Kelleigh Greenberg-Jephcott: Swan Song review - Capote redux

★★★★ KELLEIGH GREENBERG-JEPHCOTT: SWAN SONG Of Truman and his high society ladies: a voyeuristic but fascinating first novel

Of Truman and his high society ladies: a voyeuristic but fascinating first novel

Here you will find Babe Paley, Slim Keith, CZ Guest, Gloria Guinness, Lee Radziwill, Marella Agnelli, the stylish leaders of society, gorgeous, gilded, well-married ladies: the men they were with – billionaires, corporate and cultural leaders – defined them. As did their shared best friend over several decades, the writer Truman Capote (1924-1984).

Mamzer Bastard, Royal Opera, Hackney Empire review - inert Hasidic music-drama

★ MAMZER BASTARD Inert Hasidic music-drama

Sludgy orchestral lines and ungainly word-setting in Na'ama Zisser's new opera

Striking it lucky with a successful new opera is a rare occurrence, though every company has a duty to keep on trying. The Royal Opera hit the jackpot with 4.48 Psychosis, a highly original approach to Sarah Kane's profound and authentic play by Philip Venables, the first Doctoral Composer-in-Residence on the scheme initiated by Covent Garden in alliance with the Guildhall School of Music and Drama. How could one not wish his successor, Israel-born Na'ama Zisser, all the best?

Machinal, Almeida Theatre review - descending into darkness

★★★ MACHINAL, ALMEIDA THEATRE Lesser-known American classic exerts a clinical fascination

Lesser-known American classic exerts a clinical fascination

The American playwright/journalist Sophie Treadwell's 1928 expressionist drama crops up every so often in order to allow a director to leave his or her signature upon it, so the first thing to be said about Natalie Abrahami's Almeida Theatre revival of Machinal is that it puts the play and not the production fi

Studio 54 review - boogie wonderland

★★★ STUDIO 54 Documentary revisits the most celebrated discotheque of them all

Documentary revisits the most celebrated discotheque of them all

You need to be of a certain age to recall the sheer ubiquity of Studio 54. For a few years in the late 1970s, even the sterner British newspapers were routinely stuffed with stories of who was there and what went on within the hallowed citadel (if not who went down, and on whom).

Ryuichi Sakamoto: 'Ideally I'm recording all the time, 24 hours a day' - interview

RYUICHI SAKAMOTO INTERVIEW From Xenakis to Oneohtrix Point Never via Bowie and Bootsy

From Xenakis to Oneohtrix Point Never via Bowie and Bootsy, Sakamoto recalls an extraordinary life in music

Ryuichi Sakamoto has conquered underground and mainstream with seeming ease over four decades, never dropping off in the quality of his releases. Indeed his most recent projects, following his return to public life after treatment for throat cancer in 2014-15, are among his best.

The Grönholm Method, Menier Chocolate Factory - sleek and short but in no way deep

★★★ THE GRONHOLM METHOD, MENIER CHOCOLATE FACTORY Sleek and short, no way deep

Much-travelled play contains one twist too many

Add Catalan writer Jordi Galcerán to the shortlist of European playwrights who are finding an international perch, in this case with a tricksy four-character play that has had more than 200 productions in over 60 countries.

Big Sky, Big Dreams, Big Art: Made in the USA, BBC Four review - unexpected facts aplenty

★★★ BIG SKY, BIG DREAMS, BIG ART: MADE IN THE USA Unexpected facts aplenty

From the Wild West to Abstract Expressionism, Waldemar Januszczak on an enthusiastic journey

“Oh say, can you see, by the dawn’s early light” was a vision of the American flag, that star-spangled banner, riding proud from Francis Scott Key’s patriotic poem of 1814 based on an episode in the War of 1812. His sentiments were decades later rather improbably set to the tune of a popular drinking song from a London gentlemen’s club, metamorphosing into the official American national anthem by Act of Congress in 1931 – you couldn’t make it up.

Red, Wyndham's Theatre - Mark Rothko drama paints a vivid picture

★★★★ RED, WYNDHAM THEATRE Mark Rothko drama paints a vivid picture

Alfred Molina gives a towering performance as the self-absorbed artist

The band’s back together. Alfred Molina plays Rothko for the third time in Michael Grandage’s revisiting of John Logan’s richly textured two-hander, first seen at the Donmar in 2009 and then bypassing the West End for Broadway.

Patrick Melrose, Sky Atlantic review - an olympiad of substance abuse

BAFTA TV AWARDS 2019 'Patrick Melrose' is top Mini-Series, and Benedict Cumberbatch is Best Actor

Edward St Aubyn's drug-addled toff meets the cult of Cumberbatch

Edward St Aubyn’s Patrick Melrose novels have been admired for their prose style, scathing wit and pitiless depiction of a rotting aristocracy. Benedict Cumberbatch claims that Hamlet and Melrose were the two roles he was desperate to play, and now (via his own production company SunnyMarch) his portrayal of Melrose lands on Sky Atlantic.