True West, Vaudeville Theatre review - sizzling take on seminal Sam Shepard

★★★★ TRUE WEST, VAUDEVILLE THEATRE Sizzling take on seminal Sam Shepard

Kit Harington and Johnny Flynn go hell for leather as savagery-prone siblings

Don't be deceived by Kit Harington's matted, slicked-back hair that is immediately visible the minute the audience enters the boisterous West End revival of True West. By the time the director Matthew Dunster's production has roared to a close two hours later, pretty much nothing is still intact, its leading man's locks included. That's as it should be with Sam Shepard's now-iconic 1980 play that I actually saw somewhat by chance during its world premiere engagement in San Francisco in 1980 and have returned to many times since. 

Fiddler on the Roof, Menier Chocolate Factory review - family matters in this sensitive musical revival

★★★★ FIDDLER ON THE ROOF, MENIER CHOCOLATE FACTORY A soulful seasonal outing

Trevor Nunn's intimate staging provides a soulful seasonal outing

There’s a welcome alternative to panto hijinks in this gem of a Trevor Nunn musical revival – more attuned to the biting hardships of winter, and to the elegiac aspect of change, than to festive jollies. Which is not to say that there isn’t rousing fun to be had in many a slick set-piece, but this intimate, sensitive staging brings out the work’s soul, particularly its timeless call for empathy and compassion.

Hole, Royal Court review - anger is not quite enough

★★★ HOLE, ROYAL COURT Anger is not quite enough

Short new play from actor Ellie Kendrick is full of ferocity, but lacks originality

Actor Ellie Kendrick is a familiar face on television, but it's only as a writer that she reveals the depth of her rage against the world. At least, that's what it feels like. After starring in the BBC's The Diary of Anne Frank while still at school, she's gone on to act in Game of Thrones, Vanity Fair and Mike Bartlett's Press, a BBC series where she played the junior reporter on the Guardian-style daily paper.

Ralegh: the Treason Trial, Sam Wanamaker Playhouse review - gripping verbatim court case

★★★ RALEGH: THE TREASON TRIAL, SAM WANAMAKER PLAYHOUSE Gripping verbatim drama

Jacobean and contemporary justice collide in audience-involving drama

Forget the cloak in the puddle. Never mind potatoes and tobacco. The children's book cliché of Sir Walter Raleigh (or Ralegh as he seems to have preferred in an age of changeable spelling) represents little of the real man and is at best misleading. The cloak incident was a later invention and potatoes and tobacco were already known before Ralegh's adventures in the New World. He did, however, popularise the smoking of tobacco at court.

Dick Whittington, Lyric Hammersmith review - big-hearted fun

★★★ DICK WHITTINGTON, LYRIC HAMMERSMITH Big-hearted fun

Dick jokes in abundance told in urban street style pantomime

In 2009 Sean Holmes, then Lyric Hammersmith's artistic director, made a bold move by reintroducing panto at the lovely Frank Matcham house after a long break. It was a box-office and critical hit, bringing in young audiences and celebrating the theatre's roots in the community while producing a quality but unstarry show. This year's offering, Dick Whittington, written by Jude Christian (who also directs) and Cariad Lloyd, remains true to the theatre's urban street style of storytelling.

Summer and Smoke, Duke of York's Theatre review – Patsy Ferran's remarkable performance

★★★★★ SUMMER AND SMOKE, DUKE OF YORK'S THEATRE Patsy Ferran's remarkable performance

West End transfer from the Almeida retains pressure-cooker intensity

This production of Tennessee Williams’ neglected classic, Summer and Smoke, arrives from the Almeida into the West End with five-star plaudits for its pitch-perfect performances and pressure-cooker intensity.

Dietrich: Natural Duty, Wilton's Music Hall review - elegy for one

★★★★ DIETRICH: NATURAL DUTY, WILTON'S MUSIC HALL Elegy for one

Poignant take on Captain Marlene in the Second World War

Getting the look right is half the battle: in that, Peter Groom's one-time-Captain Marlene Dietrich is a winner from the start. The looks at the audience nail it too, heavy-lidded and lashed but transfixing, charismatic, winning instant complicity. As with all the best one-(wo)man cabaret-style shows, though, this is no mere impersonation.

Macbeth, Shakespeare's Globe review - sexually-charged production draws power from the shadows

★★★★ MACBETH, SHAKESPEARE'S GLOBE Daring counterintuitive reading is richly rewarding

A daring counterintuitive reading proves richly rewarding

Macbeth has rarely seemed quite as metrosexual as in this gorgeous shadow-painted production that marks Globe artistic director Michelle Terry’s first production in the Sam Wanamaker theatre.

Hadestown, National Theatre review - new folk musical is hotter than hell

★★★★ HADESTOWN, NATIONAL THEATRE New folk musical is hotter than hell

An alternative take on a classic myth produces sizzling results

The road to full musical theatre production has been a long one for Hadestown. It began back in 2006, with Anaïs Mitchell’s song cycle – a folk/jazz take on the Orpheus and Eurydice myth – toured around Vermont in a school bus, then grew into an ecstatically received concept album in 2010, and has gone through further development with director Rachel Chavkin in Off-Broadway and Canadian stagings.

Pinters Three and Four, Harold Pinter Theatre review - double bill boasts double acts to treasure

PINTERS THREE AND FOUR, HAROLD PINTER THEATRE Double-bill boasts double-acts to treasure

The Pinter season continues, this time in largely comic form

The West End is specialising in two-parters of late. To Imperium and The Inheritance we can add the latest duo of Harold Pinter one-acts that has opened in time to spread ripples of delight even as the nights draw in. "Delight", you may well ask  from this of all sombre and murky dramatists?