The Open Air Theatre, Regent's Park
With summer come the open-air productions of ‘A Midsummer Night’s Dream’ - the Bard's tale of lovers, fairies and Bottom and his rude mechanicals is always a popular choice. But there are many other productions on offer outdoors in the parks and open-air theatres of the capital too. We round up the best places to catch Shakespeare & co under the stars
Free theatre | Shakespeare's Globe | Open Air Theatre | Fringe
Shakespeare's Globe
King Lear
Until August 17
Complete with Medieval veils, Middle-English music and storm effects emanating from giant iron drums, director Dominic Dromgoole's ‘King Lear’ tops the current Time Out
ratings for outdoor theatre. Some slightly dodgy supporting performances but but David Calder’s crownless King is breathtaking.
Read review
The Frontline
Until August 17
Ché Walker's new play describes life among the druggies and dealers of Camden. Set outside Camden Tube station.
Read review
Read feature
Merry Wives of Windsor
Until October 5
Director Christopher Luscombe draws on British televisual humour to create a hugely enjoyable version of Shakespeare's rarely performed bourgeois comedy. Again, expert musical accompaniment, brashly colourful costume and spot-on stage set add to a delightful night.
Read review
Feature continues
A Midsummer Night's Dream
Until October 4
Jonathan Munby, who directs here, reminds us of his skill in luscious, multi-sensory theatre, taking Shakespeare’s much-loved comedy of
errors, binding it in a tapestry of music, magic and madcap ebullience,
and launching an irrepressible crowd-pleaser.
Read review
Free theatre | Shakespeare's Globe | Open Air Theatre | Fringe
Open Air Theatre Regent's Park
Twelfth Night
Until July 30
Plenty
of gender confusion, amorous insanity, inventive visual clowning and
bawdy musical numbers add to Edward Dick's Jazz Age-style production of
the Bard's bittersweet comedy.
Read review
A Midsummer Night's Dream re-imagined for a young audience
Until August 2
With heroin-chic fairies in tattered tutus and lovers shedding sumptuous black gowns to reveal an ample bosom, the Globe's production is certainly an adult affair. But fortunately there's a new 80-minute version of Shakespeare's frolicsome comedy for everyone aged six and over.
Read review
Romeo and Juliet
Until August 2
With Teddy Boys scrapping with
flick-knives and the women swirling in full ’50s circle skirts, new artistic director Tim Sheader creates a highly choreographed mafiosi-style context for Shakespeare’s warring families, though he can't manage to upstage the park's idyllic surroundings.
Read review
Gigi
Aug 6-Sept 13
Topol and Millicent Martin star in Lerner and Loewe musical, set in turn of the century Paris and featuring 'Thank Heaven for Little Girls', the dubious number made famous by Maurice Chevalier.
Free theatre | Shakespeare's Globe | Open Air Theatre | Fringe
Free theatre
The Scoop
July 31-Sept 7
The
sixth annual summer season of free theatre at The Scoop at More London
amphitheatre, next to City Hall on the South Bank of the Thames, will
include Lorca’s tragedy 'Blood Wedding' and 'Petite Rouge - A Cajun Red Riding Hood', a new family musical version of the Little Red Riding Hood story, from New Orleans.
Watch This Space
Until Aug 31
The National Theatre’s popular free outdoor summer theatre festival of over 200 events includes Avanti Display with ‘Leak’; Teatr Biuro Podrozy with ‘Macbeth: Who is that Bloodied Man?’ with motorbikes, stilts and a burning castle; ‘The Threepenny Ring Cycle’ in which Les Grooms present sixteens hours of Wagner in 79 minutes; and 'The Black Maze' in which the square will be packed with installations of all shapes and sizes.
This week: Fresh Faces 08, 'Pig', 'Vegetable Nannies' and 'The Station'.
Free theatre | Shakespeare's Globe | Open Air Theatre | Fringe
Fringe
Romeo and Juliet
Forty Hall, Enfield, July 8-19
Romeo and Juliet
Coram's Fields, July 24-Aug 9
Free theatre | Shakespeare's Globe | Open Air Theatre | Fringe
2 comments
" LEAVE WAR IN HISTORY,AND KNIVES IN BREAD " jb 2/7/08
i like to viste london to no whate is goin on in they and contribute to enjoment