
While the humour and wit were portrayed very well, the tragedy, violence and romance were a little harder to distinguish.

There’s something about the family dinner table that brings out your rawest and deepest emotions.


Attempting to rationalise the play in any literal sense is futile since it is the ambiguous, meandering nature of the 4 voices that allows it to become such a powerful work.


On Sunday night there was only one place to be for all jazz fans. And that was at the National theatre with none other than the legendary Chris Botti!

Of all Kafka’s works, The Trial makes the most pointed remarks about the concepts of freedom, both within the law itself and on the broader concept of self realisation and spirituality.