A Streetcar Named Desire, review: Paul Mescal's all suppressed fury in this heartstopping revival
It’s no surprise that the run at the Almeida Theatre, starring 'hot property' Paul Mescal and rising star Patsy Ferran, has already sold out
It’s no surprise that the run at the Almeida Theatre, starring 'hot property' Paul Mescal and rising star Patsy Ferran, has already sold out
Birmingham Hippodrome's festive offering has colour, confidence and an on song Marti Pellow – but it's the youngsters who shine brightest
This Festival Hall extravaganza, based on the BBC show, is an eccentric delight
L Frank Baum's The Life and Adventures of Santa Claus has inspired a slushy, magic-free new musical at Salford's Lowry Theatre
The north London venue, recently stripped of its Arts Council funding, adds to its woes with dubious American play Sons of the Prophet
Bush Theatre’s excellent show Paradise Now! skewers the Instagram generation’s obsession with authenticity as a substitute for female power
Maria Friedman's acclaimed London revival of Merrily We Roll Along transfers to New York. Might Broadway beckon?
The New Zealand Strictly star plays Peter Pan's nemesis with gusto and great good humour, in a show that's terrific fun
If this is to be Ian McKellen's swansong, then his bravura pantomime turn as Mother Goose is a fitting end to a glorious theatrical career
The 1992 Disney movie about the 1899 news boys' strike in New York is given the romping-stomping musicals treatment - but little depth
The Ted Lasso star’s interpretation of Dickens through his idiotic alter-ego Mr Swallow is utterly daft, but it will make you laugh
Morgan Lloyd Malcolm's plodding new version for the Rose Theatre disrupts the dramatic flow of Dickens's tale
Northern Stage's Geordie retelling of the classic tale is magical Christmas theatre for audiences of all ages
Playwright April De Angelis wants to illuminate the rotten state of the UK and its toxic polarisations, but her play is crude and clichéd
New Wimbledon Theatre's festive offering has all the ingredients to keep youngsters happy, but a little more creativity wouldn't have hurt
Hex plays, largely triumphantly, to Rufus Norris's somewhat underused strengths as a director
Lost Dog's ingenious retelling of the Medea myth is a witty piece of counterprogramming by the Royal Opera House
The breakout star of The Crown makes a dazzling West End return in Neil Bartlett's new take on Woolf's pioneering work
Dickens's festive classic is exuberantly reimagined in this witty and energetic production – complete with a beat-boxing ghoul
Hackney Empire's panto is traditionally one of London's finest. And this year's, both by and starring Clive Rowe, does not disappoint