East Is South, Hampstead Theatre review - bewildering and unconvincing

★★ EAST IS SOUTH, HAMPSTEAD THEATRE Bewildering and unconvincing

House of Cards writer tackles AI and religion, but without the necessary clarity

Our humanity is defined not only by our use of language, but also by our sense of the spiritual. Whether you are a believer or not, it’s hard to deny the attractions of religion for billions around the world. Sounds portentous? Yeah. Okay, you’re now in the zone for Beau Willimon’s new play East Is South, currently at the Hampstead Theatre, a work which suggests that the digital world can also be mystical place. 

An Interrogation, Hampstead Theatre review - police procedural based on true crime tale fails to ring true

 AN INTERROGATION, HAMPSTEAD THEATRE Detective gets her man, but at what cost?

Rosie Sheehy and Jamie Ballard shine in Edinburgh Festival import

In a dingy room with dilapidated furniture on a dismal Sunday evening, two detectives prepare for an interview. The old hand walks out, with just a little too much flattery hanging in the air, leaving the interrogation in the hands of the up-and-coming thruster, a young woman investigating the disappearance of a young woman. Alone, with just a camera for company (we get the video feed also from hidden cameras too) she awaits the suspect for the showdown.

The Invention of Love, Hampstead Theatre review - beautiful wit, awkward staging

Tom Stoppard’s evocation of Victorian golden age Oxford stars Simon Russell Beale

Can men really love each other – without sex? Or, to put it another way, how many different forms of male love can you name? These questions loiter with intent around the edges of Tom Stoppard’s dense history play, which jumps from 1936 to the High Victorian age of the 1870s and 1880s, and is now revived by the Hampstead Theatre starring Simon Russell Beale.

King James, Hampstead Theatre review - UK premiere drains a three-pointer

★★★★ KING JAMES, HAMPSTEAD THEATRE Two Cleveland lads bond, break and bond again in perceptive dramedy

LeBron James comes and goes, and comes back again to the Cavs

Cleveland is probably the American city most like the one in which I grew up. Early into the icy embrace of post-industrialisation, not really on the way to anywhere, but not a destination either and obsessed with popular music and sports, it's very Scouse. Okay, the Mersey did not catch fire as the Cuyahoga River did in 1969, but it would not have surprised anyone in Liverpool had it done so.

Reykjavik, Hampstead Theatre review - drama frozen by waves of detail

★★★ REYKJAVIK, HAMPSTEAD THEATRE Drama frozen by waves of detail

Richard Bean’s new play revisits the Hull fishing industry of the 1970s

“Don’t take a piss in the house of a woman you have made a widow.” The mixture of earthy comedy and tragic pain in this piece of parental advice is typical of the tone of Richard Bean’s Reykjavik, his new work play which explores the lives of the Hull trawlermen of the mid-1970s.

The Lightest Element, Hampstead Theatre review - engrossing, but fragmentary

★★★ THE LIGHTEST ELEMENT, HAMPSTEAD THEATRE Engrossing, but fragmentary

Slender new play about political and gender prejudice in 1950s American science

British theatre has a proud heritage of science plays. From 1990s classics such as Tom Stoppard’s Arcadia (1993) and Michael Frayn’s Copenhagen (1998) to more recent examples such as Lucy Kirkwood’s Mosquitoes (2017) and Marek Horn’s Octopolis (2023), the trick lies in balancing intellectual material about often complex scientific subjects with dramatic flair.

Visit from an Unknown Woman, Hampstead Theatre review - slim, overly earthbound slice of writer's angst

★★ VISIT FROM AN UNKNOWN WOMAN, HAMPSTEAD THEATRE Slim, overly earthbound

Christopher Hampton's love of Stefan Zweig's text becomes a drawback

Who was Stefan Zweig? It's likely that it's mostly older folk who studied German literature at A-level who have encountered this superb Viennese writer in his native language, though his short story from 1922, Letter to an Unknown Woman, eventually emerged as a starry Hollywood film in 1948.

Grud, Hampstead Theatre review - sparky investigation of a geeky friendship

Two awkward science nerds and a violent alcoholic father are oddly likeable company

Sarah Power, the writer of Grud, now in the Hampstead’s smaller space, is a self-confessed geek who excelled at science at school. She also had an alcoholic parent, and both autobiographical strands have turned up trumps in this, the second of her plays to be produced professionally. 

The Harmony Test, Hampstead Theatre review - pregnancy and parenthood

★★★ THE HARMONY TEST, HAMPSTEAD THEATRE Pregnancy and parenthood

Taboo-tickling comedy about both conceiving a baby and life as empty nesters

“Welcome to motherhood, bitch!” By the time a character delivers this reality check, there have been plenty of laughs, and some much more awkward moments, in Richard Molloy’s The Harmony Test, which premieres in the Hampstead Theatre’s Downstairs studio space.