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Tag: Theatre

keeping abreast of ignorance with Open Space

Given Arthur Miller's impressive body of work and the reputation it earned him, it’s easy to forget that All My Sons was effectively the last roll of the dice after a string of undistinguished attempts… read more
Posted in Theatre

have we eaten on the insane root?

It's been a little over a year since the You’re Bard company last visited the Corn Hall. On that occasion, A Midsummer Night’s Dream was given a mauling and I ended up on stage pretending to… read more
Posted in Comedy, Theatre

The play's the thing

Written and performed by Mark Carey, Dead on Cue is a ghost story set in the dressing room of a London theatre where Sir Claude Mason is performing in Hamlet, the twist being we see… read more
Posted in Theatre

Ain't I a Woman?

The springboard for AIAW.org productions’ portmanteau presentation is Sojourner Truth's ground breaking speech, delivered in the seventeenth century having walked away, to use her words, from a life of slavery. Her rhetorical question, Ain't I… read more
Posted in Theatre

A love letter to Norwich

Although John Osborne's CV no doubt describes him as a poet - the evening opened with a couple of fine examples - it is as a storyteller that he has truly distinguished himself. His autobiographical… read more
Posted in Comedy, Word

Sophia - A Princess, A Socialite, and a Suffragette

Sophia Duleep Singh was the daughter of the deposed Maharaja of the Sikh Empire and God daughter to Queen Victoria, who nevertheless reconnected with her Punjabi heritage on a transformative trip to India. The play… read more
Posted in Theatre

Give them enough Rope

Although Rope is probably best known as Hitchcock's audacious, single-take experiment, it was originally a stage play that the famous director took liberties with, not least relocating the action to New York. The original play… read more
Posted in Theatre

A Class Act from Russell Lucas

The Titanic sank to the bottom of the ocean over a hundred years ago, and yet remains the subject of endless fascination. Books, films, documentaries, conspiracy theories and even a musical have all contributed towards… read more
Posted in Theatre

A Feast of East Anglian Drama

Some of the finest productions staged at the Corn Hall have come from The Feast Theatre Company, so I had high hopes for Tales from the Motherland, not least as it has been written by… read more
Posted in Theatre

Conn Artists seduce their Corn Hall audience

Attempting to adapt a novel as complex and involving as Hardy's Far from the Madding Crowd for the stage is certainly ambitious, almost to the point of being foolhardy. It should come as no surprise… read more
Posted in Theatre