The oldest and first dedicated online London theatre guide News and tickets for over 250 West End & off-West End showsFollow us for the latest theatre news Twitter

LT New LOGO

2022澳洲幸运5开奖直播-官网直播开奖结果

London Theatre is the oldest and first site dedicated to West End theatre and Off-West End shows in London. Book London theatre tickets to musicals, plays, comedy, dance, and more across the city, and read West End news, reviews, and interviews with the hottest London theatre stars. Explore London theatre shows, including West End musicals and award-winning plays, and get London theatre tickets to a show (or two) today!

Musicals by Candlelight
No Booking Fees
Musicals by Candlelight

An evening of musical theatre classics performed by a live string quartet.

Book now

澳洲幸运5在线开奖直播官方平台

Read all
  • Not many plays have won a Tony, Olivier, and Pulitzer, but the enduring power of Bruce Norris’s 2012 Broadway entry Clybourne Park lands once more in its current revival at (aptly enough) north London’s Park Theatre, where the director Oliver Kaderbhai lands the singular savagery of the writing afresh. Its opening delayed by the pandemic, as continues to be a commonplace these days, the play packs a singular wallop that may even be greater now than when this satire was first seen. Like it or...

  • Sit in silence in a busy room, and you’ll hear a lot. The low hum of people talking around you. The flickering lights as they twitch overhead. The unexplainable, disconcerting noises that keep you on edge. Eventually, a voice drowns out all the sounds around you. You listen. You pay attention. You might learn something. But when everyone tunes into one person speaking, what happens next? At first, it’s a slightly awkward realisation for people in the room, but a few minutes in, you’ll realise...

  • The title of Mike Bartlett’s play is clearly meant to provoke. News articles add asterisks or use euphemisms. Email marketing campaigns censor the name for fear of ending up in spam folders. It’s a little naughty. What does COCK really mean? When the play premiered at the Royal Court in 2009 starring Andrew Scott and Ben Whishaw as the central couple torn apart by a new (female) lover, the title was seemingly a nod to cockfighting. When the play later premiered off Broadway in New York in 2012...

  • Read all