Reviews

Oh What a Lovely War, Salisbury Playhouse

JOAN Littlewood’s extraordinary musical satire Oh What a Lovely War is possibly the most effective anti-war show ever devised, accessible to all ages and attitudes and shining the searchlight from all angles on the reality of conflicts. In this Great War anniversary year, productions of the show – first performed by Theatre Workshop in East…

Read more...

Bad Jews at Bath Ustinov Studio

BATH audiences are fortunate to be able to see a powerful and important award-winning American play, receiving its UK premiere this month at the Theatre Royal’s Ustinov studio. Joshua Harmon’s play Bad Jews is set in a New York studio apartment with a view of the Brooklyn river glimpsed from the bathroom. Brothers Liam and…

Read more...

Therese Raquin at Bath Theatre Royal

EMILE Zola’s intense novel Therese Raquin gets the Helen Edmundson treatment at Bath Theatre Royal this summer. This new adaptation, steeped in the inescapable power of unleashed passion and guilt, is on stage at Bath until 16th August as part of the summer season. The adapter’s work with Shared Experience is evident in Jonathan Munby’s…

Read more...

Triumphant homecoming for Al

AL Stewart has been many years in the USA and his recorded output is rare – the last album was 2009’s Uncorked – but his fan base is loyal and undiminished. So when he announced a one-off gig at the Tivoli in Wimborne, a couple of miles from where he grew up in a thatched…

Read more...

The Story Giant, Shanty Theatre at Lyme Regis and on tour

THE Devon-based Shanty Theatre Company returns to the Marine Theatre in Lyme Regis this year, much to the delight of their many local fans and enraptured holidaymakers. Shanty was set up by Harry Long and Tim Bell, and they are now also joint artistic directors of the historic theatre on the cliffs above the East…

Read more...

Il Ritorno d’Ulisse in Patria at Iford Opera

CLAUDIO Monteverdi wrote at least 18 operas, only four of which remain, and most were “lost” from their first performances in the 17th century for hundreds of years. Although the fashion for “early opera” had a resurgence in the late 20th century, it is a rare treat to hear his Il Ritorno d’Ulisse in Patria,…

Read more...

Fidelio, Dorset Opera at Bryanston School, Blandford

A POLITICAL prisoner lies in chains in the darkest deepest dungeon of a forbidding prison. His name is never spoken; the prison governor has ordered that he is given less food each day. He will shortly be murdered in his cell and the body hidden in a well. It is a scene that has been…

Read more...

Singin’ in the Rain at Bristol Hippodrome

BRISTOL seems to be the place for guarantees in the midst of uncertainty recently, especially in the theatres: to guarantee England’s victory in the soccer World Cup, all you had to do was go and see the excellent World Cup Final 1966 at Bristol Old Vic, and to combat the vagaries of the British climate…

Read more...

Henry IV on Brownsea Island

BROWNSEA Open Air Theatre has a first for its 51st season on the island in Poole Harbour, an adaptation of two of Shakespeare’s history plays by director Denise Mallender. The event is part of the Royal Shakespeare Theatre’s Open Stages project, for which professionals from Stratford on Avon work with amateurs around the country on…

Read more...