Angela, Sound Stage online review - tender and time-shifting

★★★★ ANGELA, SOUND STAGE Mark Ravenhill's fragmentary audio autobiography

Mark Ravenhill’s new play is a fragmentary audio autobiography

Does a subjective theatre piece encourage a subjective critical response? I think it might, especially when it’s a memory play about dementia, so here goes: first I turn off the lights, then I press play. From the darkness comes jaunty music – it’s a dance class. The teacher says, “We’re not used to having a man in class, are we ladies?

Assembly, Donmar Warehouse online review - the future is coming, ready or not

★★★ ASSEMBLY, DONMAR WAREHOUSE ONLINE The future is coming, ready or not

The theatre's local community assembles a strange little show about the apocalypse

“Your task is to imagine the future.” That’s what the citizens of Assembly, a new streamed production performed and devised by the Donmar Warehouse’s Local Company, are told. It can be anything they like, so long as they make it together – which is the catch, of course. Since when did a citizens’ assembly ever agree on anything? 

The Picture of Dorian Gray, Barn Theatre online review - a dazzling adaptation

★★★★ THE PICTURE OF DORIAN GRAY, BARN THEATRE A dazzling adaptation

Film version of the Oscar Wilde classic is a brilliant critique of the digital age

Let’s face it, most adaptations of classic novels are disappointingly pedestrian. They are so middle-of-the-road – fancy-dress characters speaking fancy-dress dialogue in fancy-dress plots. But there are memorable exceptions: Amy Heckerling’s film Clueless brings Jane Austen’s Emma squealing into our world, while Martin Crimp’s Misanthrope and Cyrano de Bergerac do the same for theatre’s Molière and Rostand.

The Band Plays On, Sheffield Theatres online review – to Sheffield with love

★★★ THE BAND PLAYS ON, SHEFFIELD THEATRES ONLINE Latest show from Chris Bush is a celebration of local stoicism and wry humour

Latest show from Chris Bush is a celebration of local stoicism and wry humour

All theatre is local — if you can’t get to where a show is playing you can’t see it. That is, until a pandemic closes all theatres and forces their shows to go online.

Dream, RSC online review - gaming version unleashes revolutionary potential

★★★ DREAM, RSC ONLINE Gaming version unleashes revolutionary potential

Co-production brings Shakespeare's metaphor to life

Which of Shakespeare’s plays is most plagued by misperception? For my money, I would argue A Midsummer Night’s Dream. Most people encounter it at school age because of the ease with which it can be dressed up as a light comedy involving fairies. Yet at heart this is a deeply primal work which draws upon the raw power of the elements to look at the arbitrary nature of desire and how radically it can rewrite any individual’s life.

First Person: Clare Norburn on how she came to write her ambitious Zoom-era drama, 'Love in the Lockdown'

CLARE NORBURN On writing her ambitious Zoom-era drama, 'Love in the Lockdown'

Writer-producer Clare Norburn elaborates upon her self-isolation online play

Love in the Lockdown started out as my “Lockdown 1.0 project” - although, of course, we didn’t call it Lockdown 1.0 back then. We didn’t know other lockdowns would follow and that nearly one year on, here we would be, locked down again with theatres and concert halls still closed. 

Typical, Soho Theatre online review - powerfully poetic and painful

★★★★★ TYPICAL, SOHO THEATRE ONLINE Powerfully poetic and painful

Film version of 2019 monologue about institutional racism is brilliant

As the events of last year made clear, the police have a problem with race on both sides of the Atlantic. In the UK, BAME people are more than twice as likely to die in police custody while being forcibly restrained than people from other social groups. Written by award-winning actor and writer Ryan Calais Cameron, Typical is a powerful and inspiring example of how theatre tackles institutional racism.

Sherlock Holmes: The Case of the Hung Parliament review – choose-your-own whodunnit

★★★★ SHERLOCK HOLMES: THE CASE OF THE HUNG PARLIAMENT Playful interactive show casts audience members as amateur detectives 

Playful interactive show casts audience members as amateur detectives

I’ll admit, I’ve never been a fan of murder mysteries. Patience is not one of my virtues; if I can’t work something out in 30 seconds, I’m liable to give up, and whodunnits tend to need a bit longer than that.

Barnes' People, Original Theatre Company online review - intriguing quartet of monologues revived

★★★★ BARNES' PEOPLE, ORIGINAL THEATRE COMPANY Intriguing quarter of monologues revived

Jemma Redgrave and Adrian Scarborough excel in Peter Barnes radio solos brought to screen

The four monologues that make up Barnes’ People were filmed in the grand surroundings of the Theatre Royal, Windsor, and that venue's atmospheric spaces (now deserted, of course) seem to tell a sad tale of their own, one that chimes rather appropriately with the mood of some of them.

The Color Purple - at Home, Curve online review – life-affirming musical retelling of Alice Walker's novel

★★★★ THE COLOR PURPLE - AT HOME, CURVE ONLINE Life-affirming musical retelling of Alice Walker's novel

Celie learns how to live from the strong, rebellious women she encounters

This production of The Color Purple is an extraordinary testimony to the fact that many of the 20th century’s most joyous forms of music – jazz, ragtime and of course blues – had their roots in misery and oppression.