Read more about the article REVIEW: Red Velvet, Tricycle Theatre (2012)
Adrian Lester as Ira Aldridge - Photo: Tristram Kenton

REVIEW: Red Velvet, Tricycle Theatre (2012)

The scene goes back more than 30 years to London where the great Edmund Kean is ill having collapsed onstage and was due to play the role of Othello, the Moor at Covent Garden. Kean's son Charles (Ryan Kiggell) normally plays Iago and is ready to take the title role when Pierre Laporte (Eugene O'Hare), the manager says he has engaged another actor, an American who has had good reviews elsewhere. They are shocked when they discover that Ira Aldridge is a black actor, they had thought dark was an allusion to the style of the play. Set in the context of the debate on the abolition of slavery of 1833 in England and the colonies, Ira's casting prompts a vehement reaction.

Continue ReadingREVIEW: Red Velvet, Tricycle Theatre (2012)

REVIEW: Julius Caesar, Noel Coward Theatre (2012)

In a wonderful production for the Royal Shakespeare Company, its new Artistic Director Gregory Doran sets Julius Caesar in Africa using an all black cast of Britain's finest actors. Somehow the rhythm of Shakespearean verse and the clarity of the African pronunciation, along with the political theme of power politics and regime change, work well in the new setting.

Continue ReadingREVIEW: Julius Caesar, Noel Coward Theatre (2012)
Read more about the article REVIEW: The Last of the Haussmans, Lyttelton Theatre (2012)
Helen McCrory as Libby (left), Julie Walters as Judy (centre), Rory Kinnear as Nick (right) - Photo: Catherine Ashmore

REVIEW: The Last of the Haussmans, Lyttelton Theatre (2012)

Stellar Cast for Stephen Beresford's First Play "My children hate it when I'm sexual." Judy Helen McCrory as Libby (left), Julie Walters as Judy (centre), Rory Kinnear as Nick (right)…

Continue ReadingREVIEW: The Last of the Haussmans, Lyttelton Theatre (2012)