-
Globe gives away 14,000 free tickets to Macbeth
A Globe survey has found that almost all 13 year olds have visited the cinema, yet the number of theatregoers of that age is dramatically less.
-
Love Never Dies – but will Lloyd Webber’s new musical?
The much anticipated follow-up to Andrew Lloyd Webber’s Phantom of the Opera, has had mixed notices with the first round of critics.
-
Olivier Awards to be broadcast live on Radio 2 and online
The prestigious Laurence Olivier Awards will be broadcast live on BBC Radio 2 for the very first time.
-
Noel Cowards’s Private Lives wins over the critics
Sex and the City temptress Kim Cattrall is the talk of the town as her West End play proves a huge hit.
-
Blog: Vermin plaguing theatres, claim Equity. Is it that serious?
An Equity survey claims more than three quarters of West End performers and stage managers confirm there’s a vermin problem in the workplace.
-
Are you ready to take a bite of the big apple?
Launch of the TS Eliot Exchange between the US and the UK, is being launched tomorrow at the Old Vic by Jeremy Irons and James Earl Jones.
-
Photos: Surviving Actors first convention proves a huge hit
Surviving Actors, the UK’s first actors’ convention held in central London on 30th January, was a huge success.
-
Blog: How irritating are today’s theatre audiences?
How many times have you been to the theatre and had to deal with an extra ‘performance’ coming from the auditorium? What are the audience habits that annoy you?
-
Theatre Review: Love Never Dies – Adelphi
Ignore all that spiteful nonsense out there on blogosphere from “Phans” and critics alike that should know better, writes Josh Logan.
-
Film Review: Invictus – Cinemas Nationwide
Yet another “man with a mission” film from Clint Eastwood, but without the usual violent outcome, writes John Ayton.
-
Theatre Review: King Lear – RSC – Courtyard Theatre
Rupert Bridgwater reviews RSC’s King Lear and discovers a bold and magnificent all round production.
-
Preview: Kim Cattrall opens in Private Lives at Vaudeville
Sex and the City star Kim Cattrall will take centre stage in Private Lives, the Noel Coward 1929 comedy classic.
-
Theatre Preview: Six Degrees, The Caretaker & The Forecast
Planning a trip to the theatre? We round up some of the productions opening this week.
Add a comment
Lesley Manville, Obi Abili and Anthony Head star in Six Degrees of Separation at the Old VicSIX DEGREES OF SEPARATION
Old Vic Theatre
103 The Cut
London, SE1 8NB
Box Office: 0844 871 7628
www.oldvictheatre.comJohn Guare’s classic adrenalin-fuelled and Olivier Award-winning play, Six Degrees of Separation – a sharp, vivacious take on two worlds colliding. The play is inspired by the real-life story of a flamboyant con artist who managed to convince wealthy residents of Manhattan’s Upper East Side that he was the son of Sidney Poitier.
This new Old Vic production is directed by David Grindley and stars seasoned pros Anthony Head (Buffy the Vampire Slayer and Merlin) and Lesley Manville (His Dark
Materials and Old Vic’s All About My Mother). It also stars recent RADA graduate, Obi Abili, who has previously worked at the National and Young Vic. This new production
will be the first major London revival of the play in almost 18 years.Opens Tuesday 19th January and runs until 3rd April 2010
.
THE CARETAKER
Trafalgar Studios
An Ambassador Theatre Group Theatre
Whitehall, London
SW1A 2DY
www.ambassadortickets.comThe Caretaker – first performed in 1960 – was Harold Pinter’s first big hit. Fifty years on, it remains as mysterious and compelling as ever.
In this new production, Hollywood star and two-time Tony Award winner Jonathan Pryce joins the pantheon of great actors from Donald Pleasance to Michael Gambon who have played the part of the mysterious drifter, Davies.
Offered shelter in a dilapidated London flat by two strangers who later turn out to be brothers, Davies becomes embroiled in power games both terrifying and comic.
When this production opened at the Liverpool Everyman Theatre in October 2009 it was acclaimed as one of the finest ever productions of the play ever. Now it transfers to the West End for fourteen weeks only.
Opens Monday 18 January 2010 and runs until Saturday 17 April 2010
THE FORECAST
Greenwich Playhouse
Greenwich Station Forecourt, 189 Greenwich High Road
London, SE10 8JA
Box Office: 0208 858 9256
www.galleontheatre.co.ukHow do you feel about climate change? The Forecast, a new play presented by Marvin and the Cats, hilariously explores society’s different responses to the gradual warming of the planet, a bitter-sweet tale of survival on a globe running out of steam. Marvin and The Cats is an international and dynamic group formed of graduates from the eminent theatre school L’Ecole de Jacques Lecoq in Paris.
The group presents a unique form of political theatre, using a contemporary style drawing from the European clown tradition, Commedia dell’Arte and mime.
Jay Miller, Director of the company said: “We don’t want to preach about the rights and wrongs of people’s response and attitudes towards climate change, instead we want to approach the phenomenon from a variety of angles: environmental, economical, ethical, and political. Our play is an entertaining journey through complex issues that will hopefully generate public debate and drive a social movement for change.”
Runs from Monday 18 January until 7 February 2010
Published on January 18, 2010 · Filed under: Entertainment;




