Andrzej Lukowski has been the theatre editor of Time Out London since 2013.

He mostly writes about theatre and also has additional editorial responsibility for dance, comedy, opera and kids. He has lived in London a decade and has probably spent about a year of that watching productions of A Midsummer Night’s Dream. 

He has two children and while it is necessary to amuse them he takes the lead on Time Out’s children’s coverage.

Oczywiście on jest Polakiem.

Reach him at [email protected].

Andrzej Lukowski

Andrzej Lukowski

Theatre Editor, UK

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Articles (266)

Best new restaurants in London of 2026 so far

Best new restaurants in London of 2026 so far

Every week, a frankly silly amount of brilliant new restaurants, cafés and street food joints arrive in London. Which makes whittling down a shortlist of the best newbies a serious challenge. But here it is. The 20 very best new restaurants in the capital, ranked in order of greatness and deliciousness. All of them have opened over the past 12 months and been visited by our hungry critics. So go forth and take inspo from this list, which is updated regularly. Check in often to find out what we really rate on the London restaurant scene. And look here for all the info about the best new openings in February 2026. London's best new restaurants at a glance: 🍛 Central: DakaDaka, Mayfair 🍠 North: Ling Ling’s, Islington 🥟 South: Doma, Sydenham 🍝 East: Tiella, Bethnal Green 🥗 West: Martino’s, Chelsea February 2026: We have a new Number 1! The newly-opened Tiella in Bethnal Green has scooped the top spot thanks to knockout regional Italian dishes from chef Dara Klein. Other fresh additions include the slinky Martino's in Chelsea, Cambodian residency Barang at The Globe in Borough Market, foodie wine bar in a one-time Clerkenwell tattoo parlour Passione Vino, perfect produce at Dockley Road Kitchen in Bermondsey, Hunanese heat at Fiery Flavors in Surrey Quays, Ukrainian elegance at Sino in Notting Hill, cool diner energy at Dover Street Counter in Mayfair, Georgian classics at DakaDaka in Mayfair, and spicy southern Thai at the second branch of Plaza Khao Gaeng by Borough Marke
The best restaurants in Borough

The best restaurants in Borough

Borough is known for having one of the best food markets in the world, but it’s also home to some seriously good restaurants as well as the brilliant market. The Borough Yards development – just next to this historic, edible wonderland – is where you’ll find some of the latest and greatest spots to have a sit-down feast, including west African restaurant Akara and southern Thai sensation, Plaza Khao Gaeng. If you’re off to SE1 and your stomach is rumbling, then consult this list so you can hunt down all our favourite spots for a fabulous feed, from contemporary Greek classics at Oma and Pyro, to pasta at Padella, classy French cuisine at Camille and seafood at Applebee’s.  RECOMMENDED: The best restaurants in London Bridge. Leonie Cooper is Time Out London’s Food and Drink Editor. For more about how we curate, see our editorial guidelines.
The 17 best February half-term things to do in London

The 17 best February half-term things to do in London

The Christmas holidays barely feel like they’re over but oh look: here’s our old pal February half-term, back again. Dealing with the little ones for a week in the middle of what is arguably the bleakest month of the year is always a bit of a shock to the system. But fear not! By way of acknowledgement of all this London really steps up with the indoor activities challenge, with the annual Imagine festival at the Southbank Centre as ever leading the way for a week in which there’s in fact plenty to do. Read on for our top tips.  My name is Andrzej and I’m Time Out’s lead kids’ writer and also parent to two children who go to school in Bromley, where for some reason the local authorities think we want a two-week half-term. As ever, the idea with this list is to highlight the best new, returning or last chance to see shows; London also has plenty of evergreen fun for children of all ages, quite a lot of which you can find in out list of the 50 best things to do with kids in London. When is February half-term this year?  This year, London’s February half-term officially falls between Monday February 16 and Friday February 20 (ie children will be off continuously between Saturday February 14 and Sunday February 22).  Here’s our roundup of all the best things to do with your children this February half-term.
London theatre reviews

London theatre reviews

Hello, and welcome to the Time Out theatre reviews round up. From huge star vehicles and massive West End musical to hip fringe shows and more, this is a compliation of all the latest London reviews from the Time Out theatre team, which is me plus our team of freelance critics. December is the busiest time of year for London theatre – expect plenty of pantomime reviews and other seasonal fun but also a slew of major openings from across London’s many venues as the industry works itself to a frenzy before shutting down for Christmas. The best new London theatre shows to book for in 2026. A-Z of West End shows.
Children’s theatre in London: the best shows for kids of all ages

Children’s theatre in London: the best shows for kids of all ages

Hello – I'm Time Out’s theatre editor and also a parent, something that has a lot of overlap in London, a city with three dedicated kids theatres and where pretty much every other theatre might stage a child-friendly show. London's kids theatre shows at a glance: Best musical: Matilda the Musical, Cambridge Theatre Best for teens: The Hunger Games: On Stage, Troubadour Canary Wharf Theatre Biggest new show of last year: Paddington the Musical, Savoy Theatre  Quirkiest show for tweens: Who Let the Gods Out, Polka Theatre  This round up focusses on the flagship shows at London’s kids theatres – that’s the Little Angel, the Unicorn and Polka – plus other major shows aimed at or suitable for youngsters. On the whole, pre-school and primary children are the age groups best served specifically, because secondary school aged teenagers can generally see adult theatre perfectly well (and will indeed often be made to do so!). So while the odd teen focussed show will make it in here, if you’re looking for something to do with teens why not consult our reviews page or what to book list. Our London kids’ theatre page normally contains information for all the main children’s shows running in London theatres this month and next month, and is broken down into three categories. Theatre for all the family is suitable for any age, including adults without children. Theatre for older children is specifically aimed at school-age children and teenagers. Theatre for babies, pre-schoolers and yo
Best West End theatre shows in London

Best West End theatre shows in London

There are over a hundred theatres of all shapes and sizes throughout London, from tiny fringe venues above pubs to iconic internationally famous institutions like the National Theatre. And at the heart of it is the West End, aka Theatreland. What is a West End theatre? Unlike Broadway, where there are strict definitions based upon capacity, there is no hard and fast definition of a West End theatre. However, West End theatres are all commercial theatres – that is to say, they receive no government funding – and on the whole they are receiving houses, that is to say they don’t have in house artistic teams creating the work that they show (although often theatre owners like Andrew Lloyd Webber or Nica Burns may commission or even create the work). London's best West End shows at a glance: Best musical: Hamilton, Victoria Palace Theatre Best for families: My Neighbour Totoro, Gillian Lynne Theatre Best ’80s classic: Les Miserables, His Majesty’s Theatre Funniest show: Operation Mincemeat, Fortune Theatre  Hippest hit: Hadestown, Lyric Theatre They are mostly based in the West End of London, although it’s not a hard and fast rule, with two major ‘West End’ theatres at Victoria. Most West End theatres are Victorian or Edwardian, although Theatre Royal Drury Land and Theatre Royal Haymarket have roots a couple of centuries before that, while @sohoplace is the newest (it opened in 2022). Capacity is similarly all over the shop: the 2,359-set London Coliseum is the biggest; the sm
The top London theatre shows according to our critics

The top London theatre shows according to our critics

Hello! I'm Andrzej, the theatre editor of Time Out London, and me and my freelancers review a heck of a lot of theatre. This page is an attempt to distil the shows that are on right now into something like a best of the best based upon our actual reviews, as opposed to my predictions, which determine our longer range what to book for list. London's critics’ choice shows to book for at a glance: Best musical: Hamilton, Victoria Palace Theatre Best star casting: All My Sons, Wyndham’s Theatre Best for kids: Paddington the Musical, Savoy Theatre Best old classic: Les Miserables, Sondheim Theatre  Best for a scare: Paranormal Activity, Ambassadors Theatre It isn’t a scientific process, and you’ll definitely see shows that got four stars above ones that got five – this is generally because the five star show is probably going to be on for years to come (hello, Hamilton) and I'm trying to draw your attention to one that’s only running for a couple more weeks. Or sometimes, we just like to shake things up a bit. It’s also deliberately light on the longer-running West End hits simply because I don’t think you need to know what I think about Les Mis before you book it (it’s fine!). So please enjoy the best shows in London, as recommended by us, having actually seen them.
Shakespeare plays in London

Shakespeare plays in London

To say that William Shakespeare bestrides our culture like a colossus is to undersell him. Over 400 years since his death, the playwright is uncontested as the greatest writer of English who has ever lived. Even if you’re not a fan of sixteenth century blank verse – and if not, why not? – his influence over our culture goes far beyond that of any other writer. He invented words, phrases, plots, characters, stories that are still vividly alive today; his history plays utterly shaped our understanding of our own past as a nation. London Shakespeare plays at a glance: Best celebrity cast: Romeo & Juliet, Harold Pinter Theatre Best weird: The Tempest, Shakespeare’s Globe Best for kids: A Midsummer Night’s Dream, Unicorn Theatre And unsurpisingly he is inescapable in London. The iconic Elizabethan recreation Shakespeare’s Globe theatre is his temple, with a year-round programme that’s about three-quarters his works. Although based in Stratford-upon-Avon, the Royal Shakespeare Company regularly visit the capital, most frequently the Barbican Centre. And Shakespeare plays can be found… almost anywhere else, from the National Theatre – where they invariably run in the huge Olivier venue – to tiny fringe productions and outdoor version that pop up everywhere come the warmer months.  This page is simple: we tell you what Shakespeare plays are on in town this month (the answer is pretty much always ‘at least one’). We we tell you which of his works you can see coming up in the future
London musicals

London musicals

For many people, musical theatre basically is theatre, and certainly there are a hell of a lot of musicals running in London at any given time, from decades-long classics like Les Misérables and The Phantom of the Opera to short-run fringe obscurities, plus all manner of new shows launched every year hoping for long-running glory. London's best musicals at a glance: Hippest musical: American Psycho, Almeida Theatre Best of the oldies: Les Miserables, Sondheim Theatre Best for families: Matilda the Musical, Cambridge Theatre The new big thing: Paddington the Musical, Savoy Theatre  Funniest musical: Operation Mincemeat, Fortune Theatre Here Time Out rounds up every West End musical currently running or coming soon, plus fringe and off-West End shows that we’ve reviewed – all presented in fabulous alphabetical order. SEE ALSO: How to get cheap and last-minute theatre tickets in London.
Immersive theatre in London

Immersive theatre in London

What is immersive theatre? A glib buzzword? A specific description of a specific type of theatre? A phrase that has become so diluted that it’s lost all meaning? Whether you call it immersive, interactive or site-specific, London is bursting with plays and experiences which welcome you into a real-life adventure that you can wander around and play the hero in. London's best immersive shows at a glance: Best for dinner theatre: Faulty Towers the Dining Experience, President Hotel Best for Trekkies: Bridge Command, Vauxhall Arches Best for music lovers: Mamma Mia! The Party, The O2 Coolest: Lander 23, Carriageworks I’m Andrzej Łukowski, Time Out’s theatre editor, and I have run the immersive gamut, from a show where I had to take my clothes off in a darkened shipping container, to successfully bagging tickets to the six-hour Punchdrunk odyssey there were only ever a couple of hundred tickets for, to quite a lot of theatre productions where the set goes into the audience a bit and apparently that counts as immersive. There is a lot of immersive work in London, some of which is definitely theatre, some of which definitely isn’t, some of which is borderline, some of which is but doesn’t want to say it is because some some people are just horrified of the word ‘theatre’.  This page has been around for a while now and gone through various schools of thought, but the one we’ve settled on for now is that the main list compiles every major show in London that could reasonably be des
The top London comedy shows to see in February

The top London comedy shows to see in February

The comedy year is well-under way by February, with the biggest shows in town probably long runs for alt icons Stewart Lee (at Ally Pally) and Simon Amstell (The Arches). Elsewhere and there’s a chance to see new shows from the likes of Olga Koch and Kate Berland, plus a few old dinburgh Fringe classics.  There are far, far too many one-off, multi-performer comedy nights in London for us to compile a single coherent page with our favouites on, which is entirely to London’s credit. So do check individual bills of comedy clubs online for that sort of thing. But if you’re looking for an individual comedian with a full headline show then this page is here to compile the Time Out editorial team’s top choices, often with our reviews from the Edinburgh Festival Fringe. The best comedy clubs in London.The best new theatre shows to book for in London.
Easter holidays activities for kids in London

Easter holidays activities for kids in London

Thanks to some frankly pretty wacky decisions made at the Council of Nicea in the year 325AD, the Easter weekend famously jumps around crazily from year to year, making the Easter holiday undoubedly the most erratic of all school breaks. For 2026, the school Easter hols stretch from Monday March 30 to Friday April 10, with the Easter weekend tucked away snugly in the middle of that (Good Friday is April 3; Easter Monday is April 6). Theoretically, then, the holiday should be precisely two weeks long with the bank holidays neatly contained therein, although doubtless some schools will tack on a cheeky Monday teacher training day at the end. Easter is a funny old holiday that be perfect outdoor weather and can be bloody awful. But hopefully spring will have fully sprung, and if not don’t worry – there’s absolutely loads to do in London this Easter holiday, and we’ve rounded up teh best option below.  Stuck for ideas on how to fill all this free time? That’s where we come in. Below is a list of ideas for things you can get up to in London with the kids this Easter holidays.  RECOMMENDED: Crack open our full guide to the Easter weekend.  

Listings and reviews (1079)

Anansi the Spider

Anansi the Spider

4 out of 5 stars
This review is from 2019. Anansi the Spider returns in 2026.  Anansi the trickster spider went global a long time ago. But Justin Audibert’s inaugural production in charge of the Unicorn takes folklore’s most famous arachnid right back to his roots. Under Sadeysa Greenaway-Bailey’s sprawling tree set, performers Afia Abusham, Sapphire Joy and Juliet Okotie file on clutching djembe drums, wearing West African clothes and accents as they launch into a funny, energetic trio of tales. In the first act, Anansi steals the world’s wisdom, only to reflect that this might have been a rather unwise decision; in the second he blags some vegetables from a green, er, fingered snake and cons a series of unfortunate other animals into paying the steep price demanded for the veg; the third hops to modern London – this time Anansi is a chancer who concocts an elaborate scheme to bag himself two dinners and ends up falling flat on his face. The three women divvy up three Anansi roles for a funny and lively show for ages three to seven that’s essentially old-fashioned storytelling, done with pace and care. There are no splashy spider costumes, but they’re not necessary – the young audience get that each woman is a different facet of Anansi. And if it’s mostly about the power of their words, then engaging music and lighting switches up the mood when small attention spans threaten to wander. There’s also some sublime physicality, be that Anansi teetering precariously up the enormous tree set,
The Virgins

The Virgins

4 out of 5 stars
I wouldn’t really say Miriam Battye’s comedy The Virgins reminded me of my own teenage years, although to be fair this is probably because I was never a teenage girl. However, it did make me laugh a lot. Rosie Elnile’s set is divided into two rooms of the same unremarkable house, with a corridor in the middle. In the lounge, Joel (Ragevan Vasan) is silently playing on a console with his random mate Mel (Alec Boaden). In the kitchen, his teenage sister Chloe (Anushka Chakravarti) and her friends Jess (Alla Bruccoleri) and Phoebe (Molly Hewitt-Richards) are getting ready for a big night out.  The boys are not the focus here. The girls – clever, wordy, neurotic, virgins – are painstakingly crafting a plan to go out and get… snogged. They are smart and irrational, sweet and maddening as they try to naively micromanage their journey to adulthood. They’re treating kissing boys – and maybe more than kissing if it comes to it – as a sort of military operation to be planned, accomplished and ticked off. Deploy troops, storm the building, bring them home. But in part that’s their brains denying their actual horniness – for starters Jess is certainly incapable of vocalising the fact she obviously has a crush on Joel.  It’s hard not to see The Inbetweeners as casting a bit of a shadow here: I’m not saying Battye has even seen or been directly influenced by the C4 sitcom about a similarly aged, similarly neurotic group of boys, but at the least it’s a pretty good reference point for the
DakaDaka

DakaDaka

4 out of 5 stars
There is a big mood on Heddon Street, and I don’t just mean from all the David Bowie tat (it’s the Mayfair alley where the cover of 1972’s The Rise and Fall of Ziggy Stardust and the Spiders From Mars was shot). I swear to Bowie himself that I went down here about 10 years ago and it was pretty quiet, but now it positively heaves with drinking and dining destinations, from Fonda to Ambassors Clubhouse. The latest is DakaDaka, which is Georgian slang that does indeed translate as ‘big mood’. Traditional food, served smartly, with an emphasis on flame-cooked stuff A popular mood too: it was absolutely heaving on the soggy Tuesday I visited, a virtually full house soaking up the 100-ish cover restaurant’s blaring music, ginormous smoke-belching open kitchen and communal tables. I don’t want to make it sound too raucous – we could hear ourselves talk – but if you prize a hushed atmosphere and despise conviviality, DakaDaka is probably not for you. The large, boxy room is not especially stunning in and of itself, but general good vibes carry it. And the food! If you’re not familiar, Georgia is kind of at the crossroads of the Middle East and Eastern Europe – between Turkey and Russia – and the cuisine very much reflects that in a ‘you get dumplings, but you also get pomegranate’ type of way. Chef Mitz Vora is not trying to offer a slavishly nostalgic ex-pats only experience, but neither is this about culinary reinvention. It’s traditional food, served smartly, with an emphasis on
Lost Atoms

Lost Atoms

3 out of 5 stars
If you staged it as a radio play, Anna Jordan’s Lost Atoms would be a skilled but conventional story of a relationship, from meet cute through to heavily foreshadowed breakup. And as a piece of new writing, you do have to judge it as that play. And it’s not bad! Is it plausible that edgy party girl Jess (Hannah Sinclair Robinson) and aggressively square Robbie (Joe Layton) would become a couple? Maybe, or if they wouldn’t in IRL we know what Jordan means by their relationship. They both represent something the other is lacking: for her, he represents solidity, reliability, stability; for him, she’s the passion and vulnerability lacking. There’s a gripping plausibility to their halting progress and their frequent roadbumps: her flakiness and his uptightness make difficult bedfollows. Neither of them is capable of changing who they are. But they like each other enough to give it a good try, and for a while it works, taking them through marathon sex sessions, meeting each other’s parents, pregnancy, and even a trip to Grimsby. Gravity, though, is always pulling them a certain way, and frequent flash forward scenes indicate from the start that they don’t, as a couple, go the distance. When I say gravity is pulling them: I mean that more metaphorically than literally. Physically, they actually seem to defy gravity. That’s because Lost Atoms comes from the veteran physical theatre company Frantic Assembly – who celebrate their thirtieth anniversary this year  – and company boss Sco
Arcadia

Arcadia

4 out of 5 stars
Arcadia is just another play you can stage in the same way that the sun is just another thing floating in the sky. Tom Stoppard’s 1993 masterpiece is a work of burning, ravenous intelligence, and while almost universally acknowledged as his best work, I get why it’s not staged very often.  I think part of the reason is that the late, great Stoppard probably gatekeepered it from half-baked revivals. But it does definitely involve a lot of people talking about maths, and as much as anything else you really need to be able to pull together a cast who can make discussions about the statistical implications of a country estate’s 200 year-old gamekeeping logs really sing. It’s obviously not a play about gamekeeping logs. It’s a play about the unpredictability of humanity, how we’re defined by our transience, our sex drives, and our desire to understand. Carrie Cracknell’s revival is not an attempt to radically reconfigure Arcadia and I doubt anyone would be so foolish as to try – it’s an incredibly specific play. She and her team - notably designer Alex Eales - have however leaned nicely into the Old Vic’s current in-the-round configuration. A bit of furniture aside, they've forgone any attempt to make it look like the country estate on which the play is set, which we visit in the early 19th century and again in the present. Instead we’ve got a revolving circular stage and lights that look like a mobile of the stars – a specific allusion to some lines in the text but also a neat en
War Horse

War Horse

This review is from 2012 and War Horse's last West End run.  The National Theatre's 'War Horse' has become ubiquitous. The toast of the West End and Broadway, as I write this it's sold out at the New London Theatre for the next two months – by contrast, you can book to see 'Matilda' next week. Its enormous success has negated the impact of Arts Council funding cuts on the NT, to the extent that the show has started to be singled out by some commentators as an example of 'safe' post-credit crunch programming. And, of course, there's the Steven Spielberg film, a curious affair sparked by the director's genuine love of the play, in which he gives Michael Morpurgo's 1982 a lavish screen treatment that has everything bar the one thing that made the play so special in the first place. That is, of course, Handspring's astonishing life-size puppets. Skeletally modernist in form but utterly, magically alive thanks to their talented army of puppeteers and Toby Sedgwick's phenomenal choreography, they are the true stars of Tom Morris and Marianne Elliott's production. Without them, Morpurgo's tale of how Devon-dwelling teen Albert Narracott signed up to throw himself into the meat grinder of World War I – in order to track down his beloved horse Joey – would be a likeable, humane, slightly formulaic introduction to the catastrophe of the war. With them, it is something different entirely, a virtuoso spectacle that combines grit and charm in equal measure. Joey is a multifaceted delight
Bridge Command

Bridge Command

3 out of 5 stars
Even if you have literally never wanted to be part of the crew of a spaceship you’ll probably have a fun time at Parabolic Theatre’s Bridge Command, an immersive theatre show slash team-bonding exercise slash LARPer paradise that sees you and your fellow contestants take command of the, uh, bridge of a spaceship and undertake a variety of missions that run the gamut from diplomacy to warfare. Occupying the spot in the Vauxhall arches that formerly hosted renowned gay sauna Chariots, Bridge Command is not a slick, cutting-edge vision of the future, and presumably budgetary limitations are part of this. But that’s fine: it very much has its roots in a wobbly sets golden age of sci-fi, with the earlier iterations of Star Trek looming particularly large. After donning our military jumpsuits, we are ‘teleported’ into the depths of space and onto an Earth battleship that will form our base of operations. There is a background scenario here, wherein humans fled a polluted Earth, found a magic element in the depths of space, went back home to fix Earth, only a load of colonists stayed behind and set up new galactic dominions, and we’re out there looking for more of the magic element. It’s best not to think too hard about it, but at the same time the performers throw themselves into it with impressive conviction - I was particularly delighted when the person operating the teleporter earnestly fielded questions relating to my phobia of teleporters.  Following said teleportation we’re i
American Psycho

American Psycho

4 out of 5 stars
  Bret Easton Ellis’s 1991 novel American Psycho is very specifically a satire on late ’80s Manhattan yuppie culture. And yet the book’s murderous banker protagonist Patrick Bateman is transcendent of the decade he was written into. He’s timeless, a folk figure, shorthand for empathy-free consumer capitalist narcissism. If you describe somebody as ’a real Patrick Bateman’, you probably don’t mean they’re bang into Huey Lewis and the News. There are a few period chuckles at the start of Duncan Sheik and Roberto Aguirre-Sacasa’s musical, which returns to the Almeida as Rupert Goold’s final production as artistic director, having been his first back in 2013. Arty Froushan’s Bateman is very proud of his anachronistic gadgets, notably his Sony Walkman and his 30-inch Toshiba TV. The score is unabashedly ‘80s, mixing retro electro pop original songs with a smattering of classic covers (New Order, Tears for Fears, etc). But even so, before long it starts to feel alarmingly current. It’s fascinating how different Froushan’s Bateman is to Matt Smith’s deadpan, dead-eyed take from 2013. They’re very different actors, for sure. But it’s more than that. Put simply, this Bateman is kind of sympathetic. A bit. Less vile than the book version, less an out-and-out whack job than Christian Bale in the film, more of an inner life than Smith’s take. Really, he’s a young man trying desperately to fit into a ghastly world of meaningless jobs, meaningless status symbols (the infamous business card
The Moonwalkers

The Moonwalkers

4 out of 5 stars
Like many a boomer child, Tom Hanks was smitten with the Apollo moon landings; but Tom Hanks being Tom Hanks, he never became unsmitten. The most beloved man in Hollywood has been nurturing a lunar side hustle for some time now: as well as starring in the film ‘Apollo 13’, he’s been involved in lower-key works, producing the HBO miniseries ‘From the Earth to the Moon’ and co-writing the IMAX film ‘Magnificent Desolation: Walking on the Moon 3D’. Staged in Kings Cross’s new, projection-based performance space Lightroom, ‘The Moonwalkers’ is essentially a documentary with bells on, a collaboration between Hanks and the venue, with a script co-written by the actor and Christopher Riley. It is, naturally, narrated by Hanks. Although it makes a point of looking forward to next year’s Artemis mission – the first manned flight to the moon since 1972 – ‘The Moonwalkers’ is a homage to both the Apollo landings and the wonder the Apollo landings instilled in the world.  Starting with JFK’s rousing ‘we choose to go to the Moon, not because it is easy, but because it is hard’ speech, it’s upbeat and America-centric, but well-judged. The main action and most spectacular visuals are projected on the room’s huge front wall, but the side walls cram in smaller details: the female mathematicians – many of them Black – who made the project possible are duly credited, which they certainly weren’t when I was young (or at the time of the landings,for that matter). There’s no contextualising talk
The Tempest

The Tempest

4 out of 5 stars
As a schoolchild in the late ‘90s I swear to god I saw a production of The Tempest  – I think at Malvern Theatre – that mostly consisted of Prospero and his villainous brother Antonio playing chess together, while the rest of the play kind of happened around them.  It was so weird that I now occasionally doubt it actually happened. But also I’m pretty sure it did as I remember it so clearly. And Tim Crouch’s new production of The Tempest brought it to mind: I think it might baffle a lot of people, but I doubt any of them will forget it in a hurry. We’re in a junk-cluttered study of some sort, presumably on the nameless island that Crouch’s Prospero and his daughter Miranda (Sophie Steer) were exiled to by his sister Antonia (a gender swap, obvs). Their unearthly servants Caliban and Ariel are there too, though whether there’s anything supernatural about them is questionable: Naomi Wirthner’s Ariel is a colourfully dressed older lady with NHS specs and a penchant for knitting; Faizal Abdullah’s Caliban is an affable guy in a Gascoigne shirt who occasionally drifts into passages of Malay.  They appear to be acting out The Tempest. That is to say, they’re using objects in the study to recreate the usual start of the play, which follows Antonia’s ship as it wrecks during the titular storm. Everyone is going through their lines with varying degrees of enthusiasm: Steer’s deliciously gauche Miranda flings herself in with total abandon; Ariel and Caliban seem benignly happy to go al
Prehistoric Planet: Discovering Dinosaurs

Prehistoric Planet: Discovering Dinosaurs

4 out of 5 stars
This King’s Cross Lightroom now has surely the weirdest repertoire of any venue in London, possibly the world. With an oeuvre based around massive megabit projection-based immersive films, its shows so far have been a David Hockney exhibition, a Tom Hanks-narrated film about the moon landings, a Vogue documentary and a visualiser for Coldplay’s upcoming album. It’s such a random collection of concepts that it’s hard to say there was or is anything ‘missing’ from the extremely esoteric selection of bases covered. But certainly, as the school summer holidays roll around it’s very welcome to see it add an overtly child-friendly show to its roster. Bar a short Coldplay break, Prehistoric Planet: Discovering Dinosaurs will play daily at Lightroom from now until at least the end of October half-term. It is, as you would imagine, a dinosaur documentary. And indeed, if the name rings a specific bell it’s because it’s culled from the David Attenborough-narrated Apple TV series of the same name. It’s quite the remix, though: Attenborough is out, and Damian Lewis is in, delivering a slightly melodramatic voiceover that lacks Sir David’s colossal gravitas but is, nonetheless, absolutely fine. Presumably Attenborough is absent because he’s very busy and very old, because while the film reuses several of the more spectacular setpieces from the TV series, it’s sufficiently different that repurposing the old narration would be a stretch. Any child with any degree of fondness for the mesozoic
Hamlet

Hamlet

3 out of 5 stars
Most film versions of Shakespeare’s Hamlet come from an essentially stagey place, and are almost invariably made by theatre people (the ultimate example being Kenneth Branagh’s four-hour 1996 version). But in the play’s latest screen outing, star Riz Ahmed and director Aneil Karia – neither of whom have any background in theatre – have essentially made a film about grief and depression that uses Shakespeare’s words and story in a way that is cinematic first and foremost.  I could bore on about how screenwriter Michael Lesslie has done stuff like cut out Horatio, Rosencrantz, Guildenstern and the entire Yorick bit. But discussing this version as if it was just a stage take with some novel ideas is to miss the point of how wholly Shakespeare has been swallowed by the cinema here – even if in the end there are a couple of plot beats it struggles to surmount. Ahmed’s Hamlet is a traumatised man from a wealthy British Indian family, stumbling in a daze through suburban London after the death of his father. Cinematographer Stuart Bentley’s shaky camera cinematography is lush and neon streaked as it soaks up blingy nightclubs, a lavish Hindu wedding and a bathetic funeral, and lots and lots of outer London at night. There’s never a sense that the need to cram in Shakespeare’s words ever gets in the way of the business of cinema. And while the iambic pentameter isn’t exactly deployed sparingly, it feels like the pruned text is used with great purpose: the fact these very modern chara

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Adrian Lester returns to London’s West End to star in ‘Cyrano de Bergerac’

Adrian Lester returns to London’s West End to star in ‘Cyrano de Bergerac’

It’s been a while since Adrian Lester graced the London stage: the only thing he’s done this decade is the low key post-pandemic show Hymn, at the Almeida, back in 2021.  But after scoring great notices in the RSC’s Stratford-upon-Avon production of Edmond Rostand’s panache-tastic romance Cyrano de Bergerac, the screen star – still possibly best known for his starring role in Spooks – will return to the West End for the first time in a decade later this year when Simon Evans’ production heads to the Noël Coward Theatre. Co-starring the wonderful Susannah Fielding as Roxane, the true love of the gorgeously poetic but outwardly ugly Cyrano, the production is, by all accounts, a lot more traditional than Jamie Lloyd’s raptastic James McAvoy-starring production of a few years back. It’s a proper period production, and Lester’s Cyrano has a big old prosthetic nose. Nonetheless, it’s an updated version by Evans and the poet Debris Stevenson, and Stratford reviews praised its tough heart, lack of chintz, and terrific performance from Lester as a Cyrano gripped with self-loathing. For those unfamiliar with the play and story, it follows the romantic misadventures of the gifted but ugly French soldier Cyrano, who feels unable to woo the beautiful Roxane himself so instead opts for writing love letters to her on behalf of the pretty but dim Christian. Needless to say, this does not end particularly well. Cyrano de Bergerac is at the Noël Coward Theatre, Jun 13-Sep 5. Tickets are now on
Blockbuster musical ‘Miss Saigon’ will return to London’s West End in 2027

Blockbuster musical ‘Miss Saigon’ will return to London’s West End in 2027

Cameron Mackintosh’s bombastic Vietnam musical Miss Saigon was one of the last of the proper blockbuster ’80s musicals, running at the massive Theatre Drury Lane for a decade, a genuinely unthinkable feat today. Nicholas Hytner’s original production closed in 1999. But it turned out not to be the last chopper out of Saigon, as a tweaked version descended upon the Prince Edward Theatre in 2014 and stayed there for a couple of years. It also went some way to addressing the controversies around the show, which even in ‘a different era’ had received criticism for casting white actors with makeup and eye prosthetics in the leading role of half-Vietnamese/half-French hustler The Engineer. This was addressed in the 2014 casting (when Philippine-American actor Jon Jon Briones played the role). And while the musical – by Les Mis duo Claude-Michel Schönberg and Alain Boublil – will probably never beat the rap that its tragic Vietnamese women are a bit of an orientalist cliche, it’s definitely moved out of cancellation territory. Plus the Vietnam War-set reimagining of the classic Madama Butterfly is a proper old school visual spectacular and the songs aren’t half bad either. And in 2027 we’ll be able to see it again, as Miss Saigon returns to the Prince Edward for what is being billed as a ‘strictly limited’ season of eight months only from next May. Theatre nerds may recall that Miss Saigon received its first truly new UK revival at the Sheffield Crucible a couple of years back but th
Tickets are now on sale for the huge new Frank Sinatra musical coming to London’s West End in summer 2026

Tickets are now on sale for the huge new Frank Sinatra musical coming to London’s West End in summer 2026

The Aldwych Theatre spent much of the last decade as home to Tina, the smash bio musical about Tina Turner. And this summer the theatre will see another new musical about a different American singing titan move in to replace it. Sinatra the Musical has possibly the most self-explanatory name in theatre history, but it case you can’t guess, it concerns crooner, actor and general icon Frank Sinatra. We’re long past the We Will Rock You/Mamma Mia! era of extrapolating silly new plots from a musician’s greatest hits, and so aside from said hits we get a biographical story set in 1942, at a pivotal time in Sinatra’s life and career. Having recently departed the popular Tommy Dorsey Orchestra, Sinatra’s career seems to have hit the skids, as has his marriage to Nancy Sinatra thanks to an affair with rising Hollywood starlet Ava Gardner. But a New Year’s Eve concert at the Paramount Theatre in New York offers him the chance for a ‘comeback’ that will in truth be the launchpad for one of the greatest careers in popular music history. Helmed by top Broadway director/choreographer Kathleen Marshall and with a book by playwright Joe DiPietro – best known for the hit musical Memphis – Sinatra the Musical had tryouts in Birmingham in 2023 and has been made with the blessing of the Sinatra estate. This does mean that the odds of it saying anything particularly controversial about Ol’ Blue Eyes are pretty low, but the 1942 settings is certainly avoidant of Rat Pack cliches that have already
The Regent’s Park Open Air Theatre has announced its 2026 summer season

The Regent’s Park Open Air Theatre has announced its 2026 summer season

The Regent’s Park Open Air Theatre has just announced its 2026 season – or most of it, anyway. The caveat is that we actually already knew what the biggest show was already: OAT boss Drew McOnie’s production of Andrew Lloyd Webber’s Cats (Jul 25-Sep 12) – the first ever UK revival – was such a big deal that it was announced last year. It remains the centrepiece of the season, running in the ‘main’ height-of-summer slot that’s always taken by a big musical. But there’s plenty more besides, with the season getting underway in May with Joel Horwood’s new play Sherlock Holmes (May 2-Jun 6). No conceptual gimmicks here: it’s a stage thriller based on Arthur Conan Doyle’s timeless detective. The exact plot is somewhat vague but sounds like an origin story of sorts, following and early career Sherlock and Watson as they struggle to move on from their first case until they suddenly find themselves embroiled in a deadly conspiracy. Sean Holmes directs a cast that will be headed by Joshua James as Sherlock. Next up, and as with his first season, McOnie will get back to his roots by programming a short run dance show, this year A Life In Four Seasons (Jun 11-14). The new work is created by OAT associate director Tinuke Craig and choreographed by Alexzandra Sarmiento, and is a dance piece about three friends negotiating love and loss in the city of London, set to an electric version of Vivaldi’s The Four Seasons. RECOMMENDED: The 10 best new London theatre openings in February 2026. Back
Cate Blanchett, Sandra Oh and Letitia Wright lead the National Theatre’s new 2026 season

Cate Blanchett, Sandra Oh and Letitia Wright lead the National Theatre’s new 2026 season

The National Theatre has been under new management since the autumn, when Indhu Rubasingham’s tenure as artistic director officially began. And she’s made a very decent start, but with the exception of the imminent production of Les Liaisons Dangereuses starring Lesley Manville and Aidan Turner, there’s maybe the sense that her first six months in charge have been a little light on the old celebrity front. Well that all changes today, as the NT announces the entirety of its 2026 programming.  The biggest name is Cate Blanchett, who returns to the National Theatre seven years after starring in the somewhat ‘difficult’ sadomasochism drama When We Have Sufficiently Tortured Each Other, which was staged in the smaller Dorfman Theatre. While Aussie auteur Benedict Andrews’ new mash up of Sophocles’ Electra and Ingmar Bergman’s 1966 film classic Persona isn’t necessarily going to be a nakedly commercial romp, it probably will be by the standards of WWHSTEO, and it’ll be staged in the much bigger Lyttelton Theatre. Re-uniting Blanchett with her Tár co-star Nina Hoss, Electra/Persona doesn’t yet have finalised dates but we’re told it will commence its run in August. It’ll also have a fancy new score from Oscar-winner Hildur Guðnadóttir. Image: National TheatreSandra Oh Before that, the great Sandra Oh will make her UK stage debut in a Rubasingham-directed production of Molière’s timeless comedy The Misanthrope (Jun 16-Aug 1, Lyttelton Theatre), with the great playwright Martin Crim
Shakespeare’s Globe has announced its 2026 summer season

Shakespeare’s Globe has announced its 2026 summer season

We may still be locked in the depths of winter, but the sun will shine on us again one day, as evidenced by Shakespeare’s Globe announcing its 2026 outdoor summer season, which we bring you here as an exclusive. Without further ado (er, well actually there is some ado, but we’ll get to that later), the season starts – as is traditional – on April 23, AKA the date of Shakespeare’s birth and also death. First up then is Emily Lim’s production of A Midsummer Night’s Dream, which runs April 23 to August 29. Keen-eyed observers may note that there is currently a production of the same play running at the Globe’s indoor Sam Wanamaker theatre. To put it bluntly, A Midsummer Night’s Dream is big bucks at the box office, and there’s an endless stream of things you can do to it. The bleak, claustrophobic Wanamaker production seems likely to stand in contrast for what’s being billed as an uplifting and communal show from Lim, who cut her teeth making large scale community work for the National Theatre. Then it’s time for a somewhat unexpected Globe debut for Bertold Brecht, and one of the most influential playwrights to have ever lives bar Shakespeare himself. Elle While will direct Globe artistic director Michelle Terry in the title role of Mother Courage and Her Children (May 7-Jun 27), his great anti-war play about the eponymous hardbitten survivor, picking her way through a ruined world. That’s your lot for non-Shakespeare, as the season then ploughs into the much loved ultimate rom
The Donmar Warehouse has announced its 2026 season

The Donmar Warehouse has announced its 2026 season

In an insanely busy week for new season announcements (with the Globe, National Theatre and Regent’s Park Open Air Theatre all revealing programming)… here’s another! The Donmar Warehouse had already announced a single piece of 2026 programming, Anna Ziegler’s Evening All Afternoon, which will open next month but now artistic director Timothy Sheader has dropped the entire year of shows at the prestigious boutique Covent Garden theatre. Only the Christmas slot is now unoccupied. The Donmar’s programme is as eclectic as ever, with the opening play being Mass (Apr 18-Jun 6). US actor-writer-director Fran Kranz’s adaptation of his own hit indie film is about two sets of couples – the parents of the victim of a high school shooting, and the parents of the shooter – who attempt a painful reconciliation years after the event. Carrie Cracknell directs a top cast that includes Adeel Akhtar, Amari Bacchus, Monica Dolan, Paul Hilton, Lyndsey Marshal, Rochelle Rose and Susie Trayling. Photo: Helen Murray Next up, Felix Barrett of Punchdrunk fame will tackle Chloë Moss’s new play The Guilty (Jun 20-Aug 15). Like Barrett’s excellent current West End hit Paranormal Activity. Like Paranormal Activity, it’s a film adaptation, being based upon the the Dutch film Den Skyldige and its Jake Gyllenhaal-starring US remake The Guilty. The play will star Russell Tovey (pictured above) as a police officer with a troubled past who takes a shocking 999 call. Expect a Barrett production to be full to
The 10 best new London theatre openings in February 2026

The 10 best new London theatre openings in February 2026

There’s one name on everyone’s lips in Theatreland this month: Cynthia Erivo, who trades witchcraft for vampirism as she returns to the London stage for the first time in a decade with a one-woman take on Bram Stoker’s Dracula. That’s the splashiest show of the month, though if it sounds dauntingly hip a new Yes, Minister play starring Griff Rhys Jones and a reviewal of CS Lewis bio-drama Shadowlands starring Hugh Bonneville ought to offer more traditional delights. The other big news is a rare revival of the late Tom Stoppard’s masterpiece Arcadia – a generational event even without the poignant timing. Elsewhere the London stage is as eclectic as ever: the UK premiere of a play by the late Chadwick Boseman at Shakespeare’s Globe? Yes please! A drama about cavemen called The Shitheads? Why not? Read on to find out more. The best new London theatre openings in February 2026   Photo: Mark Seliger   1. Dracula Cynthia Erivo was a rising star of the British stage before the tiny Menier Chocolate Factory’s 2015 production of The Color Purple set off a chain of events that would make her one of the biggest actors on the planet. She hasn’t performed on said British stage since. But now she finally makes her return home in style: playing all 23 roles in a stage version of Bram Stoker’s vampire classic. It might sound a touch hubristic, but she’s in safe hands with Australian multimedia whizzkid director Kip Williams, who was responsible for the excellent Sarah Snook-starring Doria
The two-part version of 'Harry Potter and the Cursed Child’ is set to close in London’s West End

The two-part version of 'Harry Potter and the Cursed Child’ is set to close in London’s West End

When Harry Potter and the Cursed Child opened at the Palace Theatre a decade ago, it was event theatre, writ large. Opening just five years after the epic last Potter film and only nine years after the even weightier final book, Jack Thorne’s eighth chapter of JK Rowling’s blockbuster kiddie wizard series compounded its sense of being a massive event by being performed in two parts, totalling about five hours of theatre. Over the years, however, most international productions of The Cursed Child have switched to a relatively streamlined single part show, and indeed London is the only production left to have offered the OG two-part experience.  Well, ten years on and it’s time to bid a fond ‘avada kedavra’ to the two-part version, as it’s been announced that it’ll end its run on September 20, shut for a bit, and then reopen as a more streamlined single play – running just two hours and 55 minutes – from October 6. Photograph: Manuel Harlan There will clearly be Potter obsessives upset about this, and Rowling haters who will see it as a sign of declining franchise popularity. The truth is, however, that a two-part play is enormously logistically complicated for both company and public. The fact The Cursed Child did a decade in this form – surely the longest such run in history – and will continue at the same, very large theatre is surely testament to its prodigious popularity. Moreover, and not to put too fine a point on it, but there’s no real reason why the spectacle-heav
A new 550-seat theatre is set to open next to London’s Marble Arch this summer

A new 550-seat theatre is set to open next to London’s Marble Arch this summer

The Arts Theatre is a little venue with a big past and a low profile. Just 350 seats, it’s the smallest receiving house in the West End, although it’s so small it’s not typically considered to be a West End theatre in the classic sense. Nonetheless, it’s been quietly plugging away for almost a century now – next year is its centenary – and has seen some history, notably the English-language premiere of Samuel Beckett’s landmark Waiting for Godot. In recent years the Arts Theatre was home to the musical Six before it went on to bigger things, and post-pandemic it’s been given over to touchy feely bloke musical The Choir of Man.  Why is this relevant to a story about a new theatre at Marble Arch? Because the Arts Theatre has shut down for a period of refurbishment and rather than simply taking an extended holiday, Arts Theatre co-runners Louis Hartshorn and Brian Hook are building a 550-seat temporary theatre as a stopgap that will keep all current theatre staff fully employed. Image: HH Productions Rather than simply continue Arts Theatre business as usual, the venue’s creative team seem to have taken this as an opportunity to flex their muscles a bit. There’s no actual confirmed programming for Marble Arts (nice name), but we’re promised a state of the art theatre that will host ‘a mixture of new productions and established smash-hit shows’. So presumably not just more Choir of Man. The venue has just had its planning permission granted and will go up this summer, and is ap
A vast immersive Vikings experience is coming to London in March

A vast immersive Vikings experience is coming to London in March

You know the drill by now: large scale immersive exhibitions have gone from nowhere to ubiquity in London, with the last year alone bringing us big, tech-augmented, family-facing shows devoted to the likes of Tutankhamun, the Titanic, and the destruction of Pompeii. Most of these shows already existed – they’re generally made by European companies – but have started touring to London since the opening of a series of large-scale immersive event spaces, notably ImmerseLDN and Dock X. It’s to the latter destination – replacing The Legend of the Titanic – that the latest such exhibition is heading. Vikings: The Immersive Exhibition does exactly what it says, ie it’s about Vikings. However, it’s actually about quite specific Vikings, telling as it does the story of – and I quote – ‘King Ragnar Lodbrok, the wise Queen Kraka (Aslaug), and their world-conquering sons, Ivar the Boneless, Bjorn Ironside, Hvitserk and Sigurd Snake-in-the-Eye, as they assemble the Great Heathen Army and change the course of European history’. Photo: Morris Mac Matzen Vikingologists may note that the exact historical verity of these figures is at best ‘variable’ but immersive exhibitions love a change to get giddy with a bit of mythology. We’re told the exhibition will put a particular focus on Kraka, rather than simply glorifying Ragnar’s pillaging, which is fair enough, though presumably most audience members will be hoping for at least a bit of pillaging. There’s a decent chance Kraka didn’t exist, b
A stage play of ‘The Traitors’ is coming to London’s West End

A stage play of ‘The Traitors’ is coming to London’s West End

The Traitors is, famously, quite a popular TV show, the niche party game of Mafia blown into a gripping televised opera of trust, betrayal and raw humanity. Unsurprisingly, The Traitors has already spawned an immersive theatre version right here in London, that allows members of the public to participate in their own short but pretty sweet miniature game of the Claudia Winkleman-hosted show.  Now there’s a Traitors… play? It’s been announced today that Traitors TV producer Studio Lambert and top West End production company Neal Street Productions will join forces for ‘a stage adaptation’ of The Traitors that’ll start its run in 2027. The show will be written by John Finnemore and directed by National Theatre deputy Robert Hastie and that’s… all we know for now.  Although the details are being kept under wraps, the show’s publicist did confirm that it is definitely a play in the conventional sense. Finnemore as writer also offers some clues: he’s not known as a playwright but rather an acclaimed Radio 4 humorist, most famously responsible for the shows Cabin Pressure and John Finnemore's Souvenir Programme. So it doesn’t take a genius to assume this will probably be a somewhat jocular take on The Traitors. This does stir distant memories of Harry Hill's ill-starred X-Factor musical I Can't Sing!, which actually quite amusingly charted the journey of a wide-eyed contestant as she progressed through the singing contest. Unfortunately it wasn’t staged until people were starting t