Reel-to-Real
Krapp’s Last Tape
by Samuel Beckett
Godot’s To-do List
by Leo Simpe-Asante
The English Stage Company at The Royal Court Theatre, Chelsea until 30th May
Review by Patrick Shorrock
It’s quite a shock to realise that the plays of someone as implacably avant garde as Samuel Beckett are old enough to have been subject to the censorship of the Lord Chamberlain. It’s worth remembering that the Lord Chamberlain, an official of the monarch, used to have power to demand cuts in any publicly performed play until 1968.
For all that Krapp’s Last Tape had its premiere in 1958, it has not lost its modernist edge. Nevertheless, it does give away its age, from time to time, not least in its use of spools of reel-to-reel tape rather than cassettes, let alone something entirely digital. Whilst the Lord Chamberlain expressed concern about the sexual language in the 1950’s, the only trigger warning deemed necessary today is about sudden loud noise.
Read more…Hitting Home
The Sweet Science of Bruising
by Joy Davidson
The Questors Theatre at the Questors Studio, Ealing until 2nd May
Review by Alex Tustin
I was somewhat surprised to learn that women’s boxing was not included in the Olympic Games until London 2012. It must have been one of the last sports to reach gender parity. It had taken a long time to be accepted. The Sweet Science of Bruising takes us right back to its earliest days and is set in 1876 in Victorian London. And although the play professes to be about female competitive boxing it is actually about so much more than that.
Read more…Broken Winged Butterfly
Madama Butterfly
by Giacomo Puccini, libretto by Luigi Illica and Giuseppe Giacosa
Ellen Kent Productions, Richmond Theatre until 23rd April, then on tour until 15th May as part of the Ellen Kent Farewell Tour
Review by Heather Moulson
It’s 1904 in Nagasaki. Against a backdrop of a lovely Japanese house, surrounded by vibrant colourful flowers and blossom, all seems idyllic. What could possibly go wrong in such a beautiful setting?
But, for this tragic and iconic tale of devotion and betrayal, the floral setting is pure irony.
Read more…Tilting with Flair
Don Quixote
by Carlos Acosta after Marius Petipa, music by Ludwig Minkus
Birmingham Royal Ballet at The Sadler’s Wells, Islington until 25th April
Review by Ravenna Vale
Birmingham Royal Ballet’s Don Quixote, under the direction and choreography of Carlos Acosta, is nothing short of a visual and musical feast, an evening where classical ballet tradition meets theatrical brilliance with irresistible flair. This production does not merely revive a beloved classic; it reimagines it with intelligence, warmth, and a palpable sense of joy that radiates from stage to audience.
From the very first moments in the bustling morning market scene, the production announces its ambition. The town square is alive, bursting with movement, colour, and detail. The ensemble here deserves particular praise. Their energy is electric, their precision razor sharp, yet nothing feels mechanical. Every dancer contributes to the illusion of a living, breathing Spanish village. It is one of those rare moments in ballet where the corps de ballet does not simply support the action, they are the action.
Read more…Persuasive Persuasion
Persuasion
by Jane Austen, adapted by Sarah Rose Kearns.
Q2 and BCP at The National Archives, Kew until 25thApril
Review by Andrew Lawston
I ought to come clean, and please don’t tell my mother, but I’ve never read Persuasion. So I entered the National Archives for this Q2 and BCP co-production of Sarah Rose Kearns’s adaptation with some trepidation but an open mind. Having read pretty much everything else by Jane Austen, I was expecting a romantic tale of multiple marriages, complicated by a bounder, and in this I was of course not disappointed. If you ever find yourself in a similar position, you can always spot the dashing leading man as he’ll be the one wearing the nicest frock coat.
Persuasion stands out among Austen’s works in that her protagonist Anne Elliot is more mature, though this means she has reached the venerable age of twenty-seven. The story is effectively a second chance romance, chronicling her relationship with the gallant Captain Wentworth, with whom she broke off an engagement at the age of just nineteen.
Read more…Tangled Web Woven
Tartuffe
by Molière
YAT at The Coward Studio, Hampton Hill Theatre until 18th April
Review by Susan Furnell
YAT (Youth Action theatre) presented a fast-paced, one-hour abridgement of the famous Molière comedy, marking fifty years since the company first staged the play in 1976. It was dedicated to the memory of their much-loved late President, Eileen Baker.
While some classical comedies risk feeling dated, this production maintained consistent humour without sliding into lazy slapstick, through energetic pacing and unexpected turns in the manner in which acting was exaggerated. Director Josh Clarke’s abridged version uses a contemporary, improvisational style, particularly evident in the animalistic exchanges between Tartuffe and Elmire in the scene where Elmire hides Oregon under the table to witness Tartuffe’s hypocrisy, and in the energetic use of contemporary music between scenes and at the end.
Read more…Virtue Versus Violation
Susanna
by George Frideric Handel, libretto by Newburgh Hamilton and Moses Mendes
Richmond Opera at St. Mary’s University Theatre, Twickenham until 19th April
Review by Claire Alexander
The plot of Handel’s opera, Susanna, most often performed as an oratorio, is simple enough. Set in Babylon and based upon stories in the book of Daniel, Susanna lives an honest and happy life with her clearly loving husband, Joachim. When Joachim has to go away to tend the sheep, Susanna is left alone and unsupported. Two elders from the village find her one day bathing alone in a stream and use this opportunity to profess their ‘love’ for her, assault her and then accuse her of infidelity. The community, swift to judge, sentence Susanna to death. But a young woman (Danielle – Daniel in the original) from the community has the courage to speak out against the false accusations. Susanna is saved, returns to Joachim’s welcoming arms and the true culprits receive their punishment. Forgive the cliché, but everyone lives happily ever after.
Although written in 1748 the theme is as familiar today as it was then: woman’s eternal fate at the hands of men. The circumstances may have changed but the message is the same. Sexual and relationship misdeeds are too often assumed to be the woman’s fault – by being too suggestive, too forward. It is too often assumed to be a woman’s responsibility to protect a man from the temptations of their charms.
Read more…










