Acosta Danza, Sadler's Wells review - a dose of Cuban sun

★★★ ACOSTA DANZA, SADLER'S WELLS  A dose of Cuban sun

Carlos Acosta's Cuban troupe are looking fine on their second time out

Second album, second novel, second tour programme – the follow-up is always tricky. But the timing couldn’t be better for Acosta Danza, the Havana-based dance company which made its UK debut in 2017. These 20 young Cubans, handpicked by Carlos Acosta and bursting with talent, can’t know how badly the UK needs a shot of their sunny optimism right now.

Cross Currents/Monotones II/Everyone Keeps Me, Linbury Theatre review - the Royal Ballet finds the missing link

CROSS CURRENTS / MONOTONES II / EVERYONE KEEPS ME Royal Ballet treasures at Linbury Theatre

In exploring the road not taken, the Royal Ballet turns up treasures old and new

This programme of three short works is all about influence, specifically the supposed cross currents between ballet and contemporary dance in the latter half of the 20th century. The irony is that this is the first time that the Royal Ballet has presented a piece made by the great American dance pioneer and experimenter Merce Cunningham, whose centenary this marks.

'A laboratory for everything': Jasper Parrott on the future of his classical music agency

'A LABORATORY FOR EVERYTHING' Jasper Parrott on the future of his classical music agency

As Harrison Parrott celebrates 50 years with concerts on Sunday, its main mover reflects

Fiftieth anniversary? It seems incredible but also so exhilarating not least because these times we live in now seem to me to be a golden age for music of all kinds and in particular for what we label so inadequately classical music.

Matthew Bourne's Romeo and Juliet, Sadler's Wells review - heart-stopping drama

★★★★ MATTHEW BOURNE'S ROMEO AND JULIET, SADLER'S WELLS Heart-stopping drama

The plot isn't perfect, but this bad romance still packs a punch

Your first thought on hearing there's a new Matthew Bourne Romeo and Juliet might well be 'doesn't it exist already?' So obvious does this marriage of high drama, lush iconic score, and Britain's premier dance maker seem that you might well be forgiven for assuming it had happened years ago. In fact, the show Bourne presented at Sadler's Wells this week is brand new this year.

Wilderness Festival 2019 review - marvellous misbehaviour

★★★★★ WILDERNESS FESTIVAL Luxury lifestyle festival full of jolly good shows

A luxury lifestyle festival full of jolly good shows

The thing about Wilderness is that it’s just so jolly decent. Acres of decadence, sprawled safely over the yawning magnificence of Cornbury Park, Oxfordshire, combine to create a scintillating country fair reverie – a heady mix of good music, high end food, luxury outdoorsyness and companionable folk.

'I wrote a letter to Björk in Icelandic and it did the trick': Helgi Tomasson on an intervention that saved a ballet

The artistic director of San Francisco Ballet heralds its all-new season at Sadler's Wells

Visits from major foreign ballet companies are always news, but a two-week London season by one of America’s “big three” is something to get excited about. San Francisco Ballet doesn’t rest on its laurels. Eight of the 12 pieces offered in the coming Sadler's Wells season were premiered by the company only last year.

Gravity & Other Myths: Backbone, Brighton Festival 2019 review - eyeboggling and very human circus show

Australian troupe dazzle with balletic acrobatics, stunning precision and teamwork

Shows by Gravity & Other Myths fall into the realm of “contemporary circus”. It’s an off-putting moniker, bringing to mind a performance where there’s no clowning but quite possibly much “thought-provoking” interpretive dance.

British Paraorchestra: The Nature of Why, Brighton Festival 2019 review - it's a happening!

★★★★ BRITISH PARAORCHESTRA, BRIGHTON FESTIVAL It's a happening!

Onstage melee of players and audience that is as much about human experience as music

The Nature of Why is not so much a concert as a multi-discipline happening. To assess it is to relate a human experience rather than just an aesthetic appreciation of the new orchestral work by Goldfrapp’s Will Gregory which is at its heart. On the surface, it’s an hour-long piece in nine short movements, interspersed with old BBC recordings of the Nobel Prize-winning American physicist Richard Feynman explaining how magnetism is unexplainable in layman’s terms.

10 Questions for Brighton Festival CEO Andrew Comben

10 QUESTIONS Brighton Festival CEO Andrew Comben talks art forgery, politics and the highlights of this year's programme

Helmsman talks art forgery, politics and the highlights of this year's programme

The Brighton Festival begins in May. Since 2014 theartsdesk has had a media partnership with this lively, multi-faceted event which takes place over three weeks. This year the Guest Director is the Malian musician Rokia Traoré, who inhabits a position previously filled by cultural figures such as Brian Eno, David Shrigley, Kate Tempest, Anish Kapoor and Vanessa Redgrave.

Bon Voyage, Bob, Tanztheater Wuppertal Pina Bausch, Sadler's Wells review - interminable ennui

★★★ BON VOYAGE, BOB, TANZTHEATER WUPPERTAL PINA BAUSCH, SADLER'S WELLS At three and a half wearisome hours, this feels like a marathon

At three and a half wearisome hours, this feels like a marathon

It's a decade since Pina Bausch sadly died, and during that time her company has kept her memory alive by revisiting her amazingly rich legacy. Inevitably, though, the time would come for them to embark on a new phase; but how? The unique mix of dance and visual theatre that Bausch developed with them over 36 astoundingly creative years is so distinctive that any attempt to follow in her footsteps would most likely seem like a pastiche.