Aladdin, Richmond Theatre review - great Dame, weak script

★★★ ALADDIN, RICHMOND THEATRE Great Dame, weak script

Christopher Biggins is back in gorgeous frocks

It's always good news when Christopher Biggins announces he's going to don false bosoms again to play a panto Dame, and Aladdin offers lots of frock action in the role of Widow Twankey, Aladdin's washer-woman mum. So hopes were high for this show, which also stars Count Arthur Strong as Emperor Ming.

The Jungle, Young Vic review - physically and emotionally challenging

★★★★ THE JUNGLE, YOUNG VIC Physically and emotionally challenging

New play about refugee camp life in Calais is a gruelling docu-drama

Refugees, it is said, have no nationality – they are all individuals. This new docu-drama, deftly put together by theatre-makers Joe Murphy and Joe Robertson, is a sombre account of a couple of recent years of the great European migration crisis, and acts as a testament to the individuality and complexity of the refugee experience.

Pinocchio, National Theatre review - boy puppet lifts off, eventually

★★★ PINOCCHIO, NATIONAL THEATRE Look no strings: long-nosed cartoon character is humanised by a magical staging

Look no strings: long-nosed cartoon character is humanised by a magical staging

From Nicholas Hytner and Alan Bennett’s wonderfully nostalgic version of The Wind in the Willows through Coram Boy, the international smash hit War Horse and beyond, the National Theatre has a startling track record in turning what used to be patronisingly regarded as “family shows” into first-rate theatre.

Belleville, Donmar Warehouse review - prickly and unnerving

★★★★ BELLEVILLE, DONMAR WAREHOUSE Imogen Poots and James Norton in terrific form as American expats living on the edge

Imogen Poots and James Norton in terrific form as American expats living on the edge

The city of love provides a backdrop for marital discord and worse in Belleville, Amy Herzog's celebrated Off Broadway play now receiving a riveting British premiere at the Donmar.

Jack and the Beanstalk, New Wimbledon Theatre review - Al Murray's panto debut

★★★ JACK AND THE BEANSTALK, NEW WIMBLEDON THEATRE Al Murray's panto debut

Less than the sum of its parts

It raised some eyebrows when Al Murray announced he was to make his pantomime debut – top comics rarely make that crossover these days – but, considering his alter ego The Pub Landlord is already an over-the-top creation, the character fits right into this production.

Julius Caesar, RSC, Barbican review - Roman bromance plays straight

★★★★ JULIUS CAESAR, RSC, BARBICAN Roman bromance plays straight

Angus Jackson's traditional staging opens the the Rome MMXVII season

Even more than some of Shakespeare’s other histories, Julius Caesar inevitably offers itself to “topical interpretation”, a Rorschach test of a play which directors short of an original idea can extrapolate to project their own political aperçus upon. Over the last century, Ancient Rome’s most famous autocrat has been endlessly re-spun as a leery dictator of the modern totalitarian variety.

Misalliance, Orange Tree Theatre review - smashing Edwardian comedy is a festive treat

Bernard Shaw curio gets its first major London revival in 30 years

If this play really were “A Debate in One Sitting” as its author called it in 1909, it would have sunk without trace. “Talk, talk, talk, talk”, complains Hypatia Tarleton (Marli Siu), daughter of an Edwardian underwear magnate. Sick to death of the menfolk talking at her and over her, she longs to be “an active verb”, and we sympathise.

Antony and Cleopatra, RSC, Barbican review - rising grandeur

★★★★ ANTONY AND CLEOPATRA, RSC, BARBICAN Steady production reaches glory

Coquetry and tragic command not quite balanced, but this steady RSC production reaches glory

Is there a key to “infinite variety”? The challenge of Cleopatra is to convey the sheer fullness of the role, the sense that it defines, and is defined by only itself: there’s no saying that the glorious tragedy of the closing plays itself out, of course, but its impact surely soars only when the ludic engagements of the first half have drawn us in equally.

Cell Mates, Hampstead Theatre review - intriguing yet opaque

★★★ CELL MATES, HAMPSTEAD THEATRE Intriguing yet opaque

Simon Gray play is better served by its cast this time round

The play that famously got away when one of its stars (quite literally) jumped ship is back. In 1995, Stephen Fry abandoned the West End premiere of Simon Gray's espionage drama Cell Mates, leaving co-star Rik Mayall in the lurch and prompting Gray to write a particularly dyspeptic account of the bizarre goings-on called Fat Chance.