
Bronco Billy The Musical at Charing Cross Theatre
It’s set in America. It naturally follows there are guns: it’s their right to bear arms, y’see. The Bronco Billy of the show’s title (Tarinn
It’s set in America. It naturally follows there are guns: it’s their right to bear arms, y’see. The Bronco Billy of the show’s title (Tarinn
First seen at last year’s Belfast International Arts Festival, Big Telly’s Frankenstein’s Monster is Drunk and the Sheep Have All Jumped the Fences returns home
I have never gone skiing, and never will. Aside from the absurdity of dragging yourself up to the top of a mountain, then throwing yourself
Before The Bourne Identity and The Tourist – with their amnesiac heroes – there was The Prisoner. Before Twin Peaks and Lost – with their impenetrable plots – there was The Prisoner. Before The X-Files and Game of
I regret starting with a spoiler, but I couldn’t help pointing out that Twelve Angry Men is a misleading title: there are twelve jurors in a 1950s
It’s always satisfying to sit in a theatre and watch the seats fill up until the house is full, so this opening night was hugely
As I enter the Te Pou theatre foyer, a lot of the audience are casually waiting and talking and suddenly two staunch officers yell out
The National Theatre is meant to represent the whole nation – and not just the metropolitan middle classes. So it’s really good to see that
Two hours before ‘lights up’ on Lads on the Island, a southerly squall hit Wellington complete with thunder claps – an appropriate curtain raiser for a
Review by Emily Smith FRINGE favourites the Head First Acrobats are back in Perth with their western-style mix of circus tricks and saucy antics, RAILED.
Review by Emily Smith Patrick McPherson’s one-man play doesn’t give much away in its bio, other than being about love stories. I now know this
A two-act dance theatre work based on Federico Fellini’s 1954 film La Strada (The Road), the lead, simple soul (and soul is the right word) Gelsomina (played