Richard III review - Temple Church venue is the star of the show

★★★ RICHARD III The Richard III Society needn't worry - more humour than menace here

The Richard III Society needn't worry - more humour than menace here

Temple Church gained worldwide fame when Dan Brown included a major plot point there in his mega-selling novel The Da Vinci Code in 2003, but it has been standing, minding its own business, since the late 12th century. Now it’s home for a short run of Antic Disposition’s Richard III, following a tour of several UK cathedrals – including, controversially, Leicester, where the king's skeleton was reinterred in 2015 after being discovered in a nearby car park.

Late Company, Trafalgar Studios review - visceral production of Jordan Tannahill's lean, pained drama

★★★★ LATE COMPANY Young playwright's drama dissects a family tragedy in starkest terms

Family trauma stripped back to the barest bones

Canadian playwright Jordan Tannahill wrote Late Company when he was only 23. It would be an impressive achievement at any age, but it seems all the more remarkable that so stark a dissection of the consequences of a tragedy should have come from so young a writer. Written in 2013, it was his fifth play.

Loot, Park Theatre review – dizzyingly enjoyable

★★★★ LOOT Anniversary revival of Joe Orton’s black farce is a delight from start to finish

Anniversary revival of Joe Orton’s farce is a delight from start to finish

Fifty years ago this month, playwright Joe Orton was murdered by his lover Kenneth Halliwell. His debut play, Entertaining Mr Sloane, had both outraged and delighted West End audiences in 1964, and his follow-up a year later was Loot, which was a flop at first and then a hit when restaged in 1966. This is the show currently being revived at the Park Theatre in a production which restores some of the lines cut by the Lord Chamberlain.

Knives in Hens, Donmar Warehouse review – Yaël Farber not symbolic enough

★★★ KNIVES IN HENS, DONMAR WAREHOUSE The star director’s revival of a Nineties classic is atmospheric but unconvincing

The star director’s revival of a Nineties classic is atmospheric but unconvincing

Hark, is that the call of the earth I hear? In a frenetic urban world, the myth of rural simplicity exerts a strong pull. Surely a simpler life is possible; a more natural rhythm and a slower pace? Oh yes, I can smell burnt peat, and almost scent the deep ploughed soil and farmyard animals, as I walk into the Donmar Warehouse for this dark revival of David Harrower’s 1995 masterpiece, Knives in Hens, directed this time by Yaël Farber.

Against, Almeida Theatre review - Ben Whishaw is a modern-day Jesus

AGAINST, ALMEIDA THEATRE Baggy but brilliant new American drama starring Ben Whishaw

New American drama about God and violence is baggy, but often brilliant

Luke is a Silicon Valley billionaire, a high-tech wizard. And he’s just had a message from God. And what does God say? Well, He says, “Go where there’s violence.” So what does Luke do? He does what he’s been told, and devotes his considerable intellect and his even more considerable resources to solving the problem of violence in our society.

King Lear, Shakespeare's Globe - Nancy Meckler's Globe debut is unusually subdued

★★ KING LEAR, SHAKESPEARE'S GLOBE Kevin R McNally stars in a tragedy so quiet it proves almost inaudible at times

Kevin R McNally stars in a tragedy so quiet it proves almost inaudible at times

Every play is a Brexit play. This much we have learnt in the year since the referendum. But in Nancy Meckler’s hands the Globe’s new King Lear becomes the Brexit play – an unpicking of intergenerational responsibility and difference, of philosophies of power and governance, tackling above all that sticky question of what the old really owe the young.