overnight reviews

Amy Gledhill, Soho Theatre review - delightfully bawdy take on serious subjects

Best show winner at the Edinburgh Fringe

At the 2024 Edinburgh Fringe, Amy Gledhill won best show for Make Me Look Fit on the Poster, ostensibly a cheery collection of stories about the weird and wonderful things that happen to her. But under the guise of feelgood comedy with herself as the butt of many of the gags, Gledhill cleverly weaves in a thoughtful study of female body image and self-esteem.

Music Reissues Weekly: You Got Me Hooked! - More Marylebone Beat Girls

Brit-girl bliss

After co-fronting Vinegar Joe with Robert Palmer, Elkie Brooks first charted as a solo artist in 1977 with “Pearl’s a Singer.” Yet there was more to her musical past than the 1971 to 1974 spell in the blues-rock outfit. Her contributions to You Got Me Hooked! - More Marylebone Beat Girls are “He's Gotta Love me” and “Stop the Music” – both released a decade before “Pearl’s a Singer.”

Biss, BBCSO, Hrůša, Barbican review - electrifying Shostakovich at a crucial time

★★★★★ BISS, BBCSO, HRUSA, BARBICAN Electrifying Shostakovich at a crucial time

The Royal Opera's next music director achieves blazing results in a rich programme

At the end of an exhausting week in which Holocaust Memorial Day struck a more urgent note than ever as fascism started tearing through the USA, parts of this concert were bound to hit hard. That they did so to the power of 100 was thanks to the extraordinary impact of Jakub Hrůša, now recognised as one of the greats by British audiences as he waits to take up the full-time reins at the Royal Opera. The BBC Symphony Orchestra burned for him in fullest focus.

Paradise, Disney+ review - enigmatic drama with an unknown destination

★★★ PARADISE, DISNEY+ Enigmatic drama with an unknown destination

Dan Fogelman's new series has an excellent cast but a recycled premise

The latest from the This Is Us creator, Dan Fogelman, is a futuristic take on relationships among survivors once Earth has suffered an extinction event, a popular concept in these troubled times. Except that it starts out by following an equally popular narrative track, the classic locked-door whodunit. Where is this heading?

BBC Singers, Aurora Orchestra, Collon, Kings Place review - on the way to heaven via King's Cross

★★★★ BBC SINGERS, AURORA, COLLON, KING'S PLACE Musical journey towards bliss

Intimate settings for a musical journey towards bliss

Just now, music about survival, transcendence and the afterlife may have a special resonance for the BBC Singers. After all, the supremely versatile century-old chamber choir has endured its own near-death experience – at the hands of the BBC top brass who, in 2023, planned to axe them.

Hard Truths review - a bravura, hyperreal performance from Marianne Jean-Baptiste

★★★★ HARD TRUTHS A bravura, hyperreal performance from Marianne Jean-Baptiste

Grudges and gloom offset by love and support make for an unsettling mix

A colleague once told me that I shouldn’t take Mike Leigh’s films with contemporary settings as slices of everyday life. He was right: they’re hyperreal. Especially Hard Truths, in which his take on a woman both depressed and angry – it’s possible to be both more or less simultaneously – packs years of grievances and unacceptable verbal abuse into a very short period of time.

Saturday Night review - a dizzying 90-minute trip to a landmark TV event

Jason Reitman captures the full chaos of SNL's 1975 launch

“A countercultural sketch show full of unknowns, with no script, no structure.” The verdict of NBC’s head of talent about the embryonic Saturday Night Live expresses everything audiences loved about it when it first aired in 1975.

To capture the anarchic birth of this TV institution, Jason Reitman has made a stylish film that initially seems as wayward as the show. But it gradually comes to seem like the obvious way to handle the material.

Formal Sppeedwear, The Windmill review - Stoke-on-Trent trio reinvigorates the new wave era

Daisy fresh idiosyncrasy which isn’t nostalgia

As Stoke-on-Trent’s Formal Sppeedwear immerse themselves in what turns out to be their penultimate song, they become lost in the music. What they are playing takes over. Revolving guitar motifs spray forth like light reflected from a glitter ball. An elastic bass guitar bubbles, the frill-free drumming is hard, precise and about forward motion.

Northern Ballet: Three Short Ballets, Linbury Theatre review - thrilling dancing in a mix of styles

The Leeds-based company act as impressively as they dance

Leeds-based Northern Ballet has built a reputation as a source of fine dancers who are also impressive actors. Federico Bonelli, the former Royal Ballet principal who took over its directorship in 2022, is proving a worthy steward of this tradition. 

The company’s latest visit to London is a triple bill of “shorts’, one almost 50 years old, the other two commissioned by Bonelli. Together they make an extremely satisfying menu.