THE LION, THE B!TCH AND THE WARDROBE turns C.S Lewis’ classic into queer festive joy
If Les Misérables doesn’t tickle your festive fancy, Polly Amorous and company are back at the WMC with an irreverent queer take on another Christmas classic.
If Les Misérables doesn’t tickle your festive fancy, Polly Amorous and company are back at the WMC with an irreverent queer take on another Christmas classic.
Girl From The North Country is a show that is, despite having run since 2017, distinctly uncertain about what it is or wants to be.
Castellana - part of Cardiff’s first Christmas Festival at the Castle - is a mixed bag of oddities that’ll make you ‘ooh’, ‘ahh’ and even ‘eh?’ in the resplendent Fortuna Spiegeltent.
Tales Of The Brothers Grimm is a truly immersive experience from start to finish, with staging crafted to appear as if the characters are literally walking through the pages of a book.
Trixie and Katya are so warmly embraced by everyone in Cardiff – even in the sterility of an area instead of the intimacy of a cabaret club – there’s little they could do to turn anybody off.
Even if you hate Blood Brothers as much as I do, I’d recommend you catch this production. It might just give you a new way of seeing it.
Tuck Shop and Trafalgar Theatre are back with a Death Drop sequel: a “nun-believable killer drag comedy” no less, which is more slasher than murder mystery.
While Cardiff Castle's Spiegeltent seems like the perfect venue to experience a Christmas favourite, this particular venue and show combination left much to be desired.
It’s clear when the audience receives Spike Milligan’s one-liners with hysteric laughs the cast and crew of Spike have done Ian Hislop and Nick Newman’s script proud.
Grime and theatre may be two worlds which rarely if ever meet, but Connor Allen does the job so well in The Making Of A Monster, it made me hungry for more of the winning combo.
My Fair Lady feels like a big show, but a by-the-numbers one that's more for the musical goer seeking a light evening at the theatre.
Recent events in Iran loom over things as The Shoemaker progresses, with screenings of actual footage from protests both there and in the UK.