Review: Talking About the Fire
This is breakthrough theatre in more ways than theatre
Review: Talking About the Fire
This is breakthrough theatre in more ways than theatre
Review: Mark Burgess Talking Orton Lantern Theatre
A striking verbatim transcript.
Review: Toy Stories
A journey via 1970's model cars digs into history, family and politics, connecting across the decades with art at its heart.
Review: Sweet William
Naturally enriched by living with Shakespeare Michael Pennington unearths local habitations and names for him.
Review: Evening Conversations/Life Laundry
Engrossing, it should provoke. Sudha Bhuchar absolves us by being bloody funny.
Review: The Whole Shebang
See it again!
Review: The Love and War Trilogy
An enormously satisfying traversal
Review: Sunday Assembly
A celebration of community in the wood
Review: The Odditorium
An eclectic mix of strange and unusual entertainment
Review: Danny Dorling: Rule Britannia, Brexit and the End of Empire
Authoritative and insightful.
Review: Mao That’s What I Call Music!
Des Kapital presents a strange brew of pop karaoke and Communist China
Review: DNA – Alexandra David-Néel
Daring, intelligent, unique, challenging work
Review: The Odditorium: Dr David Luke’s Breaking Conventions
A talk about exceptional human and transpersonal experiences.
Review: Notorious Women of Brighton
To Miss This Tour-De-Force Would Be Scandalous
Review: The Art and Science of Gin
Gin as Science and History
Review: Smoothies, Salads and Sorbets
A display of how to make a delicious array of healthy dishes to try.
Review: The Odditorium: Pioneering Women in Music
A fantastic double bill of two female musicians in talks and conversation.
Review: No’s Knife: Lisa Dwon in Conversation with Clemency Burton-Hill
Here in conversation with Clemency Burton-Hill, after a soaring creative response to Beckett’s Texts For Nothing in her own adaptation No’s Knife, Dwon has claimed these texts as dramatic. Dwon avoids dissolution with her tensile strength and staggered, staggering vocal range, brushed with a tang of mortality – and a bit more of that more than we knew.
Review: I Used to Hear Footsteps
Paranormal investigation delves into family life
Review: In Fidelity
A fascinating look at love, cheating, and relationships with a live onstage date between audience members
Review: Conductors Unbecoming: Scenes from Orchestral Life
Gavin Henderson Presents: Fascinating insight into how the best-known Director of the Brighton Festival got things done as an orchestral manager.
Review: Sandi Toksvig Live! Politically Incorrect
A comedy show with a message
Review: Bill Clinton Hercules
"Let my mind light up your mind"
Review: Acting Human: Live Life Alive
"A fascinating and satisfying talk"
Review: Speed…Mating…
Science. Philosophy. Porn.