As You Like It, Shakespeare in the Squares review - an exuberant celebration of the Summer of Love

★★★★ AS YOU LIKE IT, SHAKESPEARE IN THE SQUARES An exuberant celebration of the Summer of Love

Infectious fun delivered by a cast bursting with boisterous talent

Gender-bending, confused identities, and hedonistic anarchy go together as naturally in summer Shakespeare as strawberries and cucumbers in Pimms, and in Tatty Hennessy’s exuberant alfresco version of As You Like It, touring to squares across the capital, the mix proves an appropriately heady combination.

The Winter's Tale, Shakespeare's Globe review - a chilly tale for a time of austerity

★★★ THE WINTER'S TALE A chilly tale for a time of austerity

Blanche McIntyre finds coherence in this uneven play but at what cost?

“A sad tale’s best for winter,” Leontes’ young son Mamillius tells us. By that logic the current summer heatwave should be bringing us a Winter’s Tale overflowing with joy – the songs of Bohemia drowning out the shouted accusations and desperate howls of Sicilia. But that’s not what director Blanche McIntyre has in mind.

A Midsummer Night's Dream, Wilton's Music Hall review - a stereotype-smashing evening of pagan delights

★★★★ A MIDSUMMER NIGHT'S DREAM, WILTON MUSIC HALL A stereotype-smashing evening of pagan delights

The Faction brings fire and gumption to Shakespeare

The Faction’s A Midsummer Night’s Dream is a production in which women are more likely to kick ass than sleep with one – a muscular, mischievous take on the Bard’s most light-hearted play about forbidden love. As might be expected, this boldly dynamic theatre company takes all that is most sinister and subversive about the work, and spins a stereotype-smashing evening of pagan delights.

Julius Caesar, BBC Four review - electrifying TV launch of all-women Shakespeare trilogy

★★★★★ JULIUS CAESAR, BBC FOUR Electrifying TV launch of all-women Shakespeare trilogy

Harriet Walter and Jade Anouka are the superlative opposite poles in a perfect ensemble

Who would have thought, when Phyllida Lloyd's Donmar Julius Caesar opened to justified fanfare, that two more Shakespeare masterpieces would be sustained no less powerfully within the women's-prison context over the following years?

The Two Noble Kinsmen, Shakespeare's Globe review - a breezy bromance served up slight

★★★ THE TWO NOBLE KINSMEN, SHAKESPEARE'S GLOBE A breezy bromance served up slight

Late Shakespeare collaboration is by turns engaging and daft

Those who find the Bard tough going – wasn't that one of Emma Rice's admissions back in the day? – should beat a path to The Two Noble Kinsmen, a late-career collaboration with John Fletcher that emerges as Shakespeare lite. Remembered (dimly) as the play that opened the Swan Theatre in Stratford-upon-Avon in 1986, the play tells of a bromance gone awry when competition for a woman gets in the way.

As You Like It / Hamlet, Shakespeare’s Globe review - ensemble emphasis sets a leaner style

★★★ AS YOU LIKE IT / ★★★★ HAMLET, SHAKESPEARE'S GLOBE Leaner ensemble emphasis

Michelle Terry's new company ups gender fluidity, charts new directions

There’s a distinct feeling of back to basics to this opening double bill at the Globe under the theatre’s new Artistic Director Michelle Terry. The elaborations (some would say gimmickry) of Emma Rice’s short tenure have been reined back, and a new concentration prevails.

Hamlet, RSC, Hackney Empire review - Paapa Essiedu's winning Dane

★★★★ HAMLET, RSC, HACKNEY EMPIRE Paapa Essiedu's winning Dane

RSC's touring Hamlet is well worth catching anywhere en route

Shakespeare's death-laden play is alive and well and breathing with renewed force in Hackney, the last British stop for an RSC touring Hamlet that moves on from London to the Kennedy Centre in Washington DC in May. Let's hope the American capital takes to Simon Godwin's characteristically acute, alert production with the palpable affection that was afforded the staging closer to home one recent evening.

Antony Sher: Year of the Mad King - extract

RIP ANTONY SHER: YEAR OF THE MAD KING The actor's Lear Diaries tell of his preparation to clamber up theatre's tallest peak for the RSC

The actor's Lear Diaries tell of his preparation to clamber up theatre's tallest peak for the RSC

In 1982 Antony Sher played the Fool to Michael Gambon’s King in the Royal Shakespeare Company’s production of King Lear. Shortly after, he came back to Stratford to play Richard III, for which he won the Olivier and Evening Standard Awards for Best Actor.