REVIEW: Concrete

Reading Time: 2 minutesPart of FreshFest (The Old Red Lion Theatre’s 4th-year-running festival that celebrates new writing) Ché Tligui’s Concrete had only been previously exhibited at twenty minute scratch nights.

Reading Time: 2 minutesPart of FreshFest (The Old Red Lion Theatre’s 4th-year-running festival that celebrates new writing) Ché Tligui’s Concrete had only been previously exhibited at twenty minute scratch nights.

Reading Time: 2 minutesDante or Die’s I Do, revived as part of the company’s 20th anniversary season and presented in partnership with the Barbican, is an immersive theatre experience that places audiences directly inside the emotional pressure cooker of a wedding day.

Reading Time: 2 minutesIn the wake of Netflix’s Adolescence, a spate of high profile misogynistic killings, and also the last few millennia of humankind, misogyny has been a hot topic.

Reading Time: 3 minutesLearning How to Drive tells the story of three people facing the reality of what it means to truly know someone. We sat down with award winning writer, Brendan Murray, to discuss their upcoming production.

Reading Time: 2 minutesThe play follows Arthur Kipps, played by the wonderful John Mackay, a man haunted by a traumatic experience from his past

Reading Time: 2 minutesAlma Cullen’s adaptation of the characters of the Morse universe are given new life and breadth in this expansion to the story and new mystery.

Reading Time: 3 minutesWritten by Chris Bowers, a former British diplomat, the play has some great insight on the governmental process of diplomacy.

Reading Time: 2 minutesWe sat down for an exclusive interview with Emma Ruse, Chief Exec of Framework Theatre and Director of Burnout. The writer of Burnout: A Verbatim Play, Ellen Bradbury, interviewed 27 individuals about their experiences of being burnt out.

Reading Time: 2 minutesWith Burns Night right around the corner, the National Trust for Scotland bring this treat of a performance to the Georgian House in Edinburgh.

Reading Time: 3 minutes"Woolf Works remains an immersive, atmospheric experience - an associative translation, emotive and sometimes quietly overwhelming."