Review: CLUEDO at Bath Theatre Royal
★★★☆☆ Devotees of the game will enjoy seeing the characters come to life in this first British stage rendering of the whodunnit which has its tongue firmly planted in its cheek.
Read More★★★☆☆ Devotees of the game will enjoy seeing the characters come to life in this first British stage rendering of the whodunnit which has its tongue firmly planted in its cheek.
Read More★★★★☆ From the moment that she enters, an almost sarcastic look of suggestive sexuality painted on her face while tripping through the song ‘Always Something There To Remind Me’ the audience is emotionally hijacked
Read More★★★★★ A gripping version of these rarely performed histories. Mark Quartley shines out with his subtle portrayal of King Henry. Playing a man who is both weak and unassertive, he nevertheless holds the stage with his quiet slender presence and engaging humanity
Read More★★★★☆ Morpurgo could never have imagined that his story would ever be associated with a contemporary crisis such is happening now in eastern Europe. ‘Never again’ was the cry in 1918, but here we are.
Read More★★★★★ To hold an audience spellbound throughout a sixty-minute, one-woman show is no mean feat. Actor Sarel Madziya does just that in this deeply affecting story of a seventeen-year-old girl caught in the English care system
Read More★★★★☆ If Mr Terera’s aim was to give emotional form to the importance of agency and testimony (and current events in Ukraine bear this out) The Meaning of Zong must be counted a resounding success.
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