theartsdesk.com, first with arts reviews, news and interviews
theartsdesk |
We are bowled over! We knew that theartsdesk.com had plenty of supporters out there – we’ve always had a loyal readership of arts lovers and professionals alike – but the…
Aleks Sierz |
Post-Covid British theatre has a crush on adaptations, especially those with a star actor. So it’s easy to see why National Theatre chief Indhu Rubasingham is staging the latest…
caspar.gomez |
Sweating in my lair, there’s no trip to the mecca this year. If the festival was on, I'd be there right now, but it’s a fallow year and Glastonbury Festival is keeping its head…
Rachel Halliburton |
The erotic life of puppets – we discover in this show – is filled with intriguing possibilities that are denied to mere flesh and blood lovers. They can float up into the air when…
Helen Hawkins |
French playwright Florian Zeller’s 2011 four-hander about infidelity and the deceptions it entails, translated by Christopher Hampton, returns 10 years after its UK premiere at…
Markie Robson-Scott |
It’s the summer vacation and eight-year-old Sasha (Eylul Guven) and her three brothers have moved into a new house on Vancouver Island with their Hungarian parents. The kids…
Cathi Unsworth
I got my contract to write Season of The Witch: The Book of Goth just as the first Covid lockdown began in March 2020. During that time of plague and alienation, I time-travelled…
Kieron Tyler
Shadows opens with “The Lone West,” a short, desolate instrumental featuring a simple keyboard refrain with a flute-like quality and what may be an early Seventies drum machine.…
Boyd Tonkin
During the calm evening before an apocalyptic London storm, trumpet virtuoso Håkan Hardenberger delighted the Barbican audience with not only the advertised two showcases for his…
Rachel Halliburton
King Charles I famously declared that Much Ado About Nothing should be renamed the "Beatrice and Benedick play". So it’s not difficult to imagine him – or indeed any fan of…
Jonathan Bank
I first became aware of the playwright Teresa Deevy, the Irish author of the Jermyn Street's imminent A Wife to James Whelan, while leafing through a production history of the…
Helen Hawkins
How much more can Jeremy Clarkson’s body take? The fifth season of his reality show about his Oxfordshire spread, Diddly Squat Farm and pendant pub, could have been borrowed from…
David Nice
Bloomsday doesn't just celebrate James Joyce's odyssey through so many parts of Dublin that still teem with character; it's also putatively about the same 16 June 1904 when the…
Liz Thomson
“I guess you could call it a lost album. I stumbled upon it in my vault at home. I’d forgotten about it completely,” explained Rodney Crowell as he geared up for the release of an…
Kieron Tyler
Between June 1964 and September 1966, London-area R&B band Downliners Sect issued ten singles, one EP and three albums on EMI’s Columbia imprint. A lot of records. Especially…
David Nice
The conundrum of five women, three of them men, is the same as it was in the last Serse I witnessed, in the more intimate surroundings of St Martin-in-the-Fields. Paula Murrihy…
Matt Wolf
O Glengarry, where is thy sting? That's likely to be one response to the bewildering Old Vic revival of David Mamet's defining (and remarkable) Glengarry Glen Ross, which I saw in…
Graham Rickson
Bach: The Complete Keyboard Concertos Mahan Esfahani (harpsichord/director), Britten Sinfonia, leader Jacqueline Shave (Hyperion) Image…
Tim Cumming
Beginning with “The Ground Above” and closing with “Otherside”, there’s an ambient, otherwordly, disembodied feel to Beth Orton’s new album on Partisan Records, a follow-up to…

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tv

A cancer operation is just one of the trials ahead for Diddly Squat in a moving new season
The 'Bergerac' star discusses his detective skills, playing troubled men and taking on his first theatre role after a nine-year hiatus

film

Sophy Romvari's atmospheric first feature looks back at a tortured family dynamic
The evergreen animation franchise in a below-par new romp
Revived for Monroe's centenary, Billy Wilder's classic reminds us how great film can be

new music

With no Glastonbury Festival 2026, our intrepid reporter offers us mementos and tall tales
As her collection of music by goth divas appears, the writer reveals the appeal of the dark side
Intriguing second album from Los Angeles musical auteur

classical

A brass hero blows through favourite pieces - and a bluesy newcomer
Baroque concertos, opera arias on solo horn and new music for contrabass flute
Subtle, introspective 'Harold in Italy' followed by over-punchy 'Symphonie fantastique'

opera

Paula Murrihy is a majestic Persian king, though the orchestra is more flouncy than fiery
William Kentridge's vision subtly blends his political experiences with mythology
Fine music-making illuminates Debussy's sinister blend of realism and romance

theatre

Martin Crimp’s sparkling latest revisits Molière and gives the play a gender twist
Florian Zeller weaves a clever web of deceit around four Parisians

dance

Much-appreciated words of commendation from readers and the cultural community

comedy

Much-appreciated words of commendation from readers and the cultural community

books

Much-appreciated words of commendation from readers and the cultural community
As her collection of music by goth divas appears, the writer reveals the appeal of the dark side
Joyce lurks in the margins of his own biography in a detailed history of Irish politics

visual arts

Much-appreciated words of commendation from readers and the cultural community