Posts Tagged ‘The Bridge Theatre’
Friday 19 October 2018

A Very Very Very Dark Matter certainly is what it says on the tin. But in opening that grubby little tin be warned, we might spoil the contents for you. Continue at your peril. Read the rest of this entry »
Posted in West End Whingers | 4 Comments »
Tags: A Very Very Very Dark Matter, Anna Fleischle, Charles Dickens, Elizabeth Berrington, entertainment, Graeme Hawley, Hans Christian Andersen, Jim Broadbent, Johnetta Eula'Mae Ackles, London, Martin McDonagh, Matthew Dunster, Paul Bradley, Phil Daniels, play, review, The Bridge Theatre, theatre, west end
Wednesday 18 July 2018

You have to hand it to The Bridge Theatre for jumping the gun. The publicity tells us that “Alan Bennett’s new play Allelujah! is as sharp as The History Boys and as funny as The Lady in the Van“. Err, we’ll get back to you on that.
Notice there’s no mention of Mr Bennett’s last two offerings, The Habit of Art and People. We can’t imagine why. Read the rest of this entry »
Posted in West End Whingers | 1 Comment »
Tags: Alan Benn, Allelujah!, Arlene Phillips, Bob Crowley, Cleo Sylvestre, comedy, Deborah Findlay, entertainment, Gwen Taylor, Jacqueline Chan, Jacqueline Clarke, Jeff Rawle, Julia Foster, London, Louis Mahoney, Nicholas Hytner, play, review, Sacha Dhawan, Samuel Barnett, Simon Williams, The Bridge Theatre, theatre, west end
Monday 6 November 2017

For those kind folk (that should probably read as singular rather than plural) who have been interested enough to ask where Phil’s been, here lies the answer. Hip replacement don’t you know, beating Patti LuPone to the crutches by a matter of weeks. He feels Patti’s pain. And he’s just beginning to dip the toe on the end of his newly bionic leg back into the world of theatre that doesn’t come with a surgeon and anaesthetist. Read the rest of this entry »
Posted in West End Whingers | 14 Comments »
Tags: Apollo Theatre, Cat on a Hot Tin Roof, Clive Coleman, Clive Francis, comedy, Daon Broni, entertainment, Fenella Woolgar, Follies, Gwen Taylor, Hampstead Theatre, Jack O'Connell, London, Lucy Cohu, musical, Nancy Carroll, National Theatre, Nicholas Hytner, Nicholas Wright, off-West End, Oliver Chris, Patrick Hamilton, play, review, Richard Bean, Rory Kinnear, Sienna Miller, Stephen Sondheim, The Bridge Theatre, The Slaves of Solitude, theatre, west end, Young Marx