The Birthday Party, Harold Pinter Theatre review - starry cast create a stunning masterpiece

★★★★★ THE BIRTHDAY PARTY, HAROLD PINTER THEATRE Toby Jones, Zoë Wanamaker and co breathe vibrant new life into classic Pinter comedy of menace

Toby Jones, Zoë Wanamaker and co breathe vibrant new life into classic Pinter comedy of menace

Is modernism dead and buried? Anyone considering the long haul of Harold Pinter’s The Birthday Party from resounding flop in 1958 to West End crowd-pleasing classic today might be forgiven for wondering whether self-consciously difficult literary texts have had their day.

All's Well That Ends Well, Sam Wanamaker Playhouse review - feisty, prickly and topical, as well

★★★★ ALL'S WELL THAT ENDS WELL, SAM WANAMAKER PLAYHOUSE Feisty, prickly and topical, as well

Shakespeare problem play gets a spirited reading that chimes with our #metoo times

It's the people who are problematic, not the play. That's one take-away sentiment afforded by Caroline Byrne's sparky and provocative take on All's Well That Ends Well, that ever-peculiar Shakespeare "comedy" (really?) whose title is in ironic contrast to its emotional terrain.

Rita, Sue and Bob Too, Royal Court review - iconic 1980s title makes a welcome return

★★★★ RITA, SUE AND BOB TOO, ROYAL COURT Andrea Dunbar's Thatcher-era classic is invigorated afresh

Andrea Dunbar's Thatcher-era classic is invigorated afresh

The revival that almost didn't make it into town has got the Royal Court's 2018 mainstage offerings off to a rousing start. For a while, it looked as if this fresh appraisal of a benchmark 1982 Court title would close on the road, a casualty of the "metoo" campaign and charges of inappropriate behaviour that were brought against its original director, Max Stafford-Clark (himself a former Court artistic director).

Girl from the North Country, Noël Coward Theatre review - Bob Dylan fuels a dreamlike drama

★★★★ GIRL FROM THE NORTH COUNTRY Bob Dylan fuels a dreamlike drama

Conor McPherson's latest play is blowin' in the wind

The rolling stone is now at home in the West End, as Conor McPherson’s inimitable dramatic take on Bob Dylan transfers from the Old Vic, where it premiered last summer.

Cirque du Soleil - OVO, Royal Albert Hall review - fantastical creatures, heart-in-mouth thrills

★★★★ CIRQUE DU SOLEIL - OVO, ROYAL ALBERT HALL Fantastical creatures, heart-in-mouth thrills

Athleticism, daring feats, grace and visual poetry in Cirque's animal world exravaganza

For their eighth debut at the Royal Albert Hall, mesmerising French-Canadian performance art company Cirque du Soleil takes the audience on a journey into the world underfoot.

My Mum's a Twat, Royal Court review - Patsy Ferran shines in a solo play that looks back in anger

Autobiographical debut play is sprightly but sketchy, too

That ages-old dictum "write what you know" has given rise to the intriguingly titled My Mum's a Twat, in which the Royal Court's delightful head of press, Anoushka Warden, here turns first-time playwright, much as the Hampstead Theatre's then-press rep, Charlotte Eilenberg, did back in 2002.

Best of 2017: Theatre

BEST OF 2017: THEATRE Sondheim and Alexander Hamilton sang out, as did a bracing array of new plays

Sondheim and Alexander Hamilton sang out, as did a bracing array of new plays

Year-end wrap-ups function as both remembrances of things past and time capsules, attempts to preserve an experience to which audiences, for the most part, have said farewell.

Hamilton, Victoria Palace review - rich, radical and ridiculously exciting

★★★★★ HAMILTON, VICTORIA PALACE Lin-Manuel Miranda’s hugely anticipated hit musical is a massive achievement

Lin-Manuel Miranda’s hugely anticipated hit musical is a massive achievement

“Are you aware that we’re making history?” demands Alexander Hamilton in the show that has finally made the lesser-known Founding Father an international household name. And whether its creator, Lin-Manuel Miranda, knew it when he wrote that line or not, making history is, indeed, what Hamilton is doing. The acclaim has been pretty much universal, the hype inescapable: 11 Tonys, a Grammy and a Pulitzer; celebrity fandom, and tickets as white-hot as they are hard to get your hands on.

Titus Andronicus, RSC, Barbican review - blood will out

★★★ TITUS ANDRONICUS, RSC, BARBICAN Blood will out

A slick and youthful rendering of Shakespeare's goriest drama

Live theatre, eh? It had to happen. On press night a sound of what seemed to be snoring (the production’s really not dull) revealed, in the Barbican stalls, a collapse. About an hour in, a huge amount of blood is smeared over Titus Andronicus’s raped and mutilated daughter Lavinia (Hannah Morrish, pictured below with Sean Hart as Demetrius): hands lopped off, tongue cut out.

The Grinning Man, Trafalgar Studios review - cool puppets but too convoluted by half

★★ THE GRINNING MAN, TRAFALGAR STUDIOS Cool puppets but too convoluted by half

Visually alluring Victor Hugo rewrite needs to go back to the storyboard

These are challenging times for new British musicals. Following quickly on from a Pinocchio that ought to be way more joyful than it is, along comes The Grinning Man, a Victor Hugo-inspired musical first seen in autumn 2016 in Bristol.