A Woman of No Importance, Vaudeville - Eve Best is superb as a woman scorned

★★★★ A WOMAN OF NO IMPORTANCE, VAUDEVILLE Eve Best is superb as a woman scorned

Dominic Dromgoole's Oscar Wilde seasons opens with a winner

In a rather clever wheeze, Dominic Dromgoole, former artistic director of Shakespeare's Globe – who therefore knows a thing or two about historically accurate stagings – has established Classic Spring, a new company dedicated to celebrating work by “proscenium playwrights” and staging their plays in the theatres they were written for.

David Oakes: 'I haven’t done anything as bad as my characters'

INTERVIEW - DAVID OAKES 'I haven’t done anything as bad as my characters'

The actor stars opposite Natalie Dormer in Venus in Fur. Why is he always exploring the dark side?

“He has something of Dillane about him.” Thus Patrick Marber on David Oakes. “I rate him very highly indeed. One of the very best of his generation.” Audiences at the Theatre Royal Haymarket will be able to judge for themselves this autumn. Oakes, 34, stars opposite Natalie Dormer in Marber’s production of Venus in Fur, a sizzling two-hander by David Ives.

Beginning, National Theatre review - assured, intimate, but short of surprises

★★★ BEGINNING, NATIONAL THEATRE Assured, intimate, but short of surprises

David Eldridge's wry-warm two-hander on the unsexy side of singledom

Loneliness: in the age of the digital hook-up and the flaunting narcissism of social media, it’s become a strange sort of taboo – a secret shame, the unsexy side of singledom. So it’s good to see playwright David Eldridge putting it centre-stage in this tender, pleasingly unsentimental two-hander.

The Seagull, Lyric Hammersmith review – is Lesley Sharp's Irina a sex addict?

★★★ THE SEAGULL, LYRIC HAMMERSMITH Chekhov's classic updates entertainingly, if lopsidedly, as a play for today

Chekhov's classic bird updates entertainingly, even if lopsidedly, as a play for today

The awful mother, the celebrity-obsessed teenager, the mediocre old writer who wants some young sex in his life – there are motifs in Chekhov’s The Seagull that fly merrily from one century to another, and Simon Stephens and Sean Holmes’ new modern-dress update for the Lyric, starring Lesley Sharp, is fresh and acco

The Busy World Is Hushed, Finborough Theatre review - new play puts the G-word centre stage

Religious faith, family tragedy and gay love make an unholy trinity in this European premiere

God makes few appearances at the modern playhouse – so few that the Finborough Theatre saw fit to print a glossary in the programme for its latest production. What begins with Agnostic, Annunciation and Aramaic runs all the way to Spirit Guide, Utopia and Vespers, which gives some idea of the breadth of reference to be found in this tightly constructed three-hander by New York writer Keith Bunin.

Young Frankenstein review - Mel Brooks musical is blissfully bonkers

★★★★ YOUNG FRANKENSTEIN Mel Brooks musical is blissfully bonkers

Broadway misfire finds chuckles aplenty, and a heart, at the Garrick Theatre

What a difference an ocean and a change of scale can make. When I saw the Mel Brooks musical Young Frankenstein on Broadway a decade ago, the show seemed to take its cue from the lumbering monster contained within it, who stutters and sputters before eventually being kickstarted into something resembling life.

Saint George and the Dragon, National Theatre review – a modern folk tale in the Olivier

★★★ SAINT GEORGE AND THE DRAGON, NATIONAL THEATRE A modern folk tale in the Olivier

England’s patron saint travels through time to demonstrate changing views of heroism

Bold and fearless are adjectives that might describe playwright Rory Mullarkey as accurately as any chivalrous knight. He made his name in 2013 when, at the age of 25, his play Cannibals, part of which was in Russian, took to the main stage at the Manchester Royal Exchange and went on to win the James Tait Black Prize. He has written opera libretti, a play about revolution for the Royal Court, The Wolf from the Door, and a version of The Oresteia for the Globe.

'I come from there': how the Royal Court brought home plays from Ukraine, Chile and Syria

'I COME FROM THERE' Elyse Dodgson on the Royal Court bringing drama from Ukraine, Chile, Syria

The Court's international director explores the roots of this autumn's international season

The autumn season of plays at the Royal Court leads with international work. B by Guillermo Calderón (from Chile), Bad Roads by Natal'ya Vorozhbit (from Ukraine) and Goats by Liwaa Yazji (from Syria) have a long history with our international department. We probably have to go back over a decade to look at the seeds of this work and the connections they have to one another and to each of us.

THE ROAD TO BAD ROAD

Nikki Amuka-Bird interview: 'There’s huge enthusiasm among actors of colour'

Ibsen hits the Caribbean in 'The Lady from the Sea' at the Donmar. Its star explains

Nikki Amuka-Bird spent the summer in Antigua, swimming and scuba diving and could have claimed to be working. She is playing Ellida in Ibsen’s The Lady from the Sea at the Donmar, in a version directed by Kwame Kwei-Armah transposed to the Caribbean.

Heisenberg: The Uncertainty Principle, Wyndham’s Theatre review – paradoxically predictable

★★★ HEISENBERG: THE UNCERTAINTY PRINCIPLE, WYNDHAM'S THEATRE Anne-Marie Duff and Kenneth Cranham in unconvincing rom-com

Anne-Marie Duff and Kenneth Cranham in unconvincing rom-com

Playwright Simon Stephens and director Marianne Elliott are hyped as a winning partnership. Their previous collaborations include The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time, a massive Olivier award-winning hit, and her sensitive revival of his early play, Port, at the National Theatre.