Two years ago Normal People’s Paul Mescal brought a deliciously mephistophelian edge to A Streetcar Named Desire’s antagonist Stanley Kowalski. And now his co-star in the show, Daisy Edgar-Jones is truly phenomenal as Maggie, the complicated female lead of Tennessee Williams’s other classic play Cat on a Hot Tin Roof. Edgar-Jones is so, so good, inhabiting Maggie with a burning, vivacious swagger, alternatively self-mocking, self-pitying, compassionate and vicious in her diatribe to Kingsley Ben-Adir’s Brick about the wretched state of their marriage. Rebecca Frecknall directs it as a sort of Southern Gothic doomy reimagining, in which Big Daddy’s mansion is a house of trapped spirits. But amidst the gloom, you still believe there’s light in the infernal darkness.
Hello December. There’s no getting away from it, Christmas is here and London is thick with festive events. You be hard-pressed to avoid the jollities, so you might as well get stuck in. If you want a full-festive hit head to one of the many carol services taking place across the city, from candle-lit affairs in churches to pub singsongs, hit up a Christmas party at one of London’s best venues or head to Shakespeare’s Globe to see a fairytale reimagined by poet Simon Armitage.
Still doing your best to block out all the tinsel? There’s lots more on offer without the danger of hearing a Michael Bublé cover of Jingle Bells. Head to the National Theatre to see Max Webster’s fabulously camp production of Oscar Wilde’s The Importance of Being Earnest starring current Dr Who, Ncuti Gatwa (it’s sold out, but you can still queue for standing tickets and bag a seat in the Friday Rush), stand beneath Parmigianino’s stunning painting ‘The Vision of Saint Jerome’ at the National Gallery, or see rockers Slipknot at the O2. Consider London your cultural advent calendar – it’s time to fill up your diary with daily titbits.
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