Culture | July 28, 2016
Review: The Plough and the Stars
There’s a tried and tested formula to Sean O’Casey’s 1926 play The Plough and the Stars: he ma (...Read More)
There’s a tried and tested formula to Sean O’Casey’s 1926 play The Plough and the Stars: he ma (...Read More)
This debut feature from Breaking Fourth claims to be the first Virtual Reality play, combining eleme (...Read More)
Every five years Icelandic artist Ragnar Kjartansson records a video of his mother repeatedly spitti (...Read More)
Needles and Opium is a surreal jazz noir staged in a giant revolving cube. It’s a revival of a 199 (...Read More)
A teacher in America was recently fired for saying the word “vagina” in front of her class durin (...Read More)
Three couples sit in the wreckage of a music hall. A song comes on and they start to dance, expressi (...Read More)
Richard III is the ideal play for these post-facts times, where rhetoric is no longer anchored to re (...Read More)
It’s been 14 years in the planning, it’s four years overdue, and it cost £260m. But the extensi (...Read More)