Anahera, Finborough Theatre review - blistering family drama from New Zealand

★★★ ANAHERA, FINBOROUGH THEATRE Blistering family drama from New Zealand

A runaway child precipitates a cascade of questions with unintended consequences

With power comes responsibility. One without the other is sickening -- and both iterations are on show in Emma Kinane's searing new play about a child runaway in New Zealand. 

A Very Expensive Poison, Old Vic review – bold evocation of a post-truth world

★★★★★ A VERY EXPENSIVE POISON, OLD VIC Bold evocation of a post-truth world

The evening is as devastatingly moving as it is bitingly funny

If Russia is, as Winston Churchill once so memorably said, “a riddle, wrapped inside a mystery, wrapped inside an enigma”, then this play is an outrage, wrapped inside a farce, framed by a bittersweet love story.

Total Immediate Collective Imminent Terrestrial Salvation, Royal Court review - brilliant meta-theatrical experience

★★★★★ TOTAL IMMEDIATE COLLECTIVE IMMINENT TERRESTRIAL SALVATION, ROYAL COURT Brilliant meta-theatrical experience

Experimental exploration of belief and determinism is touched by genius

Playwright and performer Tim Crouch is one of Britain's most innovative creatives, with a big back catalogue of challenging and stimulating stage work. Typically he tells stories about profound loss, while simultaneously questioning the basis of theatrical representation: how is what we see on stage true? In what way is it real? And how can you tell?

Falsettos, The Other Palace review - affecting search for the new normal

★★★★ FALSETTOS, THE OTHER PLACE Affecting search for the new normal

This ambitious musical tackles the changing forms of family, romance and faith

William Finn and James Lapine’s musical – which combines two linked one-acts, March of the Falsettos and Falsettoland, set in late 1970s/early 1980s New York – picked up Tony Awards in 1992 for its book and score, and was nominated again in 2

Hansard, National Theatre review - starry argument ends poorly

★★★ HANSARD, NATIONAL THEATRE Starry argument ends poorly

Debut play about the parliamentary ruling class is timely, but ultimately unsatisfying

In the current feverish atmosphere at Westminster, with arguments about Brexit becoming increasingly shrill, the time is right once more for political theatre: serious plays about serious issues. Oddly enough, however, while television has effectively dramatized the current crisis, in films such as Channel 4's Brexit: The Uncivil War, theatre seems to take a more oblique approach by setting its stories in the past.

The Son, Duke of York's Theatre review - a piercing drama of depression

★★★★ THE SON, DUKE OF YORK'S THEATRE Piercing drama of depression

Florian Zeller’s play of family anguish receives a much-deserved West End transfer

A tale of teenage depression and its family resonances, Florian Zeller’s The Son has a devastating simplicity. It’s the final part of a loose trilogy, following on from the playwright’s The Father and The Mother, but the new play eschews the obliquely experimental structure of its predecessors for something much more direct.

Bartholomew Fair, Sam Wanamaker Playhouse review - Jonson's chaotic slice of 17th-century life

★★★ BARTHOLOMEW FAIR, SAM WANAMAKER PLAYHOUSE Jonson's chaotic 17th-century life

Jacobean comedy gets a rare outing

It was a bold choice by director Blanche McIntyre to stage Ben Jonson's seldom performed, sprawling slice-of-life play in the bijou Sam Wanamaker Playhouse rather than Shakespeare's Globe's main stage – even if she has pared down both the script and what seems like a cast of thousands for her modern-dress production.

Fleabag, Wyndham's Theatre review - superb swansong for modern classic

★★★★★ FLEABAG, WYNDHAM'S Final outing for Phoebe Waller-Bridge as her iconic creation

Final outing for Phoebe Waller-Bridge as her iconic creation

We're saying goodbye to a much treasured friend. Fleabag will live on, of course – other actresses have and will inhabit the role – but Phoebe Waller-Bridge, its creator, has said this short run at Wyndham's Theatre is the last time she will perform the character on stage.

The Secret River, National Theatre review - turbulent tale of Australia's past

★★★★ THE SECRET RIVER, NATIONAL THEATRE Turbulent tale of Australia's past

A resonant tragedy of mutual incomprehension, fresh from the Edinburgh Festival

Neil Armfield’s resonant, turbulent production of Kate Grenville’s classic Australian novel The Secret River sing out from the stage of the Olivier like an epic, with its conflicts, culture clashes, and quest for new territories.

Appropriate, Donmar Warehouse review - fraught family reunion blisteringly told

★★★★ APPROPRIATE, DONMAR WAREHOUSE Fraught family reunion blisteringly told

Branden Jacobs-Jenkins’s 2013 play is tensely dark, as well as very funny

You can’t fail to feel the ghosts in Appropriate at the Donmar Warehouse: they are there in the very timbers of the ancient Southern plantation house that is the setting for Branden Jacobs-Jenkins’s fraught – and often very funny – family drama.