Richard III manages to be at once resounding royal propaganda and an unsettling reminder of the fragility of the status quo given Elizabeth I’s lack of an heir: the Tudors had rescued the kingdom from the murderous House of York, but they hadn’t secured the future for long.
Barbara Lewis
Authority on literature Terry Eagleton tells us tragedy is unfashionable: “Its tone is too solemn and portentous for a streetwise, sceptical culture”. If that’s true now, it was also true in 1641 when James Shirley’s finest work was one of the last plays staged in England before Oliver Cromwell’s solemn ban on theatre.
By Barbara Lewis • plays, theatre, year 2017 • Tags: Barbara Lewis, plays, theatre
Sarah Leavesley’s imaginary Claire is advised to write by a psychiatrist, as doctor and patient try to piece together a life as shattered as the glass in a kaleidoscope.
By Barbara Lewis • books, psychotherapy, year 2017 • Tags: Barbara Lewis, books, poetry, psychotherapy
Three decades after the miners’ strike of 1984, families in northern England are riven because relatives crossed the picket line.
By Barbara Lewis • plays, society, theatre, year 2017 • Tags: Barbara Lewis, history, plays, society, theatre
Posterity remembers Emma Hamilton as the mistress of Nelson. The reality is her achievements in the society salon were in their way as brave and out of the ordinary as his naval exploits.
By Barbara Lewis • exhibitions, history, year 2017 • Tags: Barbara Lewis, exhibitions, history
The cliché is that first novels are always autobiographical. Dutch writer Jeroen Blokhuis instead hides behind the biographical in his verbal portrait of one of the greatest painters his nation has produced.
By Barbara Lewis • art, books, year 2017 • Tags: art, art history, Barbara Lewis, books, painting
From big budget to fringe to retro to quirky and ironic, musicals have swept the London stage as a feel-good formula destined to pack houses. A gothic rock musical that requires a team of cleaners to de-gore the stage after the first half and should include earplugs in the programme just could become a cult.
By Barbara Lewis • music, musicals, theatre, year 2017 • Tags: Barbara Lewis, musicals, theatre
The Welsh National Opera version of Puccini’s Madame Butterfly, established in the 70s by director Joachim Herz, on the basis of meticulous research, and now directed by Sarah Crisp, delivers pure emotion with devastating directness.
By Barbara Lewis • music, opera, theatre, year 2017 • Tags: Barbara Lewis, music, opera, theatre
Either ultra-topical or else historic with contemporary resonance are the smart choices of subject matter for any playwright seeking to thrill an audience. The building of the Burj Khalifa in Dubai, the world’s tallest structure, falls somewhere in between, given that it opened in 2010 and the maltreatment and suicides of its construction workers are old news.
By Barbara Lewis • plays, theatre, year 2017 • Tags: Barbara Lewis, plays, theatre
Le Corbusier has mostly gone down in history as a visionary Swiss urban planner. For the thousands forcibly evicted from District Six in Cape Town, he has a more sinister resonance as the proponent of “the surgical method” – as mentioned in the notorious apartheid-era Group Areas Act – of sweeping away what he saw as chaos and disorder.
By Barbara Lewis • history, society, year 2017 • Tags: Barbara Lewis, history, society
Even in times when rehash is more common than originality, the risk with a revival of Burt Bacharach’s late 1960s musical Promises, Promises, in turn based on Billy Wilder’s 1960 film The Apartment, is that it feels doubly derivative.
By Barbara Lewis • music, musicals, performance, theatre, year 2017 • Tags: Barbara Lewis, music, musicals, performance, theatre
Art is at its most powerfully dramatic when it gives voice to the oppressed. By using the device of a play within a play to utmost effect, The Island communicates the oppression of a recent generation by drawing on tragic defiance from classical times.
By Barbara Lewis • plays, theatre, year 2017 • Tags: Barbara Lewis, plays, theatre