Makeshifts and Realities, Finborough Theatre review - Edwardian dramas with a pinch of Chekhov

 MAKESHIFTS AND REALITIES, FINBOROUGH THEATRE Edwardian dramas with a pinch of Chekhov

Plays that show that much may have changed for women in the last 100 years, but much remains the same

We’re in (pretty much literally so in this most intimate of venues) an Edwardian sitting room, time hanging heavily in the air, gentility almost visibly fading before our eyes.

Modest, Kiln Theatre review - tale of Victorian would-be trailblazer fails and succeeds

★★ MODEST, KILN THEATRE A trans and queer celebration, but not a very good play 

Art, songs and a cabaret (indeed, Cabaret) vibe, but the story goes nowhere

Whether you believe that Ellen Brammar’s play, Modest, newly arrived in London from Hull Truck Theatre, succeeds or not, rather depends on your criteria for evaluating theatre.

Album: Dream Wife - Social Lubrication

★★★★ DREAM WIFE - SOCIAL LUBRICATION Making the political playful, powered by punk

The London-based trio make the political playful, powered by punk

Five years ago, breaking dry January a few days early, I joined a throng of folks amongst the merch boxes and strip lights of Rough Trade East to see Dream Wife. The London-based trio has come a long way since those small-scale shows in the backroom of a Brick Lane record shop.

Album: Kesha - Gag Order

★★★★ KESHA - GAG ORDER Kesha and Rick Rubin head out into the unknown

Kesha and Rick Rubin head out into the unknown

Kesha is one of the 21st century’s most characterful pop stars. She’s regularly stepped out of the boxes people have put her in, musically and otherwise. But, even taking into account truly oddball songs such as “Godzilla” (from 2017’s Rainbow), or projects such as working with Flaming Lips, Gag Order, created with cosmic ultra-producer Rick Rubin, is by far her most out-there work. It’s also the sound of a tormented human being.

Seraphina Madsen: Aurora review - the tarot won’t save us

Homage to the history of the dark arts and the witchy women who realised them

“There is another world… a way of perceiving that is chaotic and awesome and terrifying,” announces Seraphina Madsen’s cigarillo-smoking, telepathic cat.

Lecturing a teenage coven on the art of sorcery and how to tap into the powers of the “Unseen world”, Tu Tu (also known as "The Master", in just one of Madsen’s many playful nods to Mikhail Bulgakov) swings from chandeliers, drinks champagne, plays the bongos and an electro-acoustic harp, and waltzes around a Gothic Revival mansion in a diamanté collar.

Album: Gina Birch - I Play My Bass Loud

★★★★ GINA BIRCH - I PLAY MY BASS LOUD Solo from The Raincoats' founding member

Solo record from The Raincoats' founding member lives up to its possibilities

The Raincoats are one of those revered names that I never believed I would witness live. (See also: Hole, Elastica and, until their last UK tour, extraterrestrial kooks the B52s). But in late 2019, there was a surge of activity from the godmothers of post-punk as founding members Gina Birch and Ana da Silva came together for a string of shows.

Sylvia, Old Vic review - great leads, rambling story

 SYLVIA, THE OLD VIC Beverley Knight is compelling and complex in suffragette musical

Sylvia Pankhurst suffers for her commitment to votes for women and to socialism

For many years, I would ask groups of students to vote in elections because “it’s important to honour those who gave up so much to ensure that the likes of us can”. Some would nod, others would shrug, a few might have inwardly scoffed – too cool for school, innit?

Smoke, Southwark Playhouse review - dazzling Strindberg update

 SMOKE, SOUTHWARK PLAYHOUSE A dazzling Strindberg update

The perils of navigating power relations when sexual tension is all but tangible

A play’s title can be an almost arbitrary matter – there’s no streetcar but plenty of desire in that one for example – and it might have crossed Kim Davies’ mind to call her play Ms Julie, since it is a reimagining of August Strindberg’s 1888 masterpiece, Miss Julie.