Samuel Takes a Break... in Male Dungeon No. 5 after a long but generally successful day of tours, The Yard Theatre review - funny and thought-provoking

'We don't use the word slave round here' - 21st century tourism skewered

You do not need to be Einstein to feel it. If the only dimension missing is time, 75% of a place’s identity can invade your very being, hollow you out, replace your soul with a void. It happened to me at Auschwitz and it’s happening to Samuel at Cape Coast Castle, Ghana.

Not at first. We meet him as our host, full of bonhomie, not just reading his script, but revelling in communicating his love of history to the tourists who come to the last staging post for slaves before the dreadful Middle Passage to the Americas. 

King Lear, Almeida Theatre review - Danny Sapani dazzles in this spartan tragedy

★★★★ KING LEAR, ALMEIDA THEATRE Danny Sapani dazzles in this spartan tragedy

Yaël Farber presents Shakespeare’s blistering play with bravura

Less than three years after her magnificent Macbeth, Yaël Farber returns to the Almeida with another Shakespeare tragedy. Her take on King Lear (main picture) offers a full-bodied, slow-burn version of this devastating drama, where Danny Sapani’s masterful performance as Lear sears the stage.

Hadestown, Lyric Theatre review - soul-stirring musical gloriously revamps classical myths

★★★★ HADESTOWN, LYRIC THEATRE Soul-stirring musical gloriously revamps classical myths

Tony-winning production lands in the West End with an astounding cast

Doom and gloom, we are told, may have abounded in the classical underworld, but Hadestown suggests otherwise. Returning to London five years after its run at the National Theatre, this time with a slew of Tony Awards, this bracing musical proves its mettle as a heart-warming and atmospheric feast of deeply soulful tunes.

An Enemy of the People, Duke of York's Theatre - performative and predictable

★★ AN ENEMY OF THE PEOPLE, DUKE OF YORK'S Performative and predictable

Matt Smith gives his all in unyielding adaptation of Ibsen morality play

Real life is a helluva lot scarier right now than you might guess from the performative theatrics on display in the new West End version of An Enemy of the People, which updates Ibsen's 1882 play to our vexatious modern day.

Double Feature, Hampstead Theatre review - with directors like these, who needs enemies

★★★★ DOUBLE FEATURE, HAMPSTEAD THEATRE With directors like these, who needs enemies

John Logan peers behind the scenes of the film world to muse on the icky relationship between life and art

It’s awards season in the film world, which means that we’re currently swamped by hyperbolic shows of love and respect – actors and their directors gushing about how each could simply never have reached their creative heights without the other. Of course, it’s not always like that; there is plenty of hell unleased on a movie set. 

Turning the Screw, King’s Head Theatre review - Britten and the not-so-innocent

★★★ TURNING THE SCREW, KING'S HEAD THEATRE Britten and the not-so-innocent

Real-life triangle around the composer’s darkest masterpiece yields fitfully strong drama

David Hemmings was, by his own later admission, a knowing and bumptious boy when Britten cast him as the ill-fated Miles in his operatic adaptation of Henry James’s The Turn of the Screw. The upheaval Hemmings wrought in Aldeburgh’s Crag House when Britten and his life-partner Peter Pears were living there has potential for a similar ambiguity to the opera’s carousel of what’s innocent and what’s “depraved,” and Kevin Kelly has realized the essential drama in it.

The Hills of California, Harold Pinter Theatre - ladies' night for Jez Butterworth

Laura Donnelly once again soars in tailor-made part/s scripted by her partner

Art makes for unexpected bedfellows, and so it proves in Jez Butterworth's moving if meandering The Hills of California. Butterworth's first play in seven years owes a lot more to as unexpected a source as the musical Gypsy than it does to such previous successes from this same author as The Ferryman and his mighty Jerusalem

Dear Octopus, National Theatre - period rarity is a real pleasure

★★★★ DEAR OCTOPUS, NATIONAL THEATRE Period rarity is a real pleasure

A pitch-perfect Lindsay Duncan leads a large and splendid cast in Dodie Smith rediscovery

Sisters are doing it for themselves, just as families as a whole are, too, on the London stage these days. Dear Octopus follows Till the Stars Come Down and The Hills of California as the third domestic drama I've seen in the last 10 days and in some ways the most surprising.

Just For One Day, The Old Vic review - clunky scenes and self-conscious exposition between great songs

★★ JUST FOR ONE DAY, THE OLD VIC Clunky scenes and self-conscious exposition between great songs

Saint Bob, Mrs T and a whole lot of feelgood. Oh, and mass starvation

So, a jukebox musical celebrating the apotheosis of the White Saviour, the ultimate carnival of rock stars’ self-aggrandisement and the Boomers’ biggest bonanza of feelgood posturing? One is tempted to stand opposite The Old Vic, point at the punters going in and tell anyone within earshot, “Tonight Thank God it’s them instead of you”. 

The Picture of Dorian Gray, Theatre Royal Haymarket review - inventive rollercoaster of a revamp

Sarah Snook gives a virtuoso performance amid a dazzling display of tech wizardry

Oscar Wilde’s 1890 novella The Picture of Dorian Gray has given the world a trope built for flattery, along the lines of: “You look so young, you must have a portrait growing old in your attic”. But how many who use this line have read the text itself?