Review: BEETLEJUICE: THE MUSICAL, Prince Edward Theatre
by Aliya Al-Hassan - May 29, 2026
For musical fans, it's been a long time coming, but the wait is finally over. Beetlejuice: The Musical has crossed the pond and landed in London. It's loud, brash, and certainly won't please Tim Burton purists. ...
Review: REDCLIFFE, Southwark Playhouse
by Clementine Scott - May 28, 2026
In early 1753, two men – a footman named William Critchard and a sailor named Richard Arnold – were arrested and executed for ‘buggery’ in the Bristol suburb of Redcliffe. The story, recently uncovered through court documents in local archives, is an unusually detailed account of the prosecu...
Review: BLACK COMEDY, Orange Tree Theatre
by Franco Milazzo - May 28, 2026
There is exactly one joke in Peter Shaffer's 1965 farce: when the lights come on, the characters are in the dark. Everything else — the borrowed furniture, the hapless sculptor, the stern colonel, the ex-girlfriend arriving at the worst possible moment — is just escalation....
Review: ALBATROSS, Omnibus Theatre
by Clementine Scott - May 27, 2026
It’s become something of a cliché in climate change coverage that the crisis has emerged out of the sins of the older generation wrought upon the young, and that fixing it is something that parents owe their children. Never, though, is that maxim quite so apparent than in this family drama, from ...
Review: BLIZZARD, Southbank Centre
by Christiana Rose - May 28, 2026
Blizzard by FLIP Fabrique at the Southbank Centre is a contemporary circus production which captures both the harshness and wonder of winter, through a fusion of acrobatics, clowning, live music and physical theatre. ...
Review: RED, Crazy Coqs
by Christiana Rose - May 27, 2026
Red is a dazzling and richly entertaining musical revue which celebrates the flame haired icons who have shaped stage and screen history, whilst simultaneously showcasing the extraordinary talents of its creator and performer, Amber Topaz. Stylish, intelligent and brimming with affection for its sub...
Review: OUR MOTHER'S DAUGHTERS, The Hen & Chickens Theatre
by Amber-Rae Stobbs - May 27, 2026
At the heart of every female friendship group, no matter the age group, is love and a joint effort to make sure you’re in each other's lives until you’re old and grey. Our Mother’s Daughters looks at the question of ‘is loving someone enough to look past their political views and belief syst...
Review: TALES FROM ACORN WOOD, Artsdepot
by Christiana Rose - May 27, 2026
Tales From Acorn Wood at artsdepot is a warm, engaging and visually playful introduction to theatre for young audiences, bringing Julia Donaldson and Axel Scheffler’s much loved stories delightfully to life through puppetry, songs and audience participation....
Review: DARK OF THE MOON, Charing Cross Theatre
by Clementine Scott - May 26, 2026
The history of musical theatre was almost very different. In 1943, a ‘play with music’ called Dark of the Moon narrowly missed out on being selected for out-of-town tryouts in Connecticut, in favour of the genre-defining classic Oklahoma!. Now, after being reworked into a musical that premiered ...
Review: I'M SORRY, PRIME MINISTER, Richmond Theatre
by Aliya Al-Hassan - May 27, 2026
Former Prime Minister Jim Hacker and former Cabinet Secretary Sir Humphrey are reunited in poignant and nostalgic fashion in Jonathan Lynn's I'm Sorry, Prime Minister, the final chapter for two characters so beloved from the TV series that made them British institutions....