The 4th Country, Park Theatre review – sympathetic and intriguing

★★★ THE 4TH COUNTRY, PARK THEATRE Sympathetic and intriguing

Northern Ireland’s contemporary problems get the meta treatment

History is a prison. Often, you can’t escape. It imprints its mark on people, environments and language. And nowhere is this more true that in Northern Ireland, where the history of conflict between the Republican Catholic community and the Loyalist Protestant community is both centuries old, and still raw from the legacy of The Troubles.

The Ferryman, Gaiety Theatre, Dublin review - Jez Butterworth's Northern Irish epic comes close to home

★★★★ THE FERRYMAN, GAIETY THEATRE, DUBLIN Variable ensemble yields some gripping scenes and monologues

Variable ensemble yields some gripping scenes and monologues

Dublin theatregoers have been inundated with Irish family gatherings concealing secrets or half-buried sorrows, mixing “bog gothic” with very real horrors. Clearly they’re willing to try again with Jez Butterworth’s The Ferryman, because its run has just been extended. The vanishings familiar to Butterworth’s wife Laura Donnelly, whose uncle was among the disappeared, still resonate, as a programme article by Sandra Peake, CEO of WAVE Trauma Centre, reinforces.

Conchúr White, St Pancras Old Church review - side-stepping the past to embrace the future

★★★ CONCHUR WHITE, ST PANCRAS CHURCH Northern Irish troubadour pushes forward

Northern Irish troubadour pushes forward

If there’s a feeling of déjà vu, it isn’t detectable. Conchúr White played St Pancras Old Church in April 2016 with County Armagh’s Silences, the band he fronted. This evening, a mention of having been here before is absent. Nothing in the body language suggests any familiarity with where he’s playing.

Blue Lights Series 2, BBC One review - still our best cop show despite a slacker structure

★★★★ BLUE LIGHTS SERIES 2, BBC ONE Still our best cop show despite a slacker structure

The engaging Belfast cops are less tightly focused this time around

The first season of Blue Nights was so close to police procedural perfection, it would be hard for season two to reach the same heights. Overall, it doesn’t, though there are still special moments.

The Heist Before Christmas, Sky Max review - the Santa Claus wars

★★★ THE HEIST BEFORE CHRISTMAS, SKY MAX Timothy Spall & James Nesbitt star Santas

Timothy Spall and James Nesbitt lead strong cast in Christmas fairy tale

Not just one, but two Santas in this agreeable seasonal romp. It’s set in small-town Northern Ireland, where single mum Patricia (Laura Donnelly) is struggling to bring up her two young sons, Mikey (Bamber Todd) and Sean (Joshua McLees). Her job at the Stuff for a Pound shop is barely keeping food on the family table, her boss Mr Brady (Lloyd Hutchinson) is a bully and a liar, and her son Mikey is exhibiting anti-social tendencies (by blowing up the school Christmas tree, for instance).

Ulster American, Riverside Studios review - knockabout comedy with an acid bite

Monsters of ego clash in David Ireland's demolition of posturing theatre types

David Ireland’s Edinburgh Fringe hit Ulster American is essentially a play about a play that a Hollywood big name has been cast in by a leading English theatre director. Appropriately, it stars two actual Hollywood “big names”, Woody Harrelson and Andy Serkis, the latter seen here for once without motion-capture tags or prosthetics. Welcome back.