Review
REVIEW: The Effect, National Theatre ✭✭✭✭
Paul T Davies reviews Lucy Prebbles The Effect now playing at the National Theatre.
Paul T Davies
News & Reviews
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Categories
English
en
Arabic
ar
Czech (Czechia)
cs
Danish (Denmark)
da
German
de
Spanish
es
French
fr
Hebrew
he
Hindi
hi
Italian
it
Japanese
ja
Korean
ko
Dutch (Netherlands)
nl
Norwegian (Norway)
no
Polish (Poland)
pl
Portuguese
pt
Swedish (Sweden)
sv
Turkish (Turkey)
tr
Ukrainian
ua
Vietnamese (Vietnam)
vi
Chinese
zh
The Effect is currently listed as an ended production in the British Theatre archive.
The Effect is preserved in the British Theatre archive as a historical production.
Verified archive references place the production at National Theatre.
British Theatre coverage for this title is dated 24 August 2023.
Cancellation policy: theatre tickets cannot be cancelled, exchanged, or refunded once purchased.
Review
Paul T Davies reviews Lucy Prebbles The Effect now playing at the National Theatre.
Paul T Davies
News & Reviews
News
Casting is announced for the first revival of Lucy Prebble's The Effect which is to play at the Boulevard Theatre in London from March 19.
Douglas Mayo
News & Reviews
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The beauty of Bombastic Declaration of Love is the effect it has on the audience and what Julie manages to elicit from them.
Mark Ludmon
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Shell Shock is a powerful depiction of the effects of combat on ordinary soldiers and the people around them.
Mark Ludmon
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Wrought with gun violence, this leaves you long pondering not only the effects of police power but their predicament long after the play is over. Sterling stuff.
Layla Haidrani
News & Reviews
News
Hare's adaptation, the best of the three in the Season, is crisp, charming and comical, thereby magnifying the effect of the more tragic aspects. It's a markedly short version of the play, and Kent assists the understanding of its contours and colours by interposing interval between Acts 3 and 4. This allows the four central characters of the play to stake out their positions, develop their tensions and alliances, their hopes, fears and dreams; by the time the third Act is over, the various dice have been rolled and Act Four, set two years on, is about consequences; chickens - or seagulls - coming home to roost.
Stephen Collins
News & Reviews
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The Effect