The Tyler Sisters, Hampstead Theatre Downstairs review – raucous celebration of sisterhood

★★★★ THE TYLER SISTERS, HAMPSTEAD THEATRE DOWNSTAIRS Raucous celebration of sisterhood

Quick-witted new play tackles a sibling bond in snapshots over 40 years

The Tyler sisters start as they mean to go on: bickering. Middle sister Gail (Bryony Hannah) has come home from uni to find that youngest Katrina (Angela Griffin) has stolen her room. “What about Maddy’s? Why didn’t you take that?” Gail snaps. “She’s in it,” Katrina points out. “I am in it, to be fair,” confirms eldest Maddy (Caroline Faber), trying her best not to take sides. “I am actually in it.”

Celebrating the musicals of Jerry Herman (1931-2019)

JERRY HERMAN (1931-2019) The legacy of an immortal lyricist and composer

An immortal lyricist and composer leaves us plenty to be joyful about

How is it that, in the nearly 900 pages of Sondheim's collected lyrics with extensive comments Finishing the Hat and Look, I Made a Hat, with numerous special boxes celebrating other composers and lyricists, he managed to mention Jerry Herman only once, and in passing?

Best of 2019: Theatre

BEST OF 2019: THEATRE The classics got a shake-up, while provocative new writing came mostly from America

The classics got a shake-up, while provocative new writing came mostly from America

Political dysfunction and societal distress led many amongst us to the brink this year, so where better than the theatre to find succour if not always solace in the abundantly thoughtful offerings of a creative community as often as not working at full tilt?

Girl From The North Country, Gielgud Theatre review – poignant collaboration between Conor McPherson and Bob Dylan

★★★ GIRL FROM THE NORTH COUNTRY, GIELGUD THEATRE Poignant collaboration between Conor McPherson & Bob Dylan

Raw depiction of a community where dreams go to die

Despair hangs like mildew over the small iron-ore mining town of Duluth, Minnesota, where dreams go to die, and the living haunt the clapped-out buildings like lost souls.

Peter Pan Goes Wrong, Alexandra Palace Theatre review - JM Barrie's classic as you have never seen it before

★★★★ PETER PAN GOES WRONG, ALEXANDRA PALACE THEATRE Mischief Theatre play Barrie as farce

Mischief Theatre with another enjoyable farce

Mischief Theatre is a wonder of modern commercial theatre. In 2008, a group of young actors who had met at drama school started the ensemble – writing, producing, directing and performing their own work.

Curtains, Wyndham's Theatre review - unexpectedly giddy fun

★★★★ CURTAINS, WYNDHAM'S THEATRE Unexpectedly giddy fun

Late-arrival to the West End is broad, brash - and delightful

Who knew? This West End premiere of the 2007 Broadway entry from the legendary songwriting team of John Kander and Fred Ebb (Chicago, Cabaret) secured a prime holiday-season slot at the last minute when this playhouse's previous entry, The Man in the White Suit, closed prematurely.

Snowflake, Kiln Theatre review - strong but clumsy generational war

★★★ SNOWFLAKE, KILN THEATRE Mike Bartlett's Christmas cracker goes with a bang - eventually

Mike Bartlett's Christmas cracker goes with a bang - eventually

The prolific Mike Bartlett – from whose pen have leapt television series such as Doctor Foster and Press, as well as stage hits such as King Charles III – has two things to celebrate tonight. On ITV his new three-part psychological drama, Sticks and Stones, begins, and this is also the opening night of his new play at the Kiln.

Swive, Shakespeare's Globe review – pacy, dagger-sharp rewriting of history

★★★★ SWIVE, SAM WANAMAKER PLAYHOUSE Pacy, dagger-sharp rewriting of history

An interrogation of power, womanhood and the mythologies with which we surround ourselves

History has corseted Elizabeth I with the title of “Virgin Queen” for centuries, but in Ella Hickson’s laceratingly witty new play she is revealed as nothing less than a lioness on a hot tin roof. In this pacy, dagger-sharp production we watch Elizabeth asses the dangers and contradictions of her inheritance, before ruthlessly reinventing herself so that she will not fall victim to the court’s deadly political undercurrents.   

Teenage Dick, Donmar Warehouse review - a fearlessly acted, well-intentioned mess

★★★ TEENAGE DICK, DONMAR WAREHOUSE A fearlessly acted, well-intentioned mess

Mike Lew's riff on Shakespeare needs more art to go with its heart

If good intentions were everything, Teenage Dick would be the play of the year. As it is, this British premiere at the Donmar of an Off Broadway entry from summer 2018 grants centre-stage, and not before time, to two disabled actors, one of whom  the mesmerically fearless Daniel Monks  plays the Shakespeare-inspired figure of the title.

A Kind of People, Royal Court review - multiculturalism falls apart

Family tragedy is emotionally powerful but incomplete and unsatisfying

The trouble with prejudice is that you can't control how other people see you. At the start of her career, playwright Gurpreet Kaur Bhatti's work was set in her own Sikh community. But, like other playwrights from similar backgrounds, she has tended to be pigeonholed in the category of "Asian playwright", and expected to write about clichéd subjects such as arranged marriage or religion.