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Stuart King

Andrea Lowe (Julie) in Dixon and Daughters at the National Theatre. Photo by Helen Murray
26 Apr
Reviews
Stuart King

Review: DIXON AND DAUGHTERS at National Theatre Dorfman

The National Theatre’s Dorfman stage plays host to DIXON AND DAUGHTERS a new piece of writing by Deborah Bruce for Clean Break which although it was penned pre-lockdown in 2018, remains significant and relevant as a subtle commentary (written from the female perspective), on the pervading and insidious dominance of the patriarchy.

Andrea Lowe (Julie) in Dixon and Daughters at the National Theatre. Photo by Helen MurrayAndrea Lowe (Julie) in Dixon and Daughters at the National Theatre. Photo by Helen Murray.

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Animal - Park Theatre
21 Apr
Reviews
Stuart King

Review: ANIMAL at Park Theatre

ANIMAL currently enjoying a short run at Park Theatre, received considerable critical praise on its opening in Manchester earlier this year and it’s not difficult to understand why. The creative team behind the story of a young disabled gay guy who is dependent upon his three carers (Matt Ayleigh, Amy Loughton and Harry Singh) but is desperate for a sex life (preferably with some dating involved), have created a big hearted, funny and informed piece of theatre.

Animal - Park TheatreAnimal at Park Theatre - Photography by Piers Foley

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The Cast of The Secret Life Of Bees - Photo Credit Marc Brenner
21 Apr
Reviews
Stuart King

Review: THE SECRET LIFE OF BEES at Almeida

In the era when Americans began dipping tentative toes in the boiling cauldron of civil rights, President Lyndon Johnson announced the introduction of legislation to remove the last vestiges of segregation. Those who vehemently rejected such notions remained intent on resisting revisions to the social order through intimidation and violence at voting stations. How little times have changed!

The Cast of The Secret Life Of Bees - Photo Credit Marc BrennerThe Cast of The Secret Life Of Bees - Photo Credit Marc Brenner

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La Ruta - Rahi Rezvani
20 Apr
Reviews
Stuart King

Review: Nederlands Dans Theater (NDT) Gabriela Carrizo / Jiří Kylián / Crystal Pite Simon McBurney at Sadlers Wells

In three parts, the evening begins with a weirdly ethereal scene by The Hague’s renowned Nederlands Dans Theater company entitled La Ruta by Gabriela Carrizo. A flickering light at a bus shelter is all that illuminates a nearby night-time main road, where various people and animals become roadkill.

La Ruta - Rahi RezvaniLa Ruta - Picture by Rahi Rezvani

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Siobhán McSweeney (Maggie), Bláithín Mac Gabhann (Rose), Louisa Harland (Agnes), Justine Mitchell (Kate) & Alison Oliver (Chris) in Dancing at Lughnasa at the National Theatre. Photo by Johan Persson
19 Apr
Reviews
Stuart King

Review: DANCING AT LUGHNASA at National Theatre Olivier

Brian Friel’s 1990 play set during harvest time at the village of Ballybeg somewhere in County Donegal, is intensely evocative of a world which has almost entirely disappeared. At the home of the five Mundy Sisters before the onset of the Second World War, there’s a daily battle to make ends meet whilst looking after the men in their lives — Uncle Jack (Ardal O’Hanlon) just returned from the leper colony in Ugandaand seven year old Michael Evans whose childhood memories recounted as an adult (Tom Vaughan-Lawlor) serve to narrate the piece.

Siobhán McSweeney (Maggie), Bláithín Mac Gabhann (Rose), Louisa Harland (Agnes), Justine Mitchell (Kate) & Alison Oliver (Chris) in Dancing at Lughnasa at the National Theatre. Photo by Johan PerssonSiobhán McSweeney (Maggie), Bláithín Mac Gabhann (Rose), Louisa Harland (Agnes), Justine Mitchell (Kate) & Alison Oliver (Chris) in Dancing at Lughnasa at the National Theatre. Photo by Johan Persson

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