Alice's Adventures in Wonderland, Royal Ballet review - a feast of visual delights

★★★★ ALICE'S ADVENTURES IN WONDERLAND, ROYAL BALLET Return of Wheeldon's shiny, crowd-pleasing version of Lewis Carroll's classic story

Return of Wheeldon's shiny, crowd-pleasing version of Lewis Carroll's classic story

I can imagine Monica Mason, the artistic director who commissioned Christopher Wheeldon's 2011 Alice, feeling pretty pleased with herself as she looked around the Covent Garden auditorium last night at an audience buzzing with excitement for the first performance of the new season.

Roddy Doyle: Smile review - return of the repressed

★★★★ RODDY DOYLE: SMILE A Dublin journey through memory leads down into buried trauma

A Dublin journey through memory leads down into buried trauma

Although he made his name with the generally upbeat grooves and licks of his Barrytown Trilogy, Roddy Doyle has often played Irish family and social life as a blues full of sorrow and regret. In his Booker-winning Paddy Clarke Ha Ha Ha, a bitter parental break-up shadows the wee hero’s passage through childhood. Domestic violence and the self-medication found in booze fuel The Woman Who Walked into Doors and its sequel, Paula Spencer.

Pagliacci/L’enfant et les sortilèges, Opera North review - off and on with the motley

PAGLIACCI / L'ENFANT ET LES SORTILÈGES, OPERA NORTH Masterpieces by Leoncavallo and Ravel launch a season of one-acters in style

Masterpieces by Leoncavallo and Ravel launch a season of one-acters in style

The first two one-acters in Opera North’s season called The Little Greats were unveiled on Saturday. There are six in all, scheduled on a mix-and-match basis so Leeds opera-goers can choose their own tapas menu: grab one show, choose from various pairs, or even try three on a Saturday (including a matinee) if you want to.

No More Boys and Girls, BBC Two – baby steps lead to great leaps for children

★★★ NO MORE BOYS AND GIRLS, BBC TWO A classroom becomes the first battleground for one doctor's war on gender bias

A classroom becomes the first battleground for one doctor's war on gender bias

Whether it’s the £400,000 that separates Mishal Husain from John Humphrys, or the 74 million miles between the metaphorical markers of Venus and Mars, there is a gulf between the genders. Despite legislation to enforce equality, the reality is that, right from the start, boys and girls are treated differently. Boys like trains, right? Girls like dolls… Before you know it, female students are massively under-represented in the sciences, and worrying numbers of young men think it’s OK to shout sexual threats to women on the street in the name of banter.

BambinO / Last And First Men, Manchester International Festival

★★★★ BAMBINO / LAST AND FIRST  MEN, MANCHESTER INTERNATIONAL FESTIVAL ‘Opera for babies’ and a voice from 2,000 million years in the future 

‘Opera for babies’ and a voice from 2,000 million years in the future

The Manchester International Festival – a biennale of new creative work – this year has a new artistic director in John McGrath, and there’s no large-scale new opera or prominent "classical" work, it would seem, other than Raymond Yiu’s song cycle, The World Was Once All Miracle, performed on Tuesday by Roderick Williams with the BBC Philharmonic.

Committee review - we're all on trial in new Kids Company musical

★★★★ COMMITTEE, DONMAR WAREHOUSE Investigation into the charity's downfall is slickly dramatised

Investigation into the charity's downfall is slickly dramatised at Donmar Warehouse

A memorable 2015 parliamentary select committee hearing asked Kids Company CEO Camila Batmanghelidjh and chair of trustees Alan Yentob whether the organisation was ever fit for purpose.

Russell Brand, Touring review - grandiloquent performer in reflective mood

★★★★ RUSSELL BRAND, TOURING Fatherhood prompts a look back at earlier misdemeanours

Fatherhood prompts a look back at earlier misdemeanours

Were ordinary folk to plunder their lives for comedy, most of us would be sadly lacking in any topics worthy of analysis, let alone laughs. But Russell Brand, who every few years appears to reinvent himself – from drug addict to stand-up comic, from sex addict to husband, from anarchist to social campaigner, to name a few reboots – can in no way be described as ordinary.