REVIEW: Casino Royale: Film in Concert

Reading Time: 2 minutesPerformance 17th December as part of a series of films in concert celebrating 60 years of James Bond.

Reading Time: 2 minutesPerformance 17th December as part of a series of films in concert celebrating 60 years of James Bond.

Reading Time: 3 minutesThe Wedding Speech is a one-woman show, starring Princess Donnough and written by Cheryl May Coward-Walker, currently playing at the Camden People’s Theatre.

Reading Time: 2 minutesWe sat down with Yacoub Shaheen who is part of the Bethlehem Cultural Festival. This festival shines a light on the arts, culture and heritage of Palestine, putting the region’s historic culture and artistic output centre stage.

Reading Time: 2 minutesPark Theatre's fledgling programme Make Mine A Double is a nifty idea, offering a double-bill of one-act shows and showing off twice the talent. Its first combo of Eliana Ostro's Anything With A Pulse and Deli Segal's Pickle is an attractive, if slightly lopsided, look into modern romance: Hinge fails, splitting the bill and unsatisfactory sex abound.

Reading Time: 2 minutesEveryone loves a pantomime at Christmas, and this festive season the Royal Court Theatre is hosting a well-loved classic, excellently amended for Liverpool and a more mature audience.

Reading Time: 2 minutesEveryone has heard the song ‘(You make me feel like) A Natural Woman’, but you might not know that it was written by Carole King, along with many other famous hits.

Reading Time: 3 minutesAn improvised one-act play by improv duo Hamza Mohsin and Jake Migicovsky, together forming Avocado Presents bring this show to The Curtain's Up pub.

Reading Time: 4 minutesZombiegate is a satirical and empathetic play which attempts to get behind the headlines and hashtags of internet trolls, scrutinizing mob mentality and myths around cancel culture.

Reading Time: 2 minutesOn the Mousetraps' 70th anniversary, we're invited to indulge in a classic period piece that made me feel as though I'd been transported back to the early 1950s when the play first debuted.

Reading Time: 2 minutesLiverpool’s own Hot Water Comedy Club located on Hope Street in the artsy, bustling Georgian quarter was packed this Friday Evening.