Inside No. 9's Stage/Fright final London shows announced
Reece Shearsmith and Steve Pemberton announce the final ever London performances of their hit play Stage/Fright at the Eventim Apollo. Tickets on sale November 13.
Reece Shearsmith and Steve Pemberton announce the final ever London performances of their hit play Stage/Fright at the Eventim Apollo. Tickets on sale November 13.
A mother with incurable cancer faces financial ruin after the DWP stopped her disability payments because she became too sick abroad to return to the UK within time limits.
Discover the most anticipated theatrical productions coming to London in 2022, from Broadway transfers and major revivals to groundbreaking new works that promise to transform the city's cultural landscape.
Celebrating the life and legacy of composer Adrian Sutton, whose powerful scores defined iconic National Theatre productions and brought theatrical magic to audiences worldwide.
Rachel Joyce's beloved novel makes an emotional leap to streaming this month, starring Jim Broadbent in a poignant performance about redemption and human connection.
The beloved TV crime drama makes a triumphant leap to the stage in this thrilling production at Richmond Theatre, bringing the charming yet deadly English countryside to life.
A groundbreaking Japanese theatre production reimagines Shakespeare's Henry VIII with an all-female cast, transforming the Tudor monarch's six wives into the central focus of this revolutionary adaptation.
Theatre review: Benjamin Law's stage version of Cory Taylor's celebrated memoir about mortality misses the mark, delivering an unsatisfying and emotionally distant production that struggles to translate the book's profound insights.
A stunning new production merges Korean folklore with contemporary storytelling in a visually arresting exploration of grief and memory at London's Barbican.
Celebrating the extraordinary life and legacy of Yvonne Brewster, the Jamaican-born theatre pioneer who transformed British stages and founded the groundbreaking Talawa Theatre Company.
Jack Holden's masterful stage adaptation of Alan Hollinghurst's Booker Prize-winning novel delivers a powerful exploration of 1980s gay life and political hypocrisy in Thatcher's Britain.