Royal Court Theatre
© Helen Maybanks

Royal Court Theatre

London's edgy new writing powerhouse
  • Theatre | West End
  • Sloane Square
  • Recommended
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Time Out says

London's premiere new writing theatre, the Royal Court made its name in the 1950s when it was synonymous with kitchen sink dramas and the Angry Young Men, and has scarcely looked back (in anger) since.

The commercially successful reign of Dominic Cooke was famously marked by his stated mission to acknowledge the nature of the Sloane Square theatre's audience and 'explore what it means to be middle class'. The quote probably came back to haunt him, coming to define a reign that was marked by lots of new writing from BAME playwrights, plus such towering West End transfer successes as 'Enron' and the peerless 'Jerusalem'.

Previous Royal Court artistic director Vicky Featherstone took the theatre down a much more experimental route that occasionally baffled but frequently thrilled, while still managing to score the odd transfer smash via older associates of the theatre: Jez Butterworth’s ‘The Ferryman’ was a monster of a hit. She has been succeeded by David Byrne, formerly of the New Diorama, whose tenure has only just begun at time of writing.

There are two venues, the tiny Upstairs and large Downstairs, plus a welcoming bar kitchen that's a fabulous place to visit for a gander at the cream of London's playwrights and creatives, who inexorably drift through throughout the day.

Details

Address
50-51
Sloane Square
London
SW1W 8AS
Transport:
Tube: Sloane Sq
Price:
Various
Opening hours:
Check website for tour times and show times
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What’s on

The Unbelievers

4 out of 5 stars
Nicola Walker is a brilliant TV actor: her sullen, sarcastic charisma brings an edge to sundry MOR terrestrial Brit dramas – we’re talking Spooks, Last Tango in Halifax, River, The Split, Annika – in which her career has flourished. But even though she has done some great stuff on stage – notably her excellent turn in Ivo van Hove’s landmark production of A View from the Bridge – I’m not sure Nicola Walker has ever truly successfully brought her innate Nicola Walkerness to bear in a theatre role. Until now.  Nick Payne’s new Royal Court play The Unbelievers isn’t the instant classic his last one (2012’s Constellations) was. But its star gives a turn that is absolutely, magnificently, unfettered Nicola Walker. Her unique gift for proper nuanced acting filtered via an unshakeable deadpan grumpiness is harnessed to perfection as she plays a grieving mother whose sorrow and grief at the unexplained disappearance of her son has curdled into something darker and more disturbing. The play is set in three timelines, albeit heavily jumbled up and somewhat blurred. There’s the immediate aftermath of Oscar’s disappearance, when Walker’s Miriam is terse and snappy but fundamentally reasonable in both her grief and her burning desire to make progress on the case. There’s one year on, where things are beginning to slip with her. The play opens with a scene from this timeline in which a somewhat out of it Miriam is tending to a wounded hand which has arisen from a complicated series of...
  • Drama

Porn Play

David Byrne’s tenure at the Royal Court has undoubedly seen the return of luxury theatre to the Upstairs venue. While Sophia Chetin-Leuner is a relatively up-and-coming writer, her intriguing new drama about a young female academic addicted to violent porn is blessed with an A-list director in the shape of Josie Rourke – her first showing at the Court for aeons – a great cast headed by Ambika Mod, and even Wayne McGregor doing the movement. Needless to say it’s sold out to high heck, but remember all tickets to Royal Court Mondays go on sale on the morning of performance.
  • Drama

John Proctor is the Villian

There are three obvious ‘wow’ moments in the Royal Court Theatre’s seventieth birthday programme. Two are starry revivals of classic plays from the theatre’s past: Man to Man starring Tilda Swinton and Krapp’s Last Tape with Gary Oldman.  The third is a very modern coup: the modestly-sized new writing theatre has bagged the UK debut of Kimberley Belflower’s US smash John Protcor is the Villain, a wholesale transfer of Danya Taymor’s hit Broadway production. The play does in fact have a link to the Royal Court, being a very playful post-#MeToo riff on Arthur Miller’s landmark The Crucible, which premiered at the Court during its very first season, 70 years ago in 2026. Here the action is set in a high school and a class studying The Crucible, with a debate over the morality of the actions of the play’s nominal hero Proctor finding head-spinning parallels in the student-teacher relationships in the ‘real world’. Plus: there are pop songs from the likes of Lorde and Taylor Swift. The play’s Broadway success owes a lot to the star casting of Sadie Sink of Stranger Things fame – casting has not been annoinced for this UK production, and Sink seems like an outside chance at best. But it is co-produced by West End big hitters Sonia Friedman and Wessex Grove, so don’t be surprised if it has a name cast and life beyond this initial run.
  • Drama

Krapp’s Last Tape

You have to assume that this Gary Oldman designed, directed and (of course) starring production of Samuel Beckett’s high concept elegy for youthful ambition Krapp’s Last Tape would have run at Theatre Royal York earlier in 2025 regeardless of the Royal Court’s 2026 seventieth anniversary season.  But here it is, gaining a new London life at the Court. And it’s a doubly appropriate piece of programming for the seventieth birthday season. Beckett’s play about an old man listening back with mounting horror to the megalomaniacal tapes he recorded on his birthday in his younger years had its debut at the Court in 1958, and was revived again for its fiftieth birthday with no less than Harold Pinter in the title role.  And it’s a homecoming of sorts for Oldman, who was a prolific theatre actor and Royal Court regular in the ’80s before he drifted off into film (his last stage role was in Caryl Churchill’s 1987 masterpiece Serious Money). Curiously for such a landmark play, Krapp’s Last Tape started life as a ‘curtain raiser’, the secondary event before a production of Beckett’s longer Aftermath. In that spirit, Oldman’s performance will have a curtain raiser of its own in the form of Godot’s To Do List, a short Beckett-inspired play from young writer Leo Simpe-Asante.
  • Experimental

Man to Man

There are lots of highlights to the Royal Court’s seventieth anniversary season. But where the Gary Oldman-starring production of Krapp’s Last Tape and the hit Broadway play John Proctor is the Villain would have been expected to come to London eventually, Man to Man is altogether more of a surprise. Manfred Karge’s hallucinatory solo play about a widow who assumes her late husband’s job and identity in inter-war Germany had its UK premiere at Edinburgh Traverse Theatre in 1987 before transferring to the Court the following year. Stephen Unwin’s production provided a breakthrough for an androgynous young actor named Tilda Swinton, starting her down the path to global cult fame.  Now, in a similar way to the Court’s 2025 revival of 4.48 Psychosis, the whole band is back together for a revival of Man to Man once again starring Swinton and directed by Unwin. Although Swinton has starred in the odd stage role in Europe since, she’s not performed in the UK for over three decades, and who knows if she’ll do so again.
  • Experimental
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