, is an
ambitious piece. It explores the human desire for change whilst posing important questions about the significance of protests and martyrdom. Dramaturgically, Fritz’s proves himself to be a vital voice yet this production does not hit its full potential.

Continue reading

Snow White and Rose Red, Battersea Arts Centre

https://theplaysthethinguk.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/12/fffc1-snowwhiteandredrose-0236.jpg

Battersea Arts Centre’s family Christmas show for people aged 5 and up is far from the Disney version of Snow White. The children’s show by RashDash, creators of naked, feminist, Edinburgh hit Two Man Show, is also far from conventional kids’ theatre. Combining their woman-led, political ethos with the use of live music, the company reclaims femininity and appropriates the traditionally patriarchal adventure of fairytales in this spirited show for all ages.

Continue reading

Goats, Royal Court

https://i0.wp.com/www.theartsdesk.com/sites/default/files/styles/mast_image_landscape/public/mastimages/goat1.jpg

by guest critic Gregory Forrest

You have goat to be kidding me: the Royal Court’s latest experiment is a tonally-confused take on the Syrian conflict, fake news, and livestock management.

The bleating heart of Liwaa Yazji’s narrative is fascinating. For every son martyred in the ongoing war, local government will provide their grieving family with a goat. Children replaced by milk-laden mammals – it is a compensation scheme of twisted proportions. Local party leader Abu al-Tayyib goes as far as to declare ‘Our vision is for every house in the nation to have its own goat.’

Continue reading

Double Trouble, Intermission Youth Theatre

https://pbs.twimg.com/media/DN4EhaLX4AEM9j7.jpg

It can be tough to get kids to engage with Shakespeare. Many of them see the foreign-sounding language and old-fashioned stories as irrelevant to the issues they battle as growing up today. Fortunately, Intermission Youth Theatre artistic director Darren Raymond focuses on exploring contemporary themes in Shakespeare’s work with the 16-25s that make up the theatre company and convinces them to love the Bard.

Continue reading

Joy, Theatre Royal Stratford East

https://i0.wp.com/thespyinthestalls.com/wp-content/uploads/photo-gallery/Clamour_Theatre_Company._Joy_at_Theatre_Royal_Stratford_East._Imogen_Roberts_%28Joy%29_and_Rachel_Bright_%28Mary%29._Photo_credit_Mathew_Foster..jpg

An increase in conversations on diversity indicates that people are starting to come round to the importance of more than a token few woman and people of colour on our stages. White male dominance in theatre is increasingly being called out, with some small and mid-sized venues and companies leading the way on diversifying their work. But physical disability draws less attention in the diversity debate, and learning disability even less so.

Continue reading

Our Fathers, Traverse Theatre

https://epeak.in/wp-content/uploads/2017/10/our-fathers-review-at-traverse-theatre-edinburgh.jpg

by guest critic Liam Rees

Think about your parents, or a parental figure. How have they impacted who you are now? Whether positive or negative some mark will inevitably and irrevocably remain.

Now consider the effect of growing up in a religious home, specifically as the child of a minister. The stereotypes that come to mind are either that they’ll dutifully keep the faith, join the ministry or violently rebel, like Nietzsche proclaiming ‘God is dead’ or worse, put those oratory skills to use in the theatre. Performers, and children of reverends, Rob Drummond and Nicholas Bone seem to exist somewhere in between the stereotypes.

Continue reading

Turkey, Hope Theatre

https://static.independent.co.uk/s3fs-public/styles/article_small/public/thumbnails/image/2017/09/29/18/img-0801.jpg

Toni and Madeline are happily settled in their North London home, but Madeline is missing something. From a young age, she has looked forward to being a mother. Now 32 and snuggly coupled, she thinks she’s running out of time to conceive. But as lesbians who can’t afford clinic fees, it’s not so easy. As her biological clock ticks, her desperation drives her to commit an appalling act of deception.

Continue reading