Blueprint Medea, Finborough Theatre online review – well-meaning but clunky update

★★★ BLUE PRINT MEDEA, FINBOROUGH THEATRE Well-meaning but clunky

Updated Greek tragedy has some good ideas but doesn't fully deliver

Medea is the original crazy ex-girlfriend: the wronged woman who takes perfectly understandable revenge on the man who made her life hell. In Blueprint Medea, a new adaptation premiered at the Finborough Theatre in May 2019 and available on YouTube until 2nd August, writer-director Julia Pascal gives us a 21st-century reworking of Euripides’ tragedy. 

The Deep Blue Sea, National Theatre at Home review - hauntingly elegiac portrayal of Rattigan's world

★★★★ THE DEEP BLUE SEA, NATIONAL THEATRE AT HOME Hauntingly elegiac Rattigan

Helen McCrory is the broken, irreparable heart of this production

Helen McCrory is an actor who can inject a world of feeling into one syllable that many actors would struggle to muster in an entire script. Towards the end of The Deep Blue Sea, she is telling her estranged husband what it was that attracted her to the feckless pilot for whom she has thrown away her marriage.

Theatre Lockdown Special 13: Early Lloyd Webber, vintage Rattigan, and a Dame or two in conversation

THEATRE LOCKDOWN 13 Early Lloyd Webber, vintage Rattigan & a Dame or two

Medeas past and present conjoin across a characteristically eclectic theatre week

Stop the presses! For the first time in nearly four months, The Arts Desk can point to the first of several live theatre events amongst the highlights of the coming week: the tour across the nation's car parks to multiple drive-in audiences of Horrible Histories: Barmy Britain, a previous West End mainstay that has adapted with these strange times.

Les Blancs, National Theatre at Home review – triumphant revival of forgotten classic

★★★★ LES BLANCS, NT AT HOME Triumphant revival of forgotten classic

NT archive recording of Lorraine Hansberry’s last play is absolutely compelling

Lorraine Hansberry’s debut, A Raisin in the Sun, was the first drama written by a black woman to be produced on Broadway, where it opened in 1959. It is now an American classic, but it’s her last play, Les Blancs, that in the current context of the Black Lives Matter movement and resistance to institutional racism both in the US and UK feels even more relevant.

Toast, Lawrence Batley Theatre online review - pungent adaptation of Nigel Slater's autobiography

★★★★ TOAST, LAWRENCE BATLEY THEATRE Pungent adaptation of Nigel Slater

Food crimes of the Sixties and Seventies are revealed here as Michelin-starred memories

I knew what a Howard Hodgkin painting would look like before I ever saw one because of Nigel Slater. There’s a recipe in one of his very early books, Real Cooking, for “A creamy, colourful, fragrant chicken curry” which he candidly admits is “seriously unauthentic”, with ingredients that will leave some purists “really pissed-off”. But it’s a wonderful recipe, and as ever this is partly to do with the words he chooses to describe it.

Theatre Lockdown Special 12: An American rarity, a British savoury, and fresh Apples

Nigel Slater is back, as is Richard Nelson's Apple family for a second time via Zoom

Can this weekly lineup really now be three months old?  As we move towards at least some degree of relaxation on the social restrictions that have long been in place, the offerings of theatre online continue to afford many a reason not to leave your laptop.

A Midsummer Night's Dream, National Theatre At Home review – a mad delight

★★★★ A MIDSUMMER NIGHT'S DREAM, NATIONAL THEATRE AT HOME A mad delight

Nicholas Hytner makes the familiar gloriously strange in this slippery, sumptuous show

Nicholas Hytner’s A Midsummer Night’s Dream, filmed for NT Live at the Bridge Theatre last summer, is – as it gleefully acknowledges – completely bonkers. But it doesn’t start out that way. A troop of actors trudge through the audience, singing dirge-like psalms in dark suits and The Handmaid’s Tale-esque headwraps.

The Last Five Years, The Other Palace Digital review - socially distanced heartbreak

★★★ THE LAST FIVE YEARS, THE OTHER PALACE DIGITAL Socially distanced heartbreak

Jason Robert Brown's chamber musical has new lockdown resonance

A musical featuring two people who are physically separated? Jason Robert Brown’s work is a shutdown natural – as this new digital theatre version demonstrates.