After the success of Robert Icke’s Oresteia and 1984, it’s no wonder that the anticipation around the Almeida’s latest classic adaptation, of Chekhov’s Uncle Va...
Sometimes it can feel as if everyone in the theatre business is in on playing an elaborate game of The Emperor’s New Clothes. Everyone can see the naked truth a...
Two millennia after its first performance Aeschylus’s Oresteia is as relevant to the heart of our society as it ever was. One of the world’s oldest family drama...
For a truly weird and wonderful night at the theatre, Mr Burns, currently playing at the Almeida Theatre, is well worth a look. This self-proclaimed ‘post-elect...
1984 is arguably the most famous dystopian political novel of all time. Orwell’s symbols, allegories and concepts have influenced a myriad of social commentator...
By turns funny and tragic, deep and superficial, engrossing and alienating, Boys is a play that tries to do everything and very nearly succeeds. Set at the end o...