A challenge for the artists and the audience alike, a one off performance of Haydn's Seven Last Words took place on Thursday evening with mixed success.
Roll up! Roll up! The circus is back in town.
An astonishing achievement, this brilliant, very human play brings both Blythe’s signature verbatim technique and the concept of musical theatre to a whole new level
Bored of board games? On Easter Sunday, you can either scoff lots of chocolate eggs or run around playing secret agent in a real-life game on Southbank. Or both.
Pick of this week's gigs.
Weekly listings of all things science, technology and anything a bit, well, nerdy.
We have a winner: masturbation, tango, wrestling and fake orgasms win audience and expert approval.
Verbatim plays - even the famous My Name is Rachel Corrie - get a new twist in this intriguing double bill.
Free films and pedal powered fun at the South London Olympic venue tonight.
Our choice of where to find funny this week.
It's a nice day for al fresco Shakespeare.
Ferocious lust, ruthless ambition and violent murder is the order of the day in Mark Ravenhill’s production
Summer spirit for less than 5% of a flight to Argentina!
Potent mix of people and puppets in a kid-friendly Shakespearean show
Picking highlights is tricky in a programme bursting with top notch concerts but you've got to start your Proms planning somewhere.
The Marathon dominates, but there's also a huge Dutch party, Sikh new year celebrations, a zine symposium, vintage by the kilo, the Royal Wedding pub crawl and Shunt's last night.
Micro and no-budget films and indie film makers are showcased at the Roxy and Shortwave from tonight.
R&B at the Albert Hall, a controversial rap superstar and heavy metal with a 38-piece orchestra. It can only be this week's ticket onsales.
Celebrate Queensday and Vaisakhi, try beekeeping, learn about Che Guevara, support the London Marathon runners and much more.
What do London's theatre bloggers make of the West End's newest musical?
Text, dance and music will explore death and hope in a sacred setting tonight.
Robin Ince once again curates an excellent night of intelligent comedy: can he and his guests find an activity better than reading?
Explore art, cocktails and "how thick is wall" at The King and The Minotaur this month, and escape the conventional art gallery experience.
The Kensington Drama Company's theatre production of A Clockwork Orange bristles with energy. But there's no space to explore this classic cult story's moral dilemma.
Londonist
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