April De Angelis
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Alan Ayckbourn’s orchestra decamped to the pub, Lynn Nottage’s social satire became all too real, and April De Angelis is still angry with her critics
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After years of men in the spotlight, now stories about women– and created by women – are taking centre stage at last
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Among the protesters heading for parliament are Noah’s family and Ade Adepitan as God in a suit. April De Angelis talks about turning the biblical flood into riotous drama
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Peter Duncan plays a washed-up panto dame in Park theatre’s new production. Here’s a reminder of the many farces, musicals and tragedies about an actor’s lifeGallery
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4 out of 5 stars.Anya Chalotra is compelling as a 16-year-old who leads the women in her Indian village to stand up to Art Malik’s sadistic, tyrannical cop
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Letter: Fourteen leading playwrights and theatre directors, including Mike Bartlett, Caryl Churchill, Vicky Featherstone and Rufus Norris, describe the great rage and deep pain of their Palestinian friends and colleagues
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3 out of 5 stars.Nimbly blending gothic horror and moral parable, this adaptation is skilfully stitched together by April De Angelis and Matthew Xia
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4 out of 5 stars.Full of visual gags and striking singing, Scottish Opera’s tale of passengers stuck in a departure lounge shuttles deftly between humour and profundity
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4 out of 5 stars.10 vibrant short plays by writers including April De Angelis and Richard Bean offer multifaceted, thoughtful views on issues to do with sex and consent
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4 out of 5 stars.April De Angelis’s inventive and fluid five-and-a-half-hour production spans 50 years in its characters’ lives, and makes clear the books’ feminist message
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3 out of 5 stars.Cora Bissett’s spirited revival is performed by a fine ensemble beneath a towering set but doesn’t go deeper than a lightweight observational comedy
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Vanishing Point’s The Destroyed Room opens in Edinburgh, the Hear Me Roar! festival of feminism begins in Lancaster and Jinny, a response to Look Back in Anger, premieres in Derby
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2 out of 5 stars.An intriguing premise fails to find its form in April De Angelis’s play about an artist who would like her 81st birthday to be her last
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The stories of mothers are still largely unwritten says the playwright whose latest study of mums and daughters, After Electra, explores ‘the tug that all women experience between children and work’
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2 out of 5 stars.Turner brings her unique skills to this refreshing portrait of a menopausal woman reassessing her life, but the production feels too much like television, writes Ben Packer
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Short-play series Walking the Tightrope, opening in London this month, will also feature works by Caryl Churchill, Mark Ravenhill and April De Angelis
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Nessah Muthy and April De Angelis offer Liz Hoggard a taste of their new play, Gastronauts
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My Brilliant Friend review – Elena Ferrante's twisting tale of heroines for our age
3 out of 5 stars.