Robert Icke’s Oedipus at Wyndham’s Theatre: Lots Of Stunning Acting Compensates For Some Questionable Writing
The myth of Oedipus is so central to our psychic world that I was really surprised how many people...
Read MorePosted by Aleks Sierz | 20th Oct 2024 | Adaptation, London, Review, United Kingdom
The myth of Oedipus is so central to our psychic world that I was really surprised how many people...
Read MorePosted by Walter Byongsok Chon | 9th Oct 2024 | Adaptation, Festivals, Interview, Singapore
The 6th biennial Singapore Literature Festival is held in New York City on October 19 and 20,...
Read MorePosted by Margaret Rose | 31st Aug 2024 | Adaptation, Edinburgh 2024, Review, Scotland
A cast of young actors from diverse parts of the globe brought Malvolio’s Fantasy to the Space...
Read MorePosted by Jack Wernick | 20th Aug 2024 | Adaptation, Argentina, Interview
I had the opportunity to interview frequent collaborators, writer-director Oscar Barney Finn and...
Read MorePosted by Kate Hunter | 24th Jul 2024 | Adaptation, Australia, Review
What if significant portions of William Shakespeare’s text for Macbeth had been lost, leading to a...
Read MorePosted by Huw Griffiths | 16th Jul 2024 | Adaptation, Australia, Review
The figure of Dracula has always lived somewhere between the written word, screen projections and...
Read MorePosted by David O'Donnell | 19th Apr 2024 | Adaptation, New Zealand, Review, Worldwide
The southern city of Ōtepoti/Dunedin has played an important role in the history of Samuel Beckett...
Read MorePosted by Aleks Sierz | 14th Feb 2024 | Adaptation, London, Playwriting, Review, United Kingdom, Uruguay
Nowadays it seems that it’s the fringe and Off-West End venues that are keeping the spirit of...
Read MorePosted by Alexander Howard | 1st Dec 2023 | Adaptation, Australia, Review
Russian writer Mikhail Bulgakov’s cult novel The Master and Margarita has inspired many artists....
Read MorePosted by Neeraja Murthy | 21st Nov 2023 | Adaptation, Devised Theatre, India
An ensemble of around 18 actors takes the stage this weekend in Hyderabad to present three plays...
Read MorePosted by Rhiannon Ling | 14th Nov 2023 | Adaptation, New York, Review, United States of America, Worldwide
The Sheen Center is, I find myself thinking, the perfect place to host Locus29’s Hell Dialogues....
Read MorePosted by Sarah Austin | 25th Oct 2023 | Adaptation, Australia, Review
Emerging from one of Australia’s most enduring and significant theatrical partnerships between...
Read MorePosted by Aleks Sierz | 23rd Oct 2023 | Adaptation, Books, London, Review, United Kingdom
Why are stage adaptations of bestselling novels so disappointing? Okay, I appreciate the...
Read MorePosted by Rhiannon Ling | 22nd Oct 2023 | Adaptation, New York, Review, Theatre and Gender, United States of America, Worldwide
Anat Gov’s Best Friends lives in a world of dichotomy. The title is both entirely true and...
Read MorePosted by Emiliia Dementsova | 11th Oct 2023 | Adaptation, Festivals, Germany, Review, Theatre and Film, Theatre Olympics 2023
These two people are separated by history, geography, language, maths, and other school subjects...
Read MorePosted by Russell Fewster | 5th Oct 2023 | Adaptation, Australia, Review
The Dictionary of Lost Words follows Esme as she navigates the patriarchal world of Victorian...
Read MorePosted by Aleks Sierz | 3rd Oct 2023 | Adaptation, Playwriting, Review, United Kingdom
Playwright Polly Stenham had a meteoric rise with this play, her award-winning 2007 debut which...
Read MorePosted by Huw Griffiths | 28th Sep 2023 | Acting, Adaptation, Australia, Review, Sydney, Theatre and Politics
It is easy to forget that when Oscar Wilde’s The Importance of Being Earnest was first written and...
Read MorePosted by Minakhanim Gurbanova | 16th Sep 2023 | Adaptation, Azerbaijan, Review
It has become common practice to spend time on social networks at certain hours of the day,...
Read MorePosted by Trevor Mukholi | 22nd Aug 2023 | Adaptation, Review, Uganda
When considering Okot p’Bitek’s perspective on African tradition, it becomes evident that change is inevitable. If African tradition is lived in the midst of the battle of life, then Lawino is not the character to focus on, as she refuses to acknowledge the possibility of change. Similarly, Ocol negates everything about himself to accommodate the other, but his transformation is ultimately revealed to be superficial. Opio and Clementine, however, require a more nuanced examination, as their experiences shed light on the agency of individuals in this exchange of aesthetics and epistemology.
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