The Merchant of Venice, Sam Wanamaker Playhouse review - enormous empathy

★★★★ THE MERCHANT OF VENICE, SAM WANAMAKER PLAYHOUSE Enormous empathy

A supposed 'comedy' gives the moneylender Shylock pride of place

The Merchant of Venice is a comedy, you say? Shakespeare, as ever, refuses to be confined to convenient boxes, his best plays’ extraordinary pliability and longevity a testament to the piercing eye he cast towards the slings and arrows that assail humankind.

Shedding a Skin, Soho Theatre review - feel the love

★★★★ SHEDDING A SKIN, SOHO THEATRE Feel the love 

Great staging enlivens this well-written monologue about a cross-generational relationship

Love is the most difficult four-letter word. And platonic love is perhaps the hardest kind of emotion to write well about. But it’s the central subject of Amanda Wilkin’s Shedding a Skin, and she describes it beautifully.

The Woods, Southwark Playhouse review - early Mamet not fully elevated

★★★ THE WOODS, SOUTHWARK PLAYHOUSE Murky Mamet two-hander

Francesca Carpanini shines in murky Mamet two-hander

"Get into the scene late and get out early." So wrote David Mamet in his 1992 book On Directing Film, and Southwark Playhouse, among London's most charmingly eclectic theatres, has delved very early into Mamet's canon, reviving his 1977 play The Woods – a two-hander not seen in London since 1996.

Small Island, National Theatre review - visually ravishing tale with an epic sweep

Director Rufus Norris uses the Olivier's revolving stage like a virtuoso

With its violent storms, bombed out cities and stories of families ripped apart by war, Small Island feels very much like a play for our times. From its stunning opening, in which the frantic silhouettes of humans are interwoven with black-and-white footage of hurricane-swept palm trees, it whirls us into an epic tale of fractured dreams, fraught beginnings and a constant search for humanity amid hatred.

After the End, Theatre Royal Stratford East review - suddenly relevant two-hander

★★★★ AFTER THE END, STRATFORD EAST Dennis Kelly's 2005 play presses many 2022 buttons

Lockdown, #MeToo and Ukraine give new urgency to a dystopian fable

Mark was teased about the fallout shelter at the bottom of his garden by his co-workers (that wasn’t the only thing – every friendship group has a target for micro-aggressions) but his foresight pays off when terrorists explode a suitcase bomb on a Friday evening. Louise, hungover after her leaving do, wakes up down there, Mark having rescued her from the rubble and sealed the door against the radiation. She faces 14 days locked down with him waiting for the air to clear.

Henry V, Donmar Warehouse review - playing at war

★★★ HENRY V, DONMAR WAREHOUSE Playing at war

Good in parts, but Kit Harington’s king isn’t the best thing about this hard-working show

Sharp suits swapped for combat fatigues, a people’s commander: you’d think that Max Webster’s production of Shakespeare's  surprisingly nuanced propaganda history-play would have special resonance in a week which has seen horrors and heroism unleashed in equal measure. Yet despite input from former Royal Marines Commando Tom Leigh, this is too much of a gimmicky show of war to chime with what’s churning us up now.

But I'm A Cheerleader: The Musical, Turbine Theatre review - two cheers for feelgood show

Another musical based on a movie hits London, with a moral guaranteed to please audiences

Wave your pom poms for a show with its heart in the right place

We open on “Seventeen is Swell”, the antithesis of Janis Ian’s 70s angsty anthem, “At Seventeen”. Megan is living it large as the cheerleader’s leader with her football captain boyfriend, two loving if strict parents and a golden future of all-American domestic bliss ahead. In short, she has all her pom poms in a row.

Bloody Difficult Women, Riverside Studios review - political drama

★★★ BLOODY DIFFICULT WOMEN, RIVERSIDE STUDIOS Brexit battle laid bare in political drama

Brexit battle laid bare

Few critics become playwrights, but Tim Walker has done just that with Bloody Difficult Women, his debut. It's taking a risk; should any of his less generous critical colleagues wish to take a shot at the poacher turned gamekeeper, it's open season. On the other hand, it could place a friendly critic in an uncomfortable position; what if it's awful?

When We Dead Awaken, The Norwegian Ibsen Company, Coronet Theatre review - living death, dying life

★★★★ WHEN WE DEAD AWAKEN, THE NORWEGIAN IBSEN COMPANY Living death, dying life

Ibsen anticipates Beckett in his strange final play, austerely staged with dashes of wit

In Ibsen's last and shortest play, further cut here, four people nominally climb a mountain, but actually seem to be crossing waste land towards the land of Samuel Beckett. It’s an amazing play in which reality is symbolic and symbols are real, where not one character is likeable and all speak with hallucinatory directness. The Norwegian Theatre Company, very much welcome back to the Coronet Theatre, do much of its strangeness justice.

Red Pitch, Bush Theatre review - effortlessly and energetically entertaining

★★★★ RED PITCH, BUSH THEATRE Effortlessly and energetically entertaining

Debut play about football and gentrification is pitch perfect

Football stories are never just about a game — they are also about life and how to live it. In Tyrell Williams’s Red Pitch, his debut play now getting an enthusiastically staging at the Bush Theatre after a shorter version wowed audiences at the Lyric Hammersmith in 2019, three young black teens meet at a five-a-side pitch in South London.