-
Recent Posts
- The Play That Goes Wrong lives up to its name: how Tier 3 closed the last big theatre show standing
- Andrew Lloyd Webber: ‘Theatres had to close, but the vaccine will make things dramatically better’
- Dull girl power speeches and wild sex do not make Bridgerton a feminist triumph
- Best dance in 2021
- Manchester theatre head: Easter warnings are ‘frightening’
Tags
Archives
Follow me on Twitter
- As the cancellations mount, so do the fears about theatre's likely return telegraph.co.uk/theatre/what-t… 6 hours ago
- RT @thbrogan: into every generation, a slayer is born https://t.co/NyE9GGlASx 11 hours ago
- RT @TheAmandaGorman: Thank you! I would be nowhere without the women whose footsteps I dance in. While reciting my poem, I wore a ring with… 12 hours ago
Links
Tag Archives: bus
The Ultimate Guide to London’s National Theatre
The Royal National Theatre (most commonly known as the National Theatre, or even just the National) is one of the UK’s leading theatres, and an important London landmark. Here’s everything you need to know about this amazing riverside venue. Read … Continue reading
Posted in Journalism, Theatre
Tagged angels in america, bookshop, broadway, bus, comedy, curious incident of the dog in the night time, drama, drink, eat, follies, food, guide, hadestown, how to get there, laurence olivier, london, musical, national theatre, network, nt, nt live, one man two guvnors, play, shop, south bank, southbank, the lehman trilogy, theatre, todaytix, tour, transport, travel, tube, visit london, war horse
Leave a comment
Travelling to London’s South Bank: Transport and Navigation Tips
Advice on travelling to theatres in and around the South Bank, including the National and Shakespeare’s Globe. Read my full BroadwayWorld article here
Posted in Journalism, Theatre
Tagged bike, boat, bridge, broadwayworld, bus, directions, embankment, guide, help, london, national theatre, old vic, play, river, riverside, shakespeares globe, south bank, southbank centre, taxi, theatre, tips, train, transport, travel, tube, visit london, walk, waterloo, young vic
Leave a comment
A melodramatic production that needs more bite to really engage
You would think the 2005 London bombings and their turbulent aftermath offer more than enough drama for an 80-minute play, but actor-turned-writer Damien Tracey adds to the mix political intrigue, romantic scandal, and not one but two ethnically charged revenge … Continue reading
Posted in Journalism, Theatre
Tagged 2005, 7/7, bombings, bus, drama, extremist, gun, ham and high, hate preacher, hostage, islam, islamic, london, manchester, media, murder, muslim, park theatre, play, politician, politics, pr, revenge killing, review, scandal, shooting, terrorism, terrorist, theatre, tube, warde street
Leave a comment
Warde Street, Park Theatre
The advantage of basing drama on real events, particularly emotive ones like the 2005 London bombings, is that they have inbuilt resonance; the disadvantage, all too apparent in 2013 play Warde Street, is that it can be challenging to articulate a … Continue reading
Posted in Journalism, Theatre
Tagged 2005, 7/7, albion, alecky blythe, attack, bombing, bus, drama, eastenders, killing, london, malcolm tucker, manchester, murder, muslim, park theatre, play, politician, politics, review, shooting, terrorist, the arts desk, the thick of it, the vertical hour, theatre, trial, tube, warde street, widower
Leave a comment