
Lay of the Land is a confronting and moving account of one man’s gruelling journey to his ultimate much desired destination – marriage.

Kate Denborough has assembled a series of vignettes centralised around a piece of equipment which flexes and fluxes – which both enthrals and bores.

Death Threats and Other Forms of Flattery is very rude, daft and there should be much, much more of this sort of thing.

This is a confronting play, not just because of the vast emotional landscape, but also because of the truth of the perspectives.

Black Diggers is an important act of cultural sharing and truth-telling, powerfully and evocatively told – a theatrical event, to be sure, and yet I remain unconvinced whether it is, at least in this current form, a particularly well-crafted play.

This death defying magic trick provides a way of examining the ways that one human being can influence another.

Here and Now isn't about Green or his ego, it's all about his subject; he shares anecdotes and snippets about Coward and beautifully brings to life the stories behind the songs and the emotions they carry.