ANDY HEDGECOCK is entertained by a playful novel that embeds a fictional game at its heart
Mother Courage and Her Children
Albion Electric Warehouse, Leeds
IT’S hard to think of many plays better suited to a promenade staging than Mother Courage and Her Children. Bertolt Brecht’s 1941 polemic about the futility of war does, after all, follow the titular anti-hero as she travels from town to town selling wares from her canteen.
In this production, which marks Red Ladder’s 50th anniversary, the audience becomes part of her travelling wagon, part of the sea of people displaced by conflict.
GORDON PARSONS salutes the apt return of Brecht’s vaudevillian cartoon drama that retains the vitality of the boxing or the circus ring
GORDON PARSONS is disappointed by an unsubtle production of this comedy of upper middle class infidelity
MARY CONWAY recommends a play that some will find more discursive than eventful but one in which the characters glow
SUSAN DARLINGTON is bowled over by an outstanding play about the past, present and future of race and identity in the US



