Tag: Fringe Theatre

On the left Malcolm (played by Gabriel Fogarty-Graveson); in the middle Harriet (played by Laurel Marks); on the right Regina (played by Gabrielle Nellis-Pain). They are all wearing dark undertaker-style clothes and looking quizzically at something off camera to their right.

★★★Dead Funny

Simon Ward reviews Grave Mistake at the Hope Theatre Matthew Ballantyne and Toby Hampton’s new play is a Joe Orton-esque farce set in a funeral home. Burke and Sons has been a family business for generations and is now in the hands of sisters Regina (Gabrielle Nellis-Pain) and […]

Molly Tolpuddle (played by Carol Tagg) standing, leaning on a stick, wearing a cream scarf around her head and a white blouse and long brown skirt.

★★Overdone Down Under

Simon Ward reviews Mrs T Foresees at the Lion & Unicorn Theatre Centred around the life story and formidable presence of Irish clairvoyant Mrs Molly Tolpuddle (compellingly played by Carol Tagg), writer and director Gail Matthews’s play encompasses a variety of topics, from a satirical look at the […]

On the left Paddy (played by Eoin Sweeney), seated cross-legged in school uniform of white shirt, black trousers, purple blazer with crest and purple and yellow striped tie. He is gesticulating wildly with his right arm raised. On the right is Mick (played by Matthew Blaney) also cross-legged and wearing the same school uniform. He is wearing glasses and looking terrified.

★★★★Oh Boy!

Simon Ward reviews Derry Boys at Theatre503 This piece comes closest to my own personal experience of anything I have reviewed in all my years writing for The Peg. Though I wasn’t born there, I was raised in Derry, so I would almost certainly qualify for entry to […]

Crouching figure of Eleanor Hill on the left, wearing a grey sweathsirt and barelegged, with her hand over her chin looking at a phone; projected on the back of the stage the phone screenshot of Eleanor Hill's face.

★★★★Laughter On The Edge

Simon Ward reviews Overshare at the Greenwich Theatre At one point during this hectic cavalcade of a show, creator-writer-performer-producer Eleanor Hill pauses for a beat to wonder whether her last remark was a bit of an overshare. The joke is, of course, that the whole thing is one […]

Nick Cassenbaum, seated, wearing a green and blue striped dressing gown, one hand pointing upwards

★★★★Bubbling Over

Simon Ward reviews Bubble Schmeisis at the Soho Theatre Nick Cassenbaum describes his work as ‘simultaneously unforgivingly Jewish and undeniably British’. As if to underline the point, the programme for this show includes a glossary of both Yiddish and East London slang. Admittedly the Yiddish list is significantly […]

Marianne (played by Halli Patterson) in the foreground pensively seated on the left wearing a pale blue filly nightdress; Peter (played by Boyan Petrov) in the background on the right dressed in vest and shorts, holding their bay and smoking

★★★Chekhovian Summer Blues

Simon Ward reviews The Summer After Dad Died at the Hen and Chickens Theatre Written and directed by Danish playwright and actor Sarah Majland, The Summer After Dad Died is set in Denmark in the hot summer of 1985. Three sisters, Marianne (Halli Patterson), Tina (Milja Martilla) and […]

Griffin Bellah as Charlie, in blurred foreground with finger gun to his temple; Hannah Harquart as Mom, in focus in the background

★★★★ Gallows Humour

Simon Ward reviews Dead Mom Play at the Union Theatre I have yet to decide how I feel about on the use of trigger warnings. There are the well-worn arguments about the lengthy list pretty much any Shakespeare would require. Furthermore, in my experience, the warnings tend to […]

Sitting on the left Robbie Curran (playing He) in uniform burgundy polo shirt and wearing headphones is staring straight ahead; sitting on the right, in the same uniform, Alice Victoria Winslow (playing She), is also staring straight ahead. Projected onto the screen behind them is a black and white image of an army firing squad.

★★★★Who Watches The Watchers?

Simon Ward reviews Moderation at the Hope Theatre Making its UK premiere at the Hope, Kevin Kautzman’s searingly topical new play, Moderation is the darkest of dark comedies. It is unmistakably an American work, but its themes resonate across the world, just as the actions of the techbro […]