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Abbey theatre

March 2024

  • Mysterious adult children … Marie Mullen, Anna Healy and Nick Dunning in Audrey or Sorrow.

    Audrey or Sorrow review – darkly comic tale of ghosts and grief

    The black humour gets grimmer in Marina Carr’s latest play as two parents grieve the sudden death of their baby and a disturbing family history emerges

October 2023

  • Quake  by Janet Moran.

    Dublin theatre festival goes from Quaker reflections to high-speed romance

    This year’s shows include a meditative new play from Janet Moran and an ironic variation on the romcom by Nancy Harris

July 2023

  • Charlotte McCurry in Lie Low.

    Lie Low review – disturbing consent comedy plays with expectations

    Taking an absurdist approach to sexual consent and false memory, this polished play shifts disarmingly from spiky humour to tense confrontation

June 2023

  • Samira Wiley in Blues for an Alabama Sky.

    The best theatre to stream this month
    The best theatre to stream this month: Blues for An Alabama Sky, Macbeth and more

    Our roundup of drama to enjoy at home includes the National Theatre’s Pearl Cleage revival and David Tennant taking on the Scottish king for the first time

October 2022

  • Stephen Hogan as James Joyce with Bríd Ní Neachtain as Nora Barnacle in Edna O’Brien’s Joyce’s Women at the Abbey Theatre, directed by Conall Morrisson.

    Joyce’s Women review – Edna O’Brien offers a fresh view on her literary hero

    O’Brien’s new play about her literary hero, imagining James Joyce through the eyes of the women in his life, is the hot ticket in Dublin

September 2022

  • Ali White as Harriet Weaver and Stephen Hogan as James Joyce in Edna O’Brien’s Joyce’s Women at the Abbey Theatre, directed by Conall Morrisson. Image: Ros Kavanagh

    Joyce’s Women review – Edna O’Brien’s powerful play is a fascinating portrait of a fellow writer

    O’Brien’s empathy for Joyce shines through in this lavish production, as she brings him to life, seen through the eyes of his mother, wife, daughter and lover

May 2022

  • Ross O’Donnellan, Riley Carter and Jamie O’Neill.

    Luck Just Kissed You Hello review – scorching truth-telling in deathbed drama

    Wayne Jordan directs a sombre revival of Amy Conroy’s play exploring gender identity and family dynamics

March 2022

  • xntigone<br>7. Eloise Stevenson in X ntigone after Sophocles by Darren Murphy at the Abbey Theatre until 26th March. Image c. Melissa Gordon

    X’ntigone review – culture wars rage before Freedom Day in Thebes

    The political intrigues muddy the drama of conscience but this is a sleek futuristic staging of Sophocles’ tragedy, adapted by Darren Murphy

February 2022

  • Denise Gough as Portia Coughlan.

    Portia Coughlan review – blistering birthday tragedy of self-destruction

    Denise Gough plays out Portia’s bleak 30th, defined by family resentments, misogyny and the spectral presence of her dead twin, in this disturbing drama

January 2022

  • Amy Conroy in Every Brilliant Thing

    Every Brilliant Thing review – ode to life’s joys is candid and compassionate

    With a jazzy soundtrack and heaps of audience participation, this pared-back production manages to find light in the darkness of depression

December 2021

  • Aidan Gillen as Frank Hardy in Faith Healer

    Faith Healer review – Aidan Gillen is mercurial and mysterious in Brian Friel’s classic

    Gillen, Niamh Cusack and Nigel Lindsay deliver haunting monologues in director Joe Dowling’s affectingly sombre production

October 2021

  • Purple Snowflakes and Titty Wanks, Sarah Hanly’s new play

    Purple Snowflakes and Titty Wanks review – bold mix of sacred and profane

    Sarah Hanly embodies a range of characters in her punchy debut play that explores the pressures on teenagers

September 2021

  • Rosaleen McDonagh’s Walls and Windows, directed by Jason Byrne.

    Lockdown culture
    Walls and Windows review – a moving, unsentimental Travellers’ tale

    Rosaleen McDonagh’s play, an unsettling love story set in a Traveller community, has the ring of truthfulness

June 2021

  • One Good Turn

    Lockdown culture
    One Good Turn review – everyday questions of love and mortality

    Una McKevitt’s droll domestic drama shows us a day in the life of a family dealing with the ill health of an ageing father

August 2020

  • Bonhomie that cracks apart ... the Abbey theatre’s This Beautiful Virtual Village.

    Lockdown culture
    This Beautiful Virtual Village review – drama that rages like a Twitter pile-on

    Neighbours clash over racism and sexism in the Abbey theatre’s virtual production of Lisa Tierney-Keogh’s highly topical drama

May 2020

  • Susan Wokoma in Balcony Bonding.

    Lockdown culture
    Up close and sensational: the best monologues made during lockdown

    From love triangles and explosive lust to the bond between mothers and daughters, performers step into the relationships minefield

February 2020

  • ‘It needs to be paranoid, but also quick and light’ … John Doran, Caitríona Ennis and Patrick Ryan in The Fall of the Second Republic, Abbey Theatre, Dublin.

    Watergate meets His Girl Friday: Irish news caper The Fall of the Second Republic

    A vaudeville thriller set around a Dublin newspaper in 1973 uses knockabout humour to parallel modern-day geopolitics

September 2019

  • Six characters in search of consensus ...

    This Beautiful Village review – sexist graffiti sparks power games

    Abbey, Dublin
    Only those with the most righteous anger will triumph, in this small-town play about wider societal issues.

May 2019

  • Transient moments ... Dan Monaghan and Clare McKenna in Citysong.

    Citysong review – Dublin shimmers in poetic celebration of the cycle of life

    A versatile cast and evocative setting bring to life Dylan Coburn Gray’s award-winning script, which follows a taxi driver’s journey through an eclectic Dublin family

January 2019

  • Fire Garden at the National Theatre. South Bank, London, England, UK<br>CTW7P9 Fire Garden at the National Theatre. South Bank, London, England, UK

    Stage of the nation: what does it mean to be a national theatre?

    The national theatres of Great Britain, Scotland, Wales and Ireland have all caused a stir about what they represent. How should they reflect a country’s identity?
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