From director Kelly Ann Stewart, Park Theatre’s Gawain and the Green Knight transplants the...
When you think of the theatre at Christmas, what comes to mind is...
Mischief Theatre and their Cornley Drama Society alter-egos are...
We open with a series of silhouetted figures drifting...
108 Brasserie on Marylebone Lane...
Da Long Yi, a Chinese hotpot chain originating from Chengdu, has...
Acclaimed playwright David Henry Hwang’s play Yellow Face is an entertaining...
Like many other indie-rock bands surfacing on the music scene in the mid-2000s, The...
Having to read George Orwell’s 1984 within the rigid confines of school, forced...
Back in 2003 Nelly was hailed as one of the most popular rappers of the...
An explosion of different music genres – from soft to celtic , from classical...
Closer Than Ever isn’t musical theatre in the usual sense –...
The musical paradise known as Rough Trade East hosted a short but pleasant evening...
There are few films that remain captivating without dialogue: for the most part, Silent Sonata is...
It’s a drizzling, windy evening in London for a change: those warm, sunny spring days we experienced a couple of weeks ago already seem a thing of the past. Yet it only takes a cosy venue like XOYO, some friends to spend quality time with, maybe a drink and the weather related...
Following the announcement of their debut album Final Warning – Rough...
From director Kelly Ann Stewart, Park Theatre’s Gawain and the Green Knight transplants the titular Arthurian hero from the Middle Ages to middle management. Far from a gallant soldier, Gawain (real name Gary) is a salesman who can’t seem to get his act together. This retelling of the legend is one part...




Facebook
Twitter
Instagram
YouTube
RSS