REVIEW: Little Brother

Reading Time: 3 minutesPowell-Jones here directs a phenomenal cast in communicating an urgent message for our times, by relaying the incredible experiences of one young man.

Reading Time: 3 minutesPowell-Jones here directs a phenomenal cast in communicating an urgent message for our times, by relaying the incredible experiences of one young man.

Reading Time: 2 minutes‘Love to Love’, written by Flo Petrie and directed by Oli Bates, having just finished its run at the Golden Goose Theater, is a deep and vulnerable examination of love and relationships.

Reading Time: 3 minutesJasmin Vardimon doesn’t offer answers, but she does offer space to feel, to reflect, and to remember that life itself is full of thresholds. In her ALiCE, the message is clear: we are all in motion, all moving through wonderlands of our own, and sometimes the most radical thing we can do is keep walking, even when we don’t know what’s on the other side of the door.

Reading Time: 2 minutesUpon returning home from seeing choreographer Becky Namgauds’s newest piece The Heat at the Lilian Baylis Studio, I set down my keys and looked at the couch in my living room, realizing that I would never be able to look at it the same way again.

Reading Time: 2 minutesAfter the Act is a new musical from Breach Theatre by Billy Barrett and Ellice Stevens, with music from Frew which grapples with Section 28 through the medium of verbatim theatre.

Reading Time: 2 minutesSelf-absorbed journalist Olive has just managed to get a story commissioned, covering how people feel about death, when she finds herself diagnosed with a rare, progressive and incurable liver disease.

Reading Time: 3 minutesLabyrinth Production’s rendition of Closer recaptured for me the essence of cultural zeitgeist in the early 2000s.

Reading Time: 2 minutesUnTethered is an autobiographical comedy about Tana Sirois, a queer, demisexual woman battling her obsessive compulsive disorder to experience love and safety.

Reading Time: 2 minutesVisual Sauce’s Positive follows long-time friends Malachai (Malachai Antonio) and Ade (Kojo Quainoo) as they navigate the twists and turns of the UK queer scene and their own friendship.

Reading Time: 3 minutesIts cross generational themes give everyone something to relate to. It’s not polemical, it's not a tragedy, it's joyous, and it’s a must see