A Midsummer Night's Dream, Shakespeare's Globe – blazing-coloured, kick-ass carnival

★★★★ A MIDSUMMER NIGHT'S DREAM, SHAKESPEARE'S GLOBE Blazing, kick-ass carnival

This riotous production with its Latin American vibe shows the Battle of the Dreams is on

Welcome to A Midsummer Night’s Dream as carnival – a blazing-coloured, hot-rhythmed, kick-ass take in which Oberon appears at one point as a blinged-up Elizabeth I and Puck exerts his powers as a flash-mob. Last month the glitter-ball hedonism of Nicholas Hytner’s gender-fluid Dream, which opened at The Bridge, felt like an impossible act to follow, but this riotous production by Sean Holmes at Shakespeare's Globe shows that the Battle of the Dreams is on.

First Person: Damian Cruden on reinvigorating the Bard away from London with Shakespeare's Rose

The onetime director of 'The Railway Children' sets out his vision for bringing Shakespeare afresh to the country's 'cultural pageant'

How we deliver culture in the modern day is complex. There are many misconceptions about where and who is capable of leading the nation’s cultural charge. The accepted conceit is that if culture doesn’t emanate from certain places, like London or Stratford, then it couldn’t possibly be of value. By way of response, Shakespeare’s Rose Theatre brings affordable, high-quality culture to audiences outside the M25. It promises an immersive experience, accessible to all and undeniably great fun.

Falstaff, The Grange Festival review - belly laughs and bags of fun

★★★★ FALSTAFF, THE GRANGE FESTIVAL This delightful new production is one of the Grange Festival's finest to date

Brimful of delights, this new production is one of the Grange Festival's finest to date

What is the perfect country house opera? A Midsummer Night’s Dream? L’elisir? Cenerentola? Figaro? All are strong contenders, but in the absence of anyone brave enough to stage Gerald Barry’s The Importance of Being Earnest the winner – surely – must be Falstaff.

The Merry Wives of Windsor, Shakespeare's Globe review - a gallimaufry of acting styles

Theatre's best early sitcom gets plenty of laughs, despite some miscasting

Need Shakespeare 's Falstaff charm to be funny? Those warm, indulgent feelings won by Mrisho Mpoto in the amazing Globe to Globe's Swahili Merry Wives and by Christopher Benjamin in a period-pretty version are rarely encouraged by this season's Helen Schlesinger (in Henry IV Parts One and Two ) and now Pearce Quigley for Ellie While's 1930s romp.

Ali Smith: Spring review – green shoots, dark fears

★★★★ ALI SMITH: SPRING Vernal journey takes current events, ancient myths out for a Highland spin

A vernal journey takes current events and ancient myths out for a Highland spin

Stopped in the street for a vox pop by a BBC interviewer keen to “fill your air” with strife and bile, a character in Spring retorts that “there’s a world out there bigger than Brexit, yeah?” Newshound critics, take note. The symbolically named Brit (short, originally, for Brittany) works as a guard at a migrant detention centre. In its hellish corridors, people driven by suffering, abuse and terror out of regions much less favoured than navel-gazing Europe endure routine contempt and cruelty in a “kind of underworld”, a “place of the living dead”.