Clementine Scott

  • This new romantic epic telling the story of the Eiffel Tower’s architect and the woman who inspired him is well told, but falls short of being profound.

    ★★★✰✰

    From the opening shot of a bearded, brooding ar […]

  • Like so many other art forms in the 1950s and 1960s, the post-war British theatre was in a state of flux. The upper-class comedies of manners of Terence Rattigan and Noel Coward were giving way to the kitchen […]

  • Gang of Youths’ recent Brixton show, the finale of a five-month run of UK and Ireland shows for the Australian quintet, starts with a rather jarring transition. After strong support from Sunderland native and se […]

  • ★★★★✰

    Under the combined effect of pandemic-era national solidarity and the 75th anniversary of D-Day, the last couple of years have seen an increase in British wartime nostalgia, and The Winston Machine e […]

  • We live in an era brimming with musical adaptations of teen classics, from Heathers to Bring It On, and Leeds University’s Music Theatre Society has decided that the next ideal source for jaunty school unif […]