14 December 2014 Daisy Pulls It Off (a play by Denise Deegan) The Park Theatre reviewed by Adam McCormack. Star rating **** I really must be careful. Giving away the slightest hint of a plot-spoiler for this perfectly spiffing production could have me labelled a sneak by the “babes” of the Second Form and “sent… Continue reading Issue 133:2017 12 14:Daisy pulls it off (Adam McCormack)
Tag: Adam McCormack
Issue 132:2017 12 0:King Tut: A Pyramid Panto (Adam McCormack)
07 December 2017 King Tut: A Pyramid Panto by Charles Court Opera The King’s Head Theatre, Islington reviewed by Adam McCormack Star rating: **** There are two reasons (at least) why people have stopped going to panto. One is that we are an ageing population and, without a young person to take, there is little… Continue reading Issue 132:2017 12 0:King Tut: A Pyramid Panto (Adam McCormack)
Issue 131:2017 11 30:Barber Shop Chronicles (Adam McCormack)
30 November 2017 Barber Shop Chronicles (a play by Inua Ellams) The Dorfman Theatre reviewed by Adam McCormack Star rating: **** For some of us a visit to the barber’s is a purely functional exercise where, at best, the level of discussion might hit the heights of holiday destinations. However, for five communities in Africa… Continue reading Issue 131:2017 11 30:Barber Shop Chronicles (Adam McCormack)
Issue 131:2017 11 30: Battle of the sexes (Adam McCormack)
30 November 2017 Battle of the Sexes A film by Jonathan Dayton and Valerie Faris reviewed by Adam McCormack Star Rating: *** Women’s professional tennis has come a long way. In the early 1970’s the prize money available to women at USLTA events was a mere fraction of that paid to the men, and in… Continue reading Issue 131:2017 11 30: Battle of the sexes (Adam McCormack)
Issue 130:2017 11 23:Mudbound (Adam McCormack)
23 November 2017 Mudbound. A film by Dee Rees Reviewed by Adam McCormack Star rating: **** Based on a 2008 novel by Hillary Jordan, Mudbound tells the story of two families, one white, the other black, trying to cope with the consequences of war, extreme weather and economic hardship in rural Mississippi in the 1940s.… Continue reading Issue 130:2017 11 23:Mudbound (Adam McCormack)
Issue 130:2017 11 23:The Secondary Victim (Adam McCormack)
23 November 2017 The Secondary Victim (a play by Matthew Campling) The Park Theatre reviewed by Adam McCormack Stars: **** Mud sticks. It seems that there is no profession that has escaped the wave of accusations of inappropriate sexual behaviour, and even innocent people fear a stain that remains on their reputation. It seems ironic… Continue reading Issue 130:2017 11 23:The Secondary Victim (Adam McCormack)
Issue 129:2017 11 16:Network(Adam McCormack)
16 November 2017 Network (a play by Lee Hall) The National Theatre reviewed by Adam McCormack Star rating **** The last few years have seen a number of notable parting shots. Liam Byrne’s “I’m afraid there is no money” for the new Chancellor of the Exchequer in 2010 and more recently the switching off of… Continue reading Issue 129:2017 11 16:Network(Adam McCormack)
Issue 127:2017 11 02: Three mothers(Adam McCormack)
02 November 2017 Three Mothers (a play by Matilda Velevitch) Waterloo East Theatre Reviewed by Adam McCormack Star rating **** To tackle the issue of migration is to tread on sensitive and potentially dangerous ground. Compassion for refugees forced out of their home is not always equally conferred on economic migrants seeking a better life. … Continue reading Issue 127:2017 11 02: Three mothers(Adam McCormack)
Issue 126: 2017 10 26: Young Marx (Adam McCormack)
26 October 2017 Young Marx (by Richard Bean and Clive Coleman) The Bridge Theatre reviewed by Adam McCormack Stars: **** The danger in reviewing a new play at a brand new theatre is that one focuses too much on the theatre and not on the play. However, the process is much easier when both are… Continue reading Issue 126: 2017 10 26: Young Marx (Adam McCormack)
Issue 125:2017 10 19:Beginning a play (Adam McCormack)
19 October 2017 Beginning –-a play by David Eldridge The Dorfman Theatre reviewed by Adam McCormack Star rating **** Every relationship has to start somewhere – the more important issue is: how long will it last? In Crouch End, the heart of the “pesto triangle”, two people are alone at the end of a flat… Continue reading Issue 125:2017 10 19:Beginning a play (Adam McCormack)
Issue 124:2017 10 12:Knives in Hens (Adam McCormack)
12 October 2017 Knives in Hens – a play by David Harrower Donmar Warehouse reviewed by Adam McCormack On the surface this play is extremely simple. Just 3 characters and a spare set that has little more on it than a huge mill stone. The simplicity is reminiscent of those basic economic models where there… Continue reading Issue 124:2017 10 12:Knives in Hens (Adam McCormack)
Issue 123:2017 10 05:What Shadows(Adam McCormack)
05 October 2017 What Shadows The Park Theatre by Adam McCormack Star rating: **** Are we all racists? Or are prejudices born out of an identity that comes from our culture and background? These are just two of the difficult issues that Chris Hannan’s brilliant new play raises. What Shadows is set simultaneously in 1967… Continue reading Issue 123:2017 10 05:What Shadows(Adam McCormack)
Issue 120:2017 09 14:Oslo (Adam McCormack)
14 September 2017 Oslo The National Theatre reviewed by Adam McCormack Oslo, a new play by J T Rogers, takes two big risks. The first is whether the subject matter, clandestine meetings to try to achieve peace in the Middle East, is one that can hold the attention of theatre audiences – for many the… Continue reading Issue 120:2017 09 14:Oslo (Adam McCormack)