Christine Tobin, EFG London Jazz Festival, World Heart Beat review - an enchanting ode to home

★★★★ CHRISTINE TOBIN, WORLD HEART BEAT An enchanting ode to home

A new song cycle from one of contemporary music’s unique compositional voices

This UK premiere of the award-winning, Dublin-born vocalist and composer Christine Tobin’s latest project, Returning Weather, presented an otherworldly ode to finding home – casting multiple perspectives on our yearning for connection and human warmth.

theartsdesk at Wexford Festival Opera - four operas and a recital in one crazy day

THEARTS DESK AT WEXFORD FESTIVAL OPERA Four operas and a recital in one crazy day

Youth takes the comedy award in fringe delights alongside a well-done schlocky rarity

Imagine a Glyndebourne season where all those promising young singers in the chorus get to be principals in a series of fringe operas. At Wexford, they already have their work cut out, though this year not so much in the three main rarities – hence the sheer joy of witnessing so many fine performances in Puccini’s Suor Angelica and Gianni Schicchi, Donizetti’s La fille du régiment and Rossini’s L’Italiana in Algeri.

Dance First - the travails of Samuel Beckett

★★★ DANCE FIRST Tasteful biopic of the Irish writer errs in neglecting his work

Tasteful biopic of the Irish writer errs in neglecting his work

Dance First takes its title from a line in Samuel Beckett’s most famous work Waiting for Godot. “Perhaps he could dance first and think afterwards,” says the tramp Estragon of Pozzo’s slave Lucky, who then proceeds to do both in a typically absurd Beckettian way.

The Miracle Club review - unchallenging but enjoyable Irish drama

★★★ THE MIRACLE CLUB Laura Linney shines in tale of redemption

Laura Linney shines in tale of redemption

If I had to condense the Catholic faith of my upbringing in one sentence, I would say that it essentially comes down to two things: we're all sinners, but we are all capable of redemption. (Theological experts may take a different view.) That boiled-down notion appears to be the takeaway of Thaddeus O'Sullivan's The Miracle Club, set in 1967 working-class Ballygar, just outside Dublin – the kind of place whose residents live there their entire life.

The Woman in the Wall, BBC One review - deliciously dark murder mystery with a tragic hinterland

★★★★★ THE WOMAN IN THE WALL, BBC ONE Ruth Wilson is a magnetic presence

Ruth Wilson is a magnetic presence as a bedraggled victim of the Magdalene Laundries

Ruth Wilson possibly hasn’t had as much to get her teeth into on-screen since she vamped it up in Luther. Her performance as Lorna Brady in The Woman in the Wall is an object lesson in the way a performer in demand for her engaging looks and edgy sexiness can smartly step off that particular conveyor belt and go off in a totally new direction. 

Album: Brigid Mae Power - Dream From The Deep Well

Irish singer-songwriter’s fourth album is her most direct yet

The cover versions on Dream From The Deep Well include “I Know Who is Sick,” most familiar from the Clancy Brothers and Tommy Maken interpretation, and “Down by the Glenside,” which The Dubliners incorporated into their repertoire. The first opens the album, the second closes it. Between, amongst the original compositions, there is also an adaptation of Tim Buckley’s “I Must Have Been Blind.”

Happy Days, Landmark Productions, Cork Opera House - to the end of the earth

★★★★★ HAPPY DAYS, LANDMARK PRODUCTIONS Siobhán McSweeney is transfixing

Siobhán McSweeney goes way beyond the expected in a transfixing performance

Siobhán McSweeney is to be loved as a person for her speech when she received a BAFTA for Best Female Performance in a Comedy Programme earlier this year, bringing up the way Derry people had weathered the “indignities, ignorance and stupidity of your so-called leaders in Dublin, Stormont and Westminster” (typically, the BBC cut that bit).