Everyman Kings Cross
Photograph: Everyman
Photograph: Everyman

Things to do in London this weekend (19-20 July)

Can’t decide what to do with your two delicious days off? This is how to fill them up

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The weekend (19-20 July) might not shape up to be quite as much of a scorcher as last week, but it’s still set to be pretty balmy out there as July continues – and there’s plenty to fill our diaries up with, no matter what the weather. 

When you’re not filling up your sweet days off with all those things we love about the season: beer garden hangs, alfresco dining, picnics in the park, open-air theatre and cinema and lido visits, look out for London’s biggest craft beer festival, where you can sip suds from a whole range of brilliant breweries. Or, party in the beautiful Master Shipwrights House in Deptford at new arts festival Desire Lines from the folks behind Brainchild and bag tickets to a whole range of great gigs at Somerset House’s Summer series.

Indoors, you’ll find a new run of Beth Steel’s wonderfully Chekhovian drama Till the Stars Come Down, which has transferred to the West End. Head to your favourite local cinema to watch a stirring performance from Sally Hawkins in the brilliantly dark and depraved Aussie chiller Bring Her Back. Or, if you’ve failed to get tickets before, there’s another chance to see the smash hit Bob Dylan jukebox musical Girl From the North Country, as it returns to its original home, the Old Vic. Enjoy! 

Start planning: here’s our roundup of the 25 best things to do in London in 2025

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What’s on this weekend?

  • Sport and fitness
  • Sport & Fitness

On Sunday, all eyes will be glued to the telly at 8pm as we find out who will be crowned champions in the Women’s Euros 2025. If you’re not travelling to Switzerland, where the tournament’s taking place this year, there are plenty of spots hosting screenings, fan zones and parties across the city. Here are our favourite places to celebrate the beautiful game, catch all the action and cheer on the Lionesses. Will it be coming home again? Keep your fingers crossed!

  • Things to do
  • Walks and tours
  • Trafalgar Square

On Saturday, central London will turn pink and blue as London Trans+ Pride celebrates its seventh year. This event will be extra-important this year, as UK trans rights have been jeopardised by a recent Supreme Court ruling. So it's time you showed up, whether you're part of the trans+ community or an ally. In previous years, a parade has marched through central London, from Trafalgar Square to Hyde Park Corner’s Wellington Arch.

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  • Art
  • Digital and interactive
  • Aldwych

You’ve probably heard of ‘Instagram face’. This summer, Somerset House is dedicating a whole exhibition to things like the internet’s inclination for everyone to look exactly the same. In Virtural Beauty, Somerset House will explore the impact of digital technologies on how we define beauty today. The show will display more than 20 artworks from the 'Post-Internet' era, an art movement concerned with the influence of the internet on art and culture. It will feature sculpture, photography, installation, video and performance art, with highlights including ORLAN’s Omniprésence (1993), a groundbreaking performance in which the artist live-streamed her own facial aesthetic surgery, and AI-generated portraits by Minnie Atairu, Ben Cullen Williams, and Isamaya Ffrench. 

  • Drama
  • South Bank
  • 4 out of 5 stars
  • Recommended

The time is once again Nye, as Michael Sheen returns to the National Theatre to reprise firebrand politician and NHS founder, Aneurin Bevan, in Tim Price’s play, after it originally debuted last year. The state of the country’s health and that of Nye himself are intwined from the start, as we open to the bed-ridden deputy leader of the Labour Party. It’s July 1960. We’re here, it’s increasingly clear, for the end of his life. Plunging us into Nye’s unconscious, Price gives us a dream-like portrait of his life. Sheen is predictably great at combining Nye’s burning sense of belief in welfare for all and his irascibility within a single scene. This play is a rallying cry for the power of empathy and bloody-minded humanitarianism.         

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  • Japanese
  • Soho
  • 4 out of 5 stars
  • Recommended

For a country known for its elite cattle – the majestically marbled wagyu – there are far fewer Japanese steakhouses than sushi spots. Kanpai Classic laughs in the face of delicate nigiri and volleys back a robust barrage of meat. This place isn’t just about a serious slab of steak on your plate, but a whole wagyu experience. It has various cuts, all imported daily from Japan, displayed on a platter complete with name cards. But first, a series of wagyu-adjacent starters; a caviar-slathered hunk of beef tartate, wagyu gyoza and wagyu spring roll. Then, it’s time for the Jules Verne-worthy journey into wagyu. Each piece is cooked atop the mesh grill fitted into the table, then deftly flipped onto plates.

  • Art
  • Bankside

Emily Kam Kngwarray, an Anmatyerr artist from the Sandover region in the Northern Territory of Australia, didn’t start making art until she was 70. Her prolific and vibrant output during the ensuing decade paved the way for Aboriginal artists, women artists and Australian artists – and is the subject of this, her first major solo exhibition in Europe. Expect monumental canvases adorned with batik and acrylic patterns whose networks of dots and lines are almost immersive.

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  • Music
  • Dance and electronic
  • Brentford

One of London’s biggest dance music festivals is back to take over Boston Manor Park. If previous years are anything to go by, you can expect Junction 2 to provide a careful balance of massive names and hotly-tipped up-and-comers across the last Friday, Saturday and Sunday of July. The festival has just released its final lineup, and it’s got some huge names on it. This year you’ve got a stacked selection of house and techno juggernauts like deadmau5, Christian Löffler, Ahmed Spins, Amber Broos and Kolter. They come alongside the likes of Nina Kravitz, Bashkka, Mount Kimbie, Moxie, Midland, DJ Koze and Soul Wax. Basically, it’s the holy grail of raves.

Lineup includes: deadmau5, Christian Löffler, Nina Kravitz, Bashkka, Mount Kimbie, Moxie, Midland, Palms Trax, DJ Koze. 

  • Film
  • Film

Writer-director James Gunn’s puckish and political blockbuster skips jauntily past the entire plot of Richard Donner’s 1978 classic, leaving out the basics of DC’s most righteous figure. There’s none of the scene-setting Smallville stuff, no early flirtations with girlfriend Lois Lane (the impressive Rachel Brosnahan) either, and not very much of Clark Kent. Instead, there are team-ups with Green Lantern (Nathan Fillion), Hawkgirl (Isabela Merced), and someone called Mister Terrific (House’s Edi Gathegi). The story cedes the floor to the villain: Lex Luthor, played by Nicholas Hoult as an alpha tech man-baby and David Corenswet, talented-spotted by Gunn playing Pearl’s creepy projectionist, makes the best Man of Steel since Christopher Reeve, a lovely balance of sweetness, strength and self-doubt bubbling beneath the surface. Gunn never shies away from the political optics of this immigrant hero and his zeitgeisty nemesis, a billionaire megalomaniac adept at manipulating talk shows and social media discourse alike.

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  • Music

Alanis Morissette has been one of music’s most influential songwriters since 1995, bagging seven Grammy awards over her career. Fresh off the back of her Glasto slot, she’s comin' to The O2 to wrap up the European run of her 2025 world tour. Her expressive music and electric performances have earned her critical acclaim, with standouts like ‘Ironic’ and ‘You Oughta Know’ promising to be particularly exciting.

The O2, SE10 0DX. Sun Jul 27, 6pm. From £71.31.

  • Things to do
  • Exhibitions
  • London

Deptford X, SE8’s beloved contemporary visual art festival, is back – but this time with a brand new format. For the first time, it’s going biennial, expanding the festival to 18 days packed with art, exhibitions, events, and a street parade. Plus, fringe art events will leave almost no part of Deptford untouched. 

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On the edge of Covent Garden, Osteria del Mare’s hugely popular Italian Riviera Buffet is a Sunday feast worth clearing your schedule for. Think unlimited lobster, freshly shucked oysters and Mediterranean prawns, paired with seasonal pasta, wood-fired pizza, and a decadent dessert station. With live music and a glass of Prosecco in hand (or bottomless, if you fancy it), it’s one of London’s most indulgent seafood spreads, and Time Out readers can enjoy 25% off all summer long.

Get 25% off with vouchers only through Time Out Offers.

  • Music
  • Music festivals
  • Blackheath

Boy George and Culture Club will headline this family-friendly festival in Blackheath this July. As well as plenty of ‘80s and ‘90s pop nostalgia, the fun-filled day will see plenty of activities for little’uns including games and rides. The full line-up of activities and support acts hasn’t been announced yet, but Uptown promises to go heavy on the nostalgia, with ‘legendary’ acts programmed across three different stages.  

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  • Drama
  • South Bank
  • 3 out of 5 stars
  • Recommended

First-time playwright Shaan Sahota does a decent job of spinning an In The Thick of It-style yarn about Angad (Adeel Akhtar), a very junior British Sikh shadow minister who suddenly finds himself in play for the leadership of what is implicitly the Tory Party. The opening scenes thrum with an energy similar to a previous National Theatre triumph, James Graham’s This House, as it plunges us into an amusingly compromised world of sweary spads, cocky whips and malleable MPs. Helena Wilson is scene-stealingly entertaining as the apparently humble Angad’s shark-like head of comms Petra. It’s fun.

  • Music
  • Jazz
  • Greenwich Peninsula

Roaming performers, street food and live bands will take over the Greenwich Peninsula this weekend for a free-to-attend day of jazz and delicious eats. Musical acts include Steamdown, Shunaji, Knats, Queer Jazz, vinyl sets from community radio station LOOSE.fm, DJs Tim Garcia and Tina Edwards and more. Fueling the action will be food and drink in the form of fresh oysters, bites from the Shotengai Japanese Market, natural wines, New Orleans-inspired small plates and plenty of cocktails. 

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  • Music
  • South Kensington
Listen to top-notch classical music at the BBC Proms
Listen to top-notch classical music at the BBC Proms

Another year, another spectacular line-up of classical music. In 2025, the orchestral extravaganza will feature 86 concerts across eight weeks, with over 3,000 artists taking to the stage, with the majority of the action taking place inside the grand surroundings of London’s Royal Albert Hall. This weekend, look out for The Traitors Prom hosted by Claudia Winkleman herself and Mozart and Bruckner performed by the BBC Scottish Symphony Orchestra. 

  • Drama
  • Leicester Square
  • 4 out of 5 stars
  • Recommended

In Mansfield, the wedding of the year is about to take place. Local girl Sylvia (Sinéad Matthews) is marrying Polish lad Marek (Julian Kostov). The ceremony plays out in real time at Beth Steel’s Till The Stars Come Down, now running in the West End after debuting at the National Theatre. Director Bijan Sheibani sucks you right into this world through fast-paced dialogue and artfully constructed tableaus. It is heady, hilarious and emotional; the wedding itself might be a car crash, but this imaginative production is anything but. 

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  • Immersive
  • Royal Docks

London’s newest major immersive experience is, as you would imagine from the title, all about Elvis Presley, and promises to offer a whirlwind two-hour tour through his life, building up to his classic ’68 comeback special. It comes from Layered Reality, the company behind the hit shows The War of the Worlds and the Gunpowder Plot, and ‘will use cutting-edge technology and live actors and musicians to deliver intimate moments that offer an insight into the man behind the myth’. 

Love sushi, dumplings or noodles? Inamo’s got you covered. This high-tech spot in Soho or Covent Garden lets you order from interactive tabletops, play over 20 games while you wait and even doodle on your table. Then it’s all you can eat pan-Asian dishes like Sichuan chicken, red dragon rolls and Korean wings with bottomless drinks. Usually £113.35, now just £33 or £26 if you're in early at the weekend!


Get Inamo’s best ever bottomless food & drink brunch from only £26 with Time Out Offers.

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  • Drama
  • Waterloo
  • 4 out of 5 stars
  • Recommended

Having premiered at the Old Vic in 2017 – and gone on to conquer the West End and Broadway – Girl From the North Country has lost none of its potency as it returns to the theatre where it all began — a dreamy, sepia-soaked production of character-driven vignettes and reimagined Bob Dylan songs. It’s 1934 in Duluth, Minnesota  Dylan’s actual birthplace  and the Great Depression is chewing through the soul of the town. At the centre is the Laine family, struggling to keep their guesthouse (and each other) from crumbling under debt, loss, and the weight of time. As we follow their story, we enter a world that feels like the inside of an old jukebox: full of half-remembered stories, crackling melancholy, and music that never quite stops playing.

  • Film
  • Film

Writer-director James Gunn’s puckish and political blockbuster skips jauntily past the entire plot of Richard Donner’s 1978 classic, leaving out the basics of DC’s most righteous figure. There’s none of the scene-setting Smallville stuff, no early flirtations with girlfriend Lois Lane (the impressive Rachel Brosnahan) either, and not very much of Clark Kent. Instead, there are team-ups with Green Lantern (Nathan Fillion), Hawkgirl (Isabela Merced), and someone called Mister Terrific (House’s Edi Gathegi). The story cedes the floor to the villain: Lex Luthor, played by Nicholas Hoult as an alpha tech man-baby and David Corenswet, talented-spotted by Gunn playing Pearl’s creepy projectionist, makes the best Man of Steel since Christopher Reeve, a lovely balance of sweetness, strength and self-doubt bubbling beneath the surface. Gunn never shies away from the political optics of this immigrant hero and his zeitgeisty nemesis, a billionaire megalomaniac adept at manipulating talk shows and social media discourse alike.

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  • Music
  • Classical and opera
  • Dalston

The Arcola Theatre's alt-opera festival Grimeborn returns for its eighteenth year in 2025 and it’s as eclectic as ever, from a stripped back reworking of Wagner’s magnum opus Tristan und Isolde (Aug 13-16) to the first ever full staging of John Joubert’s final opera Jane Eyre (Aug 6-9)  and the return of last year’s bit of fun Sense & Senibility, The Musical (Aug 19-23) which is, you know, a bit more musical-y, and also last year’s Lucia di Lammermoor, which is, you know, bleak.

 

★★★★ 'Frameless has managed to create something genuinely exciting' - Time Out

Escape reality through maximum immersion and experience 42 masterpieces from 29 of the world’s most iconic artists, each reimagined beyond belief, through cutting-edge technology. Situated in Marble Arch, Frameless plays host to four unique galleries with hypnotic visuals and a dazzling score. Enjoy 90 minutes of surreal artwork from Bosch, Dalí and more for just £24!

Get £24.80 tickets (originally £31) to Frameless, only with Time Out Offers.

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  • Theatre & Performance

The balcony scene from Jamie Lloyd’s Evita is the biggest news to come out of the theatre world in years. People have been entranced by Rachel Zegler’s fame and the sheer ballsiness of Lloyd having her sing ‘Don’t Cry for Me Argentina’ for free to the good people of Argyll Street at 9pm each night from the London Palladium balcony. Opening the second half, the balcony sequence is a study in pure artifice. Clad in flowing white dress and an elegant blonde wig, Evita – now the First Lady – sings her great song of love and yearning for the country she’s cynically worked her way to the summit of.  But the Eva the outside audience sees is a lie: wig, dress and her sense of empathy are torn off before she returns to the stage. There is so much that is good about it – from Zegler, to the choreography, to the timely antifascist sentiment, to That Scene. It’s not just the London theatre event of the summer, but the London event of the summer full stop. 

London Palladium. Now until Sep 6. Buy tickets here

  • Art
  • Photography
  • Soho
  • 4 out of 5 stars
  • Recommended

The Jamaican-born, London-raised photographer Dennis Morris is best known for his portraits of Bob Marley: a teenaged Morris, then a Hackney schoolkid, first photographed the reggae star in 1973. He went on to photograph the Sex Pistols and other reggae and punk icons, and there are plenty of stunning portraits of the likes of John Lydon and Lee ‘Scratch’ Perry in this hugely satisfying first UK retrospective of Morris’s work. Morris’s musical portraits are thrilling, but it’s his 1970s documentary work capturing Black and Asian life in Hackney and Southall that steals the show. They’re valuable, essential moments in time, capturing the capital at a point when Black British and British Indian communities were becoming well-established in some neighbourhoods but were anything but integrated or widely accepted. 

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  • Drama
  • Seven Dials
  • 4 out of 5 stars
  • Recommended

‘Intimate Apparel’ is a period drama, following a selection of characters in New York City, 1905. The story centres on Esther (Samira Wiley), a hard-working but shy and emotionally repressed Black seamstress who specialises in ‘intimate apparel’ – that is to say underwear, which in 1905 includes a lot of fancy corsets. Each of Lynn Nottage’s characters exists on some sort of margin, they’re all transgressing in each others’ spaces: they have intimate relationships more complicated than simple friendship. It’s a beautifully acted and exquisitely written drama about what happens when raw human longing is filtered through the strangeness of class, race and rulebound human society.

  • Museums
  • Art and design
  • Kensington

Us humans can be pretty selfish, and that’s especially true when it comes to design. It’s probably not something you’ve really thought about much before now (see, selfish!) but the world of design has historically neglected the needs of the animals, plants and other living organisms with whom we share our planet, in favour of catering to the whims and demands of us homosapiens. But not anymore. Created in collaboration with Future Observatory – the Design Museum’s national research programme championing new design innovations around environmental issues – this groundbreaking exhibition brings together art, design, architecture and technology to explore the concept of ‘more-than-human’ design, which embraces the notion that human activities can only flourish alongside those of other species and eco-systems. 

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  • Drama
  • Islington
  • 4 out of 5 stars
  • Recommended

It’s a trap, almost, to think of Eugene O’Neill’s final play A Moon for the Misbegotten as a sequel to his miserable masterpiece Long Day’s Journey Into Night. But you go in expecting despair and instead find something that’s more like an episode of Steptoe and SonMaybe that’s down to director Rebecca Frecknall, who creates not the faded grandeur of a seaside home here, but a wooden yard full of splintered timbers. Peter Corboy and Ruth Wilson as siblings Mike and Josie burst onto the stage and whack each other with dialogue, fed up with dad Phil’s drunkenness and slave-driving on their rock-infested farm. Frecknall turns the tilth on a half-buried play, and digs up something extraordinary.

Imagine indulging in all the dumplings, rolls, and buns you can handle, crafted by a Chinatown favourite with over a decade of culinary excellence. Savour Taiwanese pork buns, savoury pork and prawn soup dumplings, and luxurious crab meat xiao long bao. To top it off, enjoy a chilled glass of prosecco to elevate your feast. Cheers to a truly delightful dining experience at Leong’s Legend!

Indulge in unlimited dim sum at this iconic Chinatown dining spot, from just £24.95! Buy now with Time Out Offers.
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  • Things to do
  • Film events
  • King’s Cross

Popping up each summer on the steps where the Regent’s Canal passes Granary Square, Everyman’s Screen on the Canal is one of the city’s best-loved outdoor cinemas. This year’s pop-up will be looking more Instagrammable than ever before, thanks to designer and architect Yinka Ilori, who has created an eye-popping screen design. Head down on a sunny afternoon to catch live coverage from Wimbledon every day of the tournament, plus the usual mix of live sports, classic movies, family-friendly flicks and recent hits. 

  • Things to do
  • Exhibitions
  • South Kensington

The 99-year-old living legend that is Sir David Attenborough is still going strong: fresh off the back of his new documentary Ocean, he now drops a new film at the Natural History Museum in the form of Our Story. The 50-minute ‘immersive’ documentary will be projected across the walls of the Jerwood Gallery, subsuming you in what we can only describe as raw nature (it sounds like a relatively similar idea to 2023’s BBC Planet Earth Experience, albeit with more Attenborough and more of a narrative) as he takes us on the story of humanity, from origins to the present. Blending wildlife footage with animation, it’s human-centric but has plenty of room for animals too. 

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