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This play written seventeen years ago hits us with a very contemporary dilemma. How do two people who love each other – and yet have a clear sense of their ...
Family Matters: Yous Two at the Hampstead Theatre Downstairs
Yous Two is Georgia Christou’s first play and, crucially, the first Hampstead Downstairs play to be open for press reviews. It is a great choice.
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The Other Side of Anonymity: The Believers Are But Brothers at the Bush Theatre
Before you enter the theatre, you are asked to join a special WhatsApp group as part of the show. For once, we are not asked to switch off our phones. ...
Looking for Mummy: Nazanin’s Story: An Urgent Call For Justice
Emi Howell’s play, about the British-Iranian charity worker currently imprisoned in Iran, is political theatre at its best.
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The Price of War: Minefield at the Royal Court Theatre
Lola Arias’s melancholic study of the Falklands War is a strange and poignant show about war and memory.
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Having It All: Bitched at the Tristan Bates Theatre
Second-time playwright Sharon Raizada takes a good marriage, puts it in a carriage with no seat belts and pushes it down the London rollercoaster.
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A Tale of Twilight: Prism at the Hampstead Theatre
Terry Johnson’s portrait of legendary British cinematographer Jack Cardiff is a lovely tale of decline and twilight without an ounce of doom.
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The Price of Freedom: Talk Radio at the Old Red Lion Theatre
Talk Radio marked a turning point in Eric Bogosian’s career. He said he wrote it at a time in his life when “confusion reigned”.
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The Write Stuff: Gloria at the Hampstead Theatre
Branden Jacobs-Jenkins’ searing satire on magazine journalism was a finalist for the 2016 Pulitzer Prize for Drama.
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The Refrigerator
She opened both the freezer and the regular refrigerator doors. It was already smelling bad like a dead appliance. They were holes in the back of the top compartment as ...









