Music Hall for the modern age.
No more plain Jane in this version of Bronte's classic.
An EPIC list. Book ahead, don't miss out.
Marlowe’s bloody play returns to London for first time in 400 years.
Welcome relief from the usual West End offerings? No.
Perky musical about the ice-cream and programme sellers.
Oral performance of the river in Finnegans Wake.
One teenager, one big city, lots of broken rules.
A new variety night from Bourgeois & Maurice.
Olwen Fouéré takes on James Joyce's Finnegan's Wake.
English National Opera proves it is the 'House of Handel' with Rodelinda.
300,000 audience members later, the 2010 phenomenon returns to London.
Musical theatre about maps, starring Peep Show's Isy Suttie.
Stage adaptation of the 1997 film is a crowd-pleaser, but should it be?
Landmark in Northern 'kitchen sink' writing gets a well-deserved revival.
Orwell's novel, adapted with gusto.
Nine Songs' imagery is diverse and evocative
Breaking, locking and popping fun.
Marvellous manic momentum in motion and music.
Hubert Essakow's latest work is thought-provoking but lacks dynamism.
Residents, performers and local history combine.
The Fat Man’s Wife casts a paralysing spell at the Canal Café Theatre.
The Merely Players season in rep kicks off with the Comedy of Errors.
Production may divide opinions, but the singing is hard to beat.
Londonist
Something wrong with this article? Let us know here.