REVIEW: Multiple Casualty Incident

Reading Time: 2 minutesIn Sami Ibrahim’s new play, directed by Olivier award-winning director Jaz Woodcock-Stewart, three Westerners prepare to provide humanitarian aid in an active warzone.

Reading Time: 2 minutesIn Sami Ibrahim’s new play, directed by Olivier award-winning director Jaz Woodcock-Stewart, three Westerners prepare to provide humanitarian aid in an active warzone.

Reading Time: 2 minutesA few minutes before the play, we are passive spectators of what we believe is going to be a traditional narrative, about Joey Jepps and Gabriele Uboldi, the two lead actors that we witness in the poster advertising the show.

Reading Time: 2 minutesExpatriated is a uniquely candid portrayal of what it is to move abroad. It highlights how experiences vary based on where you move to, your country of origin, or even your race. It looks at how different people are treated when they are viewed as an immigrant rather than an expat.

Reading Time: 2 minutesWe sat down with Sally Cheng who is in the cast of Twelfth Night at Regent’s Park Open Air Theatre.

Reading Time: 2 minutesWhen Mountains Meet tells the story of Scottish musician Anne Wood, and her turbulent journey to South-Asia to become reacquainted with her long-lost father.

Reading Time: 2 minutes‘Bespoke Plays', the company began in the US and recently launched their UK branch.

Reading Time: 2 minutesRemembrance Monday’s opening scene sketches out an idyllic long-term relationship for dance-teacher Julius and artist Connor.

Reading Time: 2 minutesNorthern, female, fat. Rachel Stockdale’s recounting of a life as a person who is all three of these things, while also trying to make it in the theatre industry is a poignant, punchy piece with a beautiful message.

Reading Time: 3 minutesJoe Ward Munrow’s ‘The Legend of Ned Ludd’ looks at our reality - how capitalism has shaped our lives and our relationship to work, with the constant push-and-pull of innovation and adaptation undulating beneath it all.

Reading Time: 2 minutesIn Black Swans, Christina Kettering and director Ria Samartzi, bring forth a narrative featuring two female protagonists, a rarity in theatre, tackling the weighty responsibilities of daughters and mothers.