Half A Sixpence, Chichester Festival Theatre

HALF A SIXPENCE, CHICHESTER FESTIVAL THEATRE The Tommy Steele musical gets a triumphant, banjo-rehabilitating refresh

The Tommy Steele musical gets a triumphant, banjo-rehabilitating refresh

Watching Cameron Mackintosh’s joyful revision of this Sixties musical, it’s possible to believe for a moment that all the world needs now is love sweet love and a shit-ton of banjos. With a new book by Downton Abbey behemoth Julian Fellowes, new numbers by the pair behind hit musical Mary Poppins, and design that delights at every turn of the multi-revolve, Half A Sixpence seems destined to follow a flush of previous Chichester Festival musicals into the West End. It also puts vintage stars around the previously unknown name of Charlie Stemp.

Harry Potter and the Cursed Child, Palace Theatre

HARRY POTTER AND THE CURSED CHILD, PALACE THEATRE Does the continuing story of JK Rowling's witches and wizards work its magic onstage?

Does the continuing story of JK Rowling's witches and wizards work its magic onstage?

Harry Potter lives to see another day. The Hogwarts wizard has made his stage debut in Harry Potter and the Cursed Child, a two-part play that pushes JK Rowling’s world-beating franchise beyond the realm of fiction and film to embrace live action: the bespectacled boy has become an angsty grown-up, and London theatre is much the richer for it.

Jesus Christ Superstar, Regent's Park Open Air Theatre

JESUS CHRIST SUPERSTAR, REGENT'S PARK OPEN AIR THEATRE A classic musical reborn for a contemporary audience

A classic musical reborn for a contemporary audience

London’s West End may be the envy of the world, but when it comes to musicals the big-hitting theatres might have to up their game a bit if they’re to keep up with the city’s rival offerings. Compare the summer’s biggest opening, Aladdin (currently failing to pull a genie out of its bottle at the Prince Edward Theatre) with just a few of the current upstart alternatives: the cheeky and charming Bugsy Malone at the Lyric Hammersmith and the thoughtful Into The Woods at the Menier Chocolate Factory.

Some Girl(s), Park Theatre

SOME GIRL(S), PARK THEATRE Neil LaBute's masochistic odyssey is sporadically thought-provoking

Neil LaBute's masochistic odyssey is sporadically thought-provoking

Neil LaBute’s exercise in self-flagellation, first seen in 2005 and adapted for film in 2013, offers his familiar misanthropic take on the battle of the sexes. This one concerns Guy (Charles Dorfman), engaged to be married and embarking on a tour of ex-girlfriends across America – ostensibly to right wrongs, but murkier motives soon emerge.

Into the Woods, Menier Chocolate Factory

INTO THE WOODS, MENIER CHOCOLATE FACTORY Off Broadway transfer illuminates Sondheim's fairy tales anew

Off Broadway transfer illuminates Sondheim's fairy tales anew

"Children will listen," or so goes a lyric to one of the most heart-rending numbers in Into the Woods, the Stephen Sondheim/James Lapine musical that seems rarely to be long-absent from the British stage. And the great virtue of the Fiasco Theatre's approach to this of all Sondheim shows is that the company's childlike sense of play releases the abiding seriousness, even sorrow, of the piece afresh. 

Unreachable, Royal Court Theatre

LAST CHANCE TO SEE UNREACHABLE. Anthony Neilson's wild film comedy closes at the Royal Court on 6 Aug

Devised play about a film director's obsession almost loses the plot

There are obvious reasons why films about the theatre outnumber plays about the movie industry, but here’s a play that bucks that trend. Anthony Neilson’s latest drama is located on a film set somewhere distant, hot and challenging but doesn’t allow us so much as a peep at the local colour. Throughout the evening any potential view of the wider world is blocked on stage by those wheelie screens cinematographers use for bouncing light around. Their presence signals the theme of the play. 

The Stripper, St James Theatre

THE STRIPPER, ST JAMES THEATRE A musical take on pulp noir is frustratingly uneven

A musical take on pulp noir is frustratingly uneven

Womanising detectives, shapely dames, gangsters and convoluted criminal conspiracies: Richard O’Brien and Richard Hartley’s 1982 musical take on Carter Brown’s California-set whodunit fiction is pulp noir to the max. However, unlike the pair’s previous collaboration, the indelible Rocky Horror Show, this is more homage than send-up – arch but fairly straightforward storytelling in place of riotous, risqué pastiche.

Bugsy Malone, Lyric Hammersmith

BUGSY MALONE, LYRIC HAMMERSMITH Generation-bridging joy with the return of the mobster musical pastiche

Generation-bridging joy with the return of the mobster musical pastiche

For those in sore need of a theatrical pick-me-up, jazz square your way over to Bugsy Malone. Last year’s smash-hit opener of the redeveloped Lyric has been given a well-deserved encore, with Sean Holmes’s production once again nailing the beguiling blend of Alan Parker’s 1976 film: children performing musical mobster pastiche, smartly knowing in their deconstruction of adult absurdities, but sidestepping cloying precocity.

Faith Healer, Donmar Warehouse

★★★★★ FAITH HEALER, DONMAR WAREHOUSE Friel revival is brilliantly acted and utterly compelling

Revival of Brian Friel’s 1979 classic is brilliantly acted and utterly compelling

Oh dear. I could have sworn I had a book about Irish playwright Brian Friel somewhere. But I can’t find it. Or maybe I never bought it. Maybe I just thought I might have bought it. Maybe it’s a false memory. Better ask my wife. Now at least I’m in the zone, that place called ambiguity that is, aptly enough, one of the characteristics of Friel’s 1979 play, Faith Healer, which is being revived with a starry cast at this boutique venue. With its themes of miracle cures, bitter exile and fallible memory, this tale is as resonant as ever.

As You Like It, The Savill Garden, Windsor

AS YOU LIKE IT, THE SAVILL GARDEN, WINDSOR All the garden's a stage for an appealing Shakespeare staging of romance and spectacle

All the garden's a stage for an appealing Shakespeare staging of romance and spectacle

How often are you charmed by one of Shakespeare’s sylvan romances while literally under a greenwood tree? Even if this summer is proving rather generous with the rough weather, it is an unusual pleasure to wander around a fine woodland garden while Rosalind and Orlando pursue their light-hearted crossdressing courtship in the forest of Arden, and white sheets inked with bad love poems flutter from the trunks of many oak trees.