You’d imagine that taking a group of people out of London and putting them in the countryside would help to alleviate any tension that might be present among t...
Caryl Churchill: a legend of British theatre. The kind of playwright whose voice writers all over dream of emanating in some small way, and yet she remains ini...
Sophie Treadwell’s Machinal, written in 1928, explores the entrapment of women in the societal systems they have (short of killing) no control over. Presented a...
It is near impossible to describe the agonizing array of emotions evoked by Joe Murphey and Joe Robertson’s, The Jungle. Directed by Stephen Daldry and Justin M...
Hampstead Theatre's proscenium is so neat that its stage looks like a television screen: stark, claustrophobic and coaxing. Even more so when that stage is tran...
As we enter the space, Boy has already started; the actors circle around the stage on a moving travelator, sitting on invisible chairs. Following their collabor...