Playing Sandwiches & A Lady of Letters, Bridge Theatre review - the darkness dazzles, twice over

★★★★ PLAYING SANDWICHES & A LADY OF LETTERS, BRIDGE THEATRE The darkness dazzles

Masterclasses make up a mighty hour of theatre

"Getting dark," or so comments Irene Ruddock (a pitch-perfect Imelda Staunton) in passing midway through A Lady of Letters, and, boy, ain't that the truth? Both this monologue, and the one that precedes it (Playing Sandwiches, featuring the mighty Lucian Msamati), find Alan Bennett in fearlessly penetrating, ever-darkening mode.

Enola Holmes review – a new Sherlock-related franchise is afoot

★★★★ ENOLA HOLMES A new Sherlock-related franchise is afoot

Millie Bobby Brown gives the patriarchy what-for in a charming young adult adventure

Its no secret that Arthur Conan Doyles most famous creation lays claim to more appearances on screen than any other fictional character. Over the past several decades, weve seen Sherlock as a pugilist action-hero, a modern-day sleuth, and in a painfully unfunny slapstick guise.

Nocturnal review - an impossible love

★★★ NOCTURNAL A schoolgirl and a painter-decorator rush headlong into an impossible love

A schoolgirl and a painter-decorator rush headlong into harm

The most painterly and ominous sequence in Nocturnal naturally occurs at night. Until recently strangers, 33-year-old Pete (Cosmo Jarvis) and 17-year-old Laurie (Lauren Coe) gaze across a body of seawater to a miniature chemistry set – a tract of illuminated industrial buildings and smoke-belching cooling towers. Initially these bright satanic mills occupy the foot of the frame, the rest of it a vast black void; then they glide disarmingly close to Pete and Laurie as he drives among them.

BBC Proms live online: Anoushka Shankar/Laura Marling - scintillating sitar and fortified folk

★★★★ BBC PROMS: ANOUSHKA SHANKAR / LAURA MARLING Scintillating sitar and fortified folk from genre-melting musicians

Innovative collaborations from genre-melting musicians

In what would have been the year her father, the legendary sitar player Ravi Shankar turned 100, sitarist and composer Anoushka Shankar pays tribute to him and builds on his legacy in this online Prom. The pre-recorded first half saw Shankar collaborate with electronic producer, composer and performer Gold Panda for a half hour long continuous piece, Variations.

I Hate Suzie, Sky Atlantic review - Billie Piper excels as an actress on the edge

★★★★ I HATE SUZIE, SKY ATLANTIC Billie Piper excels as an actress on the edge

Celebrity and its perils: a thrilling co-creation by Lucy Prebble and Billie Piper

“I’m going to be a Disney princess!” Thirty-five-year-old actress Suzie Pickles (Billie Piper) is screaming with joy at having got the part, and her deaf, seven-year-old son Frank (Matthew Jordan-Caws) looks excited too. Her husband’s reaction? “I thought you were too old.”

Nick Hayes: The Book of Trespass review – a leap over England's walls

★★★★ NICK HAYES: THE BOOK OF TRESPASS A merrily provocative tour of English landscape, history and culture

Nature, culture and history converge in this exhilarating tale of intrusion and exclusion

Since snobbery and deference have a big part to play in Nick Hayes’s exhilarating book, let’s start with the obligatory name-drop. I have lunched – twice, in different country piles, and most enjoyably – with one of the principal villains of The Book of Trespass. Richard Scott, tenth Duke of Buccleuch, owns around a quarter-million acres of Britain (no individual has more, although the Crown Estate, the National Trust, the Forestry Common, the RSPB and MoD outgun the Buccleuchs).

The Streets, EartH review - empathy in isolation

★★★ THE STREETS, EARTH Empathy in isolation

Garage laureate proves eager to connect

Mike Skinner got out just in time, pulling the plug on The Streets at the point of exhaustion. After Original Pirate Material’s hopeful bedroom dream of English rap came true in 2002, four further albums wearily analysed fame and self-destruction, and ended in 2011 when Skinner saw only dead ends ahead.

Blueprint Medea, Finborough Theatre online review – well-meaning but clunky update

★★★ BLUE PRINT MEDEA, FINBOROUGH THEATRE Well-meaning but clunky

Updated Greek tragedy has some good ideas but doesn't fully deliver

Medea is the original crazy ex-girlfriend: the wronged woman who takes perfectly understandable revenge on the man who made her life hell. In Blueprint Medea, a new adaptation premiered at the Finborough Theatre in May 2019 and available on YouTube until 2nd August, writer-director Julia Pascal gives us a 21st-century reworking of Euripides’ tragedy.