thu 18/09/2025

Reviews

'We are bowled over!' Thank you for your messages of love and support

Tom Birchenough

We are bowled over! 

The Producers, Garrick Theatre review - Ve haf vays of making you laugh

Gary Naylor

Unexpectedly, there’s a sly reference to James Joyce’s Ulysses interpolated into Act One (in case we hadn’t caught the not so sly one, naming a leading character Leopold Bloom). While that’s a nice callback from brash commercial Hollywood to the high art salons of Paris, it also links the works. If Ulysses is the book whose legend persists despite so few people having read it, is The Producers its cinematic equivalent?  

Appl, Levickis, Wigmore Hall review - fun to the...

Bernard Hughes

Concerts at the Wigmore Hall offer many types of pleasure, but not often an evening so straightforwardly fun as Monday night’s recital by baritone...

Lammermuir Festival 2025, Part 2 review - from...

Simon Thompson

My colleague Boyd Tonkin visited the Lammermuir Festival for the first time this year. His eyes and ears have been opened to its treasures, but some...

Frances Wilson: Electric Spark - The Enigma of...

Claudia Bull

How do you tell the story of a person’s mind? In the preface to Electric Spark: The Enigma of Muriel Spark, published this year by Bloomsbury,...

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Spinal Tap II: The End Continues review - comedy rock band fails to revive past glories

Adam Sweeting

Belated satirical sequel runs out of gas

Tosca, Welsh National Opera review - a great company reduced to brilliance

Stephen Walsh

The old warhorse made special by the basics

Not Your Superwoman, Bush Theatre review - powerful tribute to the plight and perseverance of Black women

Demetrios Matheou

Golda Rosheuvel and Letitia Wright excel in a super new play

Music Reissues Weekly: Robyn - Robyn 20th-Anniversary Edition

Kieron Tyler

Landmark Swedish pop album hits shops one more time

Downton Abbey: The Grand Finale review - an attemptedly elegiac final chapter haunted by its past

Helen Hawkins

Noel Coward is a welcome visitor to the insular world of the hit series

BBC Proms: Ehnes, Sinfonia of London, Wilson review - aspects of love

Boyd Tonkin

Sensuous Ravel, and bittersweet Bernstein, on an amorous evening

Presteigne Festival 2025 review - new music is centre stage in the Welsh Marches

Clare Stevens

Music by 30 living composers, with Eleanor Alberga topping the bill

Islands review - sunshine noir serves an ace

Demetrios Matheou

Sam Riley is the holiday resort tennis pro in over his head

A Single Man, Linbury Theatre review - an anatomy of melancholy, with breaks in the clouds

Jenny Gilbert

Ed Watson and Jonathan Goddard are extraordinary in Jonathan Watkins' dance theatre adaptation of Isherwood's novel

Cow | Deer, Royal Court review - paradox-rich account of non-human life

Aleks Sierz

Experimental work about nature led by Katie Mitchell is both extraordinary and banal

Lammermuir Festival 2025 review - music with soul from the heart of East Lothian

Boyd Tonkin

Baroque splendour, and chamber-ensemble drama, amid history-haunted lands

Album: Yasmine Hamdan - I Remember I Forget بنسى وبتذكر

Kieron Tyler

Paris-based Lebanese electronica stylist reacts to current-day world affairs

BBC Proms: Steinbacher, RPO, Petrenko / Sternath, BBCSO, Oramo review - double-bill mixed bag

Bernard Hughes

Young pianist shines in Grieg but Bliss’s portentous cantata disappoints

Honey Don’t! review - film noir in the bright sun

James Saynor

A Coen brother with a blood-simple gumshoe caper

theartsdesk on Vinyl 92: Marianne Faithful, Crayola Lectern, UK Subs, Black Lips, Stax, Dennis Bovell and more

Thomas H Green

The biggest, best record reviews in the known universe

Blondshell, Queen Margaret Union, Glasgow review - woozy rock with an air of nonchalance

Jonathan Geddes

The singer's set dripped with cool, if not always individuality

Ganavya, Barbican review - low-key spirituality

Mark Kidel

Communion and intimacy with diminishing returns

Music Reissues Weekly: Chiswick Records 1975-1982 - Seven Years at 45 RPM

Kieron Tyler

Triple-album 50th-anniversary celebration of the mould-breaking British independent label

I Fought the Law, ITVX review - how an 800-year-old law was challenged and changed

Helen Hawkins

Sheridan Smith's raw performance dominates ITV's new docudrama about injustice

theartsdesk at the Lahti Sibelius Festival - early epics by the Finnish master in context

David Nice

Finnish heroes meet their Austro-German counterparts in breathtaking interpretations

Deaf Republic, Royal Court review - beautiful images, shame about the words

Aleks Sierz

Staging of Ukrainian-American Ilya Kaminsky’s anti-war poems is too meta-theatrical

Laura Benanti: Nobody Cares, Underbelly Boulevard Soho review - Tony winner makes charming, cheeky London debut

Matt Wolf

Broadway's acclaimed Cinderella, Louise, and Amalia reaches Soho for a welcome one-night stand

Waley-Cohen, Manchester Camerata, Pether, Whitworth Art Gallery, Manchester review - premiere of no ordinary violin concerto

Robert Beale

Images of maternal care inspired by Hepworth and played in a gallery setting

The Courageous review - Ophélia Kolb excels as a single mother on the edge

Markie Robson-Scott

Jasmin Gordon's directorial debut features strong performances but leaves too much unexplained

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