Standing at the Sky's Edge, Gillian Lynne Theatre review - heartwarming Sheffield musical arrives in the West End

★★★★ STANDING AT THE SKY'S EDGE, GILLIAM LYNNE THEATRE Heartwarming Sheffield musical arrives in the West End

Olivier Award-winning musical offers a celebration of community and a stirring exploration of a brutalist building's history

Can there be anyone from Sheffield who has not seen Standing at the Sky’s Edge, possibly several times?

Cruel Intentions, The Other Palace review - uneasy vibes, hit tunes and sparkling staging

★★★ CRUEL INTENTIONS, THE OTHER PALACE Bad people do bad things, but bangers from Britney and co save the day 

Jukebox musical gets toes tapping, but the thrill of transgression ain't what it used to be

Transgression was so deliciously enticing. Back in the Eighties when I saw Les Liaisons Dangereuses in the West End on three occasions, life was simpler  or so us straight white men flattered ourselves to believe.

The Human Body, Donmar Warehouse review - Keeley Hawes and Jack Davenport excel in an intriguing staging

★★★★ THE HUMAN BODY, DONMAR Keeley Hawes and Jack Davenport excel in intriguing staging

Lucy Kirkwood’s latest mixes the birth of the NHS with a Brief Encounter-ish romance

Keeley Hawes onstage is something to look forward to, so rare are her appearances there. In Lucy Kirkwood’s new play, The Human Body, we are given a double treat: Hawes, plus her black and white screen image, projected all over the Donmar’s back wall from cameras roaming around the action.

Nachtland, Young Vic review - German black comedy brings uneasy humour and discomfiting relevance

★★★ NACHTLAND, YOUNG VIC Patrick Marber directs flawed but fascinating disquisition on the past's relevance to the present in art, politics and morality

Something to laugh at and plenty to think about in a tonally inconsistent 90 minutes

If Mark Twain thought that a German joke was no laughing matter, what would he make of a German comedy? 

Cable Street, Southwark Playhouse review - engaging new musical in an impressive staging

The rise of fascism in the 1930s East End is given a human face

Hot on the heels of Brigid Larmour’s updating of The Merchant of Venice to the East End in 1936, a spirited new musical across town at Southwark Playhouse is tackling the same topic: the impact of rising British fascism in the same era, culminating in the clash between locals with Oswald Mosley’s British Union of Fascists (BUF) on the streets of Bethnal Green.

Out of Season, Hampstead Theatre review - banter as bullying

★★★ OUT OF SEASON, HAMPSTEAD THEATRE Banter as bullying

New comedy about masculinity and music is predictable and clumsy

One island off the coast of Spain has more cultural oomph than all the rest put together. I’m talking about Ibiza, the sun-soaked, music-happy and drug-friendly paradise for anyone in their roaring luved-up twenties who wants a break that will fry their minds – and imprinting them with memories of sun, sex and ecstasy for years to come.

Shifters, Bush Theatre review - love will tear us apart again

★★★★ SHIFTERS, BUSH THEATRE Love will tear us apart again

New play about love and memory is exquisitely written and beautifully acted

For the past ten years, Black-British playwrights have been in the vanguard of innovation in the form and content of new writing. I’m thinking not only of writers with longer careers such as Roy Williams and debbie tucker green, but also of Inua Ellams, Arinzé Kene, Nathaniel Martello-White, Matilda Feyiṣayọ Ibini and Tyrell Williams.

The Merchant of Venice 1936, Criterion Theatre review - radical revamp with a passionate agenda

Tracy-Ann Oberman turns Shylock into a heroic Jewish anti-fascist

It’s an unhappy time to be staging Shakespeare’s problematic play, given its antisemitic content, so hats off to adaptor-director Brigid Larmour and actor Tracy-Ann Oberman for persevering with this updated version, now in the West End. Their ambition to make Shylock a female anti-fascist has been hard won, though.

The Big Life, Stratford East review - musical brings the joy and honours the past

★★★★ THE BIG LIFE, STRATFORD EAST Big-hearted musical brings joy and honours the past

Revived 20 years on, this Windrush musical lands differently, but is still wonderfully entertaining

Is there a healthier sound than that of laughter ringing round a theatre? 

There are plenty of opportunities to test that theory in Tinuke Craig’s riotous revival of The Big Life, two decades on from its first run at this very venue. Much has changed in that time, specifically the coming to light of the appalling mistreatment of the Windrush Generation at the hands of a callous, racist state. What might have felt then like an unnecessarily heavy-handed political undertow now feels, if anything, underplayed. 

Hir, Park Theatre review - incendiary production for Taylor Mac's rich absurdist family drama

★★★★ HIR, PARK THEATRE Incendiary production for Taylor Mac's rich absurdist family drama

Felicity Huffman, heading a superb cast, is a force of nature

In 2017, two years after Hir premiered, Taylor Mac was awarded a “Genius Grant” and nominated for a Pulitzer Prize for drama. The new production of Hir at the Park demonstrates why. It’s a rich, provocative piece about the ideas that drive us now, thrown into a blender and blitzed.