Our Lady of Kibeho, Theatre Royal Stratford East review - heaven and hell in Rwandan visions

★★★★ OUR LADY OF KIBEHO, THEATRE ROYAL STRATFORD EAST Heaven and hell in Rwandan visions

Questions of faith in Katori Hall’s luminous meditation on belief, doubt and miracles

The American dramatist Katori Hall has created a work of rare accomplishment in Our Lady of Kibeho, a play that combines a beautifully established picture of a particular world – a church school in rural Rwanda, in the early 1980s – with profound themes such as faith and belief.

Hail Satan? review - the detail of the devil

★★★★ HAIL SATAN? The detail of the devil

Documentary reveals the comedy and politics of America's satanists

As Penny Lane’s documentary shows, America and Satanism have a long history. From the Salem Witch trials to the moral panic triggered by the Manson murders and films like William Friedkin’s The Exorcist in the 1970s, mass panic in America of the occult is nothing new.

Jesus Christ Superstar, Barbican review - Andrew Lloyd Webber's musical lives again

★★★★ JESUS CHRIST SUPERSTAR, BARBICAN Andrew Lloyd Webber's musical lives again

The Regent's Park revival is just as spectacular indoors

Andrew Lloyd Webber and Tim Rice’s 1970 musical had a heavenly resurrection at Regent’s Park Open Air Theatre three years ago, with an encore run the following summer.

Mike Jay: Mescaline - A Global History of the First Psychedelic review - multiple perspectives

★★★ MIKE JAY: MESCALINE - A GLOBAL HISTORY OF THE FIRST PSYCHEDELIC Multiple perspectives

Thoroughly researched book is strong on drug's social significance

Humans have been consuming mescaline for millennia. The hallucinogenic alkaloid occurs naturally in a variety of cacti native to South America and the southern United States, the most well known of which are the diminutive peyote and the distinctively tubular San Pedro.

Brockes-Passion, AAM, Egarr, Barbican review - fleshly Handel for our earthbound times

★★★★ BROCKES-PASSION, BARBICAN Neglected Handel offers a seasonal alternative to Bach

Neglected oratorio offers a seasonal alternative to Bach

Whips, scourges, sinews, blood and pus: where Bach’s two Passions lament from a contemplative distance, Handel’s plunges right to the bone, to the cruel, tortured death that is the heart of the Easter story.

Fleabag, Series 2 finale, BBC Three review - Phoebe Waller-Bridge's miraculous situation tragedy

★★★★ FLEABAG, SERIES 2 FINALE Tear-jerking farewell to a towering dramatic creation

Tear-jerking farewell to a towering dramatic creation

The problem with Fleabag (BBC Three/BBC One) is that it makes almost all television look pedestrian. It’s like the difference between Fleabag’s scummily inadequate boyfriends and the unattainable perfection embodied by the cool sweary priest. Earth vs heaven. Water/wine. And now it is gone.

Pah-La, Royal Court review - complex ideas, wild storytelling

★★★ PAH-LA, ROYAL COURT Complex ideas, wild storytelling

New play about the freedom struggle in Tibet is a bit too unclear for its own good

Theatre can give a voice to the voiceless – but at what cost? Abhishek Majumdar, who debuted at the Royal Court in 2013 with The Djinns of Eidgah – about the situation in Kashmir – returns with his latest play, Pah-La.