My Master Builder, Wyndham's Theatre review - Ewan McGregor headlines stillborn Ibsen riff

★★ MY MASTER BUILDER, WYNDHAM'S THEATRE Ewan McGregor headlines stillborn Ibsen riff

Starry new writing premiere struggles to connect

It's both brave and bracing to welcome new voices to the West End, but sometimes one wonders if such exposure necessarily works to the benefit of those involved. And so it is with My Master Builder, American writer Lila Raicek's Ibsen-adjacent play that nods throughout at the Norwegian scribe's scorching 1892 The Master Builder only to suggest that director Michael Grandage might have been better off staging that classic title instead: his Wild Duck, dating back to his Donmar tenancy, remains the stuff of legend. 

Ghosts, Lyric Hammersmith Theatre - turns out, they do fuck you up

★ GHOSTS, LYRIC HAMMERSMITH Ibsen screams into 2025 in this perfect reimagining

Ten years on, Gary Owen and Rachel O'Riordan top their triumphant Iphigenia in Splott

A single sofa is all we have on stage to attract our eye - the signifier of intimate family evenings, chummy breakfast TV and, more recently, Graham Norton’s bonhomie. Until you catch proper sight of the room’s walls that is, which are not, as you first thought, Duluxed in a bland magnolia shade, nor even panelled with upmarket modernist abstract paintings, befitting of the whiff of wealth that suffuses the space. It’s a man’s head, repeating and repeating and repeating, turned away, bull-necked, present but not present, intimidating from beyond the grave.

The Wild Duck, The Norwegian Ibsen Company, Coronet Theatre review - slow burn, devastating climax

★★★★★ THE WILD DUCK, CORONET THEATRE Another triumph for Norwegians in Notting Hill

Ibsen's pitiless take on the 'life lie' is another triumph for Norwegians in Notting Hill

“I think this is all very strange,” declares 14-year-old Hedvig Ekdal at the end of The Wild Duck’s third act, just as everything is about to plunge into a terrifying vortex. Alan Lucien Øyen's’s production is pointedly strange from the start, a claustrophobic, Beckett-like terrain in the haunting, possibly haunted space of the Coronet, with black side walls and 13 black chairs, in which happiness stands no chance of survival. The screw turns slowly, but with devastating effect.

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.

Ghosts, Sam Wanamaker Playhouse review - a claustrophobic descent into purgatory

★★★★ GHOSTS, SAM WANAMAKER PLAYHOUSE A claustrophobic descent into purgatory

Hattie Morahan returns to Ibsen, for another round of unhappy families

Henrik Ibsen may well have wanted to shake things up, to rile against the social mores of his time. But his visionary critiques didn’t usually come with anything as radical as, say, optimism. And there’s no more of a downer than Ghosts.

Ghosts, Abbey Theatre, Dublin review - creating tension from desolation

★★★★ GHOSTS, ABBEY THEATRE, DUBLIN Creating tension from desolation

Cathy Belton’s devastating economy steers Mark O’Rowe’s quietly stunning Ibsen

Church and law are enemies of promise in Ibsen’s tragedy-without-catharis. You can see why this devastating attack on, among other things, the syphilitic sins of the fathers being visited on the hopeful young created a ruckus in the 1880s. It’s still potent thanks to the characters’ complex reactions to social constraints. Mark O’Rowe’s new version for Landmark Productons at the Abbey is faithful to the essence, while sets and costumes only reinforce modernity in period dress.

A Doll's House, Part 2, Donmar Warehouse review - Noma Dumezweni nails it

★★★ A DOLL'S HOUSE, PART 2, DONMAR WAREHOUSE Noma Dumezweni nails it

Broadway entry from 2017 is the rare sequel that richly delivers

Slamming the door on experience comes with repercussions in A Doll's House, Part 2, the thrilling Broadway entry from American writer Lucas Hnath that has arrived at the Donmar as part of an America-friendly season at that address including Marys Seacole (already finished) and The Band's Visit (still to come).

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.

Theatre Lockdown Special 5: A solo show for the ages, Ibsen refreshed, and yet more frolicsome cats

THEATRE LOCKDOWN SPECIAL 5: A solo show for the ages, Ibsen refreshed, and yet more frolicsome cats

From a much-traveled one-man play to a continent-spanning National Theatre premiere, the theatrical week offers plenty so savour

No one can accuse the gods of streaming of failing to cast a wide net. That's even more so with an array of streaming opportunities over the next week that ranges from Off West End Ibsen given a second chance to shine to an online encounter with, yes, The Encounter, and, should you wish, with its protean creator and leading man, as well.

Nora: A Doll's House, Young Vic review - Ibsen diced, sliced and reinvented with poetic precision

★★★★ NORA: A DOLL'S HOUSE, YOUNG VIC Ibsen diced, sliced and reinvented

Stef Smith brings exhilarating spirit to a familiar classic

Ibsen's Nora slammed the door on her infantilising marriage in 1879 but the sound of it has continued to reverberate down the years.