The Tell Theatre Company present two shows that wonder out loud whether marriage is all its cracked up to be.
A Respectable Wedding by Bertolt Brecht, translated by Jean Benedetti, looks at a very complicated wedding party, while Nick Darke's one-man-show, Bud, follows a fifty year-old farmer as he maps the events that destroyed his marriage.
“Hope is the enemy of
reason” says a Nazi to a Jew in Michael Ashton's The Beekeeper.
It's a line which, for me, sets the focus of the story and so clever
are Ashton's metapho...
Can Themba's story of a husband's revenge on his cheating wife has been turned into a musical play by Peter Brook and Marie-Helene Estienne. When a young South African worker finds his wife in bed with...
The Duchess finds herself widowed and tied to her two brutish brothers who refuse to let her remarry so they can keep a hold on her inheritance. The discovery of her relationship with Antonio, her steward...
Lisa D'Amour's play about two American couples transfers from The States to National Theatre this May. She pairs straight-laced, middle-class Ben and Mary with their recovering junkie neighbours Sharon...
An exhibition of enigmatic photographic works by Edgar Martins this summer. After debuting earlier this year at one of London's most brilliant gallery/restaurant spaces - the wonderful Wapping Proj...
Frisky and Mannish, London's resident experts of mash-up pop hermeneutics are back at the Udderbelly to blow the bloody hooves off it. They’ll be letting their hair down and letting rip. Expect the...
Glammed up, old school vaudeville circus comes to town with magicians and musicians in tow. The show includes Circa, La Clique and Acrobat and Circus Oz who put on one hell of a spectacle. Seriously fun...
Esa-Pekka Salonen’s season opening continues with an evening of Beethoven and Berlioz Beethoven Overture, Leonore No.2 Beethoven Piano Concerto No.4 Berlioz Symphonie fantastique