Covent Garden venue de-snoots itself.
Hello from the other side.
Does dread define humanity?
Don't believe the hype.
Federico Garcia Lorca's emotional tale of family animosity.
An effective but clinical look at how diseases - and fascism - spreads.
A rare successful transition from Edinburgh to London.
An important, timely and noble project around male suicide.
This play makes its point, with tongue firmly in cheek.
This musical imagines Henry VIII's six wives teaming up in a girl band.
The St Petersburg Ballet brings the classic to London in inimitable style.
A clever, resourceful production that requires some fine tuning.
Jim Cartwright’s 1992 play has lost its original power.
Friel's play about a strange, haunted family.
A fresh, bold reinterpretation of a cult classic.
You'll want to watch it all over again.
A shining example of La Soiree at its best.
A singing duck and sea battles.
Bringing the subtext to the fore.
Mark Rylance dazzles as Iago.
The childhood classic comes to the stage.
Formica, jiving and quiffs.
Did you know about London's own Fringe?
Ifans commands the stage as the vainly demanding, pyjama-clad Bérenger.
Londonist
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