Who Killed My Father, Young Vic review - Hans Kesting excels in this solo show

★★★★ WHO KILLED MY FATHER, YOUNG VIC Hans Kesting excels in this solo show

Édouard Louis’s book is brought to life in a fierce performance

A bare interior with tarnished walls, a single bed, and an oxygen tube. The stage seems to have been set for a Beckett play, but the figure who comes to inhabit this dejected enclosure for 90 minutes is grounded in a far different world.

Chasing Hares, Young Vic review - militant mix of politics and fantasy

New award-winning political play is warmly idealistic, if a bit too obvious

While Britain is experiencing a "summer of discontent", with inflation, strikes and other conflicts, it is odd that so few plays are as overtly political, and as overtly resonant as Sonali Bhattacharyya’s Chasing Hares, which won the activist Theatre Uncut’s Political Playwriting Award, and is now on the main stage at the Young Vic.

Oklahoma!, Young Vic review - a stunning, stripped-down version of the classic musical

OLIVIER AWARDS 2023 - Best Musical in revival OKLAHOMA! & Arthur Darvill, Best Actor, musical

Rodgers and Hammerstein revival goes to the dark heart of the story

No surreys, fringes or corny chap-slapping: the Rodgers and Hammerstein revival that has arrived at the Young Vic from New York, trailing a Tony award, is no ordinary makeover. Daniel Fish, its director, has spent the best part of 15 years stripping down and remodelling the 1943 original.

Extract: David Lan's As If By Chance

EXTRACT: DAVID LAN'S 'AS IF BY CHANCE' Adventures in Palestine from the memoir of the former artistic director of the Young Vic

Adventures in Palestine from the memoir of the former artistic director of the Young Vic

In June 2001 the London Festival of International Theatre brought Amir Nizar Zuabi’s Alive from Palestine to the Royal Court Theatre for one performance. The Guardian said, “How often do you see a piece of necessary theatre? These 'stories under occupation' fall precisely into that category. We are used to the idea of theatre as a diversion. Here it is fulfilling a more important function of bringing us the news.”

Imagine... My Name is Kwame, BBC One review - interesting but incomplete

★★★ IMAGINE... MY NAME IS KWAME, BBC ONE Interesting but incomplete

Profile of Young Vic artistic director could go still further

Filmed, as one would, well, imagine, prior to lockdown, Imagine .... My Name is Kwame hearkens to what now seems a bygone era of full and buzzy playhouses and adventurous theatre-making that was about the live experience and not some facsimile online.

A Streetcar Named Desire, National Theatre at Home review - world on fire

★★★★★ A STREETCAR NAMED DESIRE, NT AT HOME World on fire

NT Live recording of this classic Young Vic production is genuinely unmissable

The National Theatre’s triumphant march through its archive of NT Live recordings continues this week with a glorious blaze of a show. Starring Gillian Anderson, Ben Foster and Vanessa Kirby, this 2014 revival of Tennessee Williams’s 1947 modern classic A Streetcar Named Desire was a Young Vic production, and its film version is presented by National Theatre at Home.

Theatre Lockdown Special 6: A prolific playwright, a timeless play, and speeches galore

THEATRE LOCKDOWN SPECIAL 6 A prolific playwright, a timeless play, and speeches galore

A popular American star vehicle and 'Alice in Wonderland' minute-by-minute figure among the cultural bounty during the week ahead

Can we really be entering a third month in lockdown? Indeed we can, and culture, thank heavens, shows no signs whatsoever of leaving us in the lurch. This week's lineup of highlights offers a typically electic bunch, ranging from two sizable American talents streaming a two-hander for one night only to the arrival online of the latest work from an octogenarian playwriting treasure, Sir Alan Ayckbourn, who ought to be more celebrated of late than he is.