To rescue Kahlo from the clutches of the corporate art market, we need to acknowledge the overt and covert political dimensions of the work, demands GAVIN O’TOOLE
Titus Andronicus
The Globe Theatre
BACK in 2014, Globe patrons were fainting at the blood and gore of the theatre’s main-stage production of Titus Andronicus. Now, in 2023, at the first performance of Titus on the Sam Wanamaker stage, director Jude Christian gives us less viscera and more candle wax.
Titus Andronicus is Shakespeare’s foray into the revenge play and, typically, these plays encourage their audiences to delight in bloodshed and violence. But here Christian refuses that, and instead of enacting violence on the bodies of the characters, it is the candles which are synonymous with the indoor stage of the Sam Wanamaker that get the treatment.
Each actor in this wonderfully strong ensemble carries a candle that represents their character and when they die that candle is snuffed out. If they are tortured, it’s the candle that bears the brunt of the violence.
GEORGE FOGARTY is dazzled by a breathtakingly skillful puppet version of Shakespeare’s greatest love poem
JAN WOLF enjoys a British revival of the 1972 come of age farce/panto Pippin
GORDON PARSONS is blown away by a superb production of Rostand’s comedy of verbal panache and swordmanship
JAN WOOLF is beguiled by the tempting notion that Freud psychoanalysed Hitler in a comedy that explores the vulnerability of a damaged individual


