Ailey 2, Marlowe Theatre, Canterbury review - young, black and fabulous

★★★★ AILEY 2, MARLOWE THEATRE, CANTERBURY Young, black and fabulous

The younger sibling of the Alvin Ailey family visits for the first time in 12 years

Dance lovers with no access to a major city could feel genuinely hard done by were it not for Dance Consortium. This sainted organisation works to bring a company from overseas each autumn to a dozen or so large-scale theatres across the UK and Ireland – theatres whose dance offering might otherwise rarely extend beyond the latest Strictly spin-off.

Strange Way of Life review - Pedro Almodóvar's queer Western

★★★ STRANGE WAY OF LIFE Pedro Almodóvar's queer Western

A sheriff and his old lover spark again in a thin frontier drama

Less is more, except when it isn’t. Among the latest batch of overlong Oscar-tipped movies by celebrated auteurs such as Christopher Nolan (Oppenheimer with a running time of 181 minutes) and Martin Scorsese (Killers of the Flower Moon, 207 mins), it’s a relief to find the iconic Spanish filmmaker Pedro Almodóvar bucking the trend with a 31-minute short that doesn’t test the audience’s mental and physical stamina.

Mad Rush, Carol Williams, RFH review - a rainbow of organ colours

★★★★ MAD RUSH, CAROL WILLIAMS, RFH A rainbow of organ colours

A born entertainer at the highest level takes on the Royal Festival Hall's refurbished giant

Big Ben was chiming the quarter-hour as I hit the South Bank side of the river after a not terribly inspiring Remain rally in Parliament Square. What delight, then, to hear the wacky and wonderful Carol Williams playing Vierne’s “Carillon de Westminster” as the opening fanfare of her Royal Festival Hall organ hour. It’s one of my two favouite organ voluntaries – the other being the most famous, “the Widor Toccata”, and she ended with that. All was well, in fact, from start to finish.

First Person: 'America's sweetheart organist' Carol Williams on running the musical gamut

CAROL WILLIAMS 'America's sweetheart organist', at the RFH today, on running the musical gamut

A born entertainer about to surprise London audiences discusses her happy life

I have always had a fascination with concert programmes. I did my Doctorate thesis on this subject. I remember vividly as a youngster attending many uninteresting programmes and thinking “there has to be more exciting, exhilarating, interesting music for the concert goer!” What type of repertoire makes audiences come back to solo organ concerts?

Wilderness, Prime Video review - twisty thriller that leaves a nasty aftertaste

Gilded couple explore the barren lands of their blighted marriage

Jenna Coleman has had a mostly upbeat acting CV to date, notably playing Clara in Doctor Who and the young Queen in ITV’s Victoria. The mood darkened with her excellent turn as the French-Canadian girlfriend of the mass murderer in The Serpent; now it turns to pitch with Wilderness.

Blu-ray: Three Ages

Buster Keaton's feature debut is daft but delightful

The Saphead gave Buster Keaton his first starring role in a full-length comedy, but 1923’s Three Ages is the first feature film which he wrote, produced, directed and starred in. Two-reelers were a form where he could go, in his words, “wild and crazy”, the more outlandish the visual humour the better.

Next to Normal, Donmar Warehouse review - terrific cast in a punchy musical

★★★★ NEXT TO NORMAL, DONMAR WAREHOUSE Twin miseries of bipolar disorder and grief are given an unusual treatment

Twin miseries of bipolar disorder and grief are given an unusual treatment

The journey from off-Broadway to central London has taken 15 years, but the multi-award-winning musical Next to Normal has finally made it. That time lag may lead to suspicions that its subject matter has become a tad outmoded, but this staging, directed by outgoing Donmar director Michael Longhurst, is fresh and affecting.

Prom 55: Thibaudet, Boston Symphony Orchestra, Nelsons review - old-style showmanship

★★★★ PROM 55: THIBAUDET, BOSTON SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA, NELSONS Perfect finessing, but not all the fun of the fair

Perfect finessing, but not all the fun of the fair

Funfairs and dance music, old world and new, should have guaranteed a corker of a second Prom from the Boston Symphony Orchestra with its chief conductor, Andris Nelsons. Glitter it did; but wit, drive and violence took a back seat to showcase sophistication, at least from where I was sitting in the hall (always a necessary qualification)

Mob Land review - familiar pulp fiction

★★★ MOB LAND Travolta graces a derivative but solid Southern noir

Travolta graces a derivative but solid Southern noir

Optimistically billed as John Travolta’s comeback, writer-director Nicholas Maggio’s debut is an effective Southern noir, with Travolta an authoritative but peripheral presence.