Young Vic_CREDIT_Philip Vile.jpg
© Philip Vile

Young Vic

This edgy Waterloo theatre has a formidable artistic reputation
  • Theatre | Private theatres
  • Waterloo
  • Recommended
Advertising

Time Out says

The Young Vic more than lives up to its name, with its slick modern exterior, buzzing bar, and a forward-looking line-up that makes it feel metaphorically as well as literally miles away from London's fustier West End houses. Under current boss Kwame Kwei-Armah, who cut his teeth on the New York theatre scene, it's thriving, with a renewed focus on connecting with the Southwark community that surrounds it, and on championing works by people of colour.

Kwei-Armah is building on the legacy of the theatre's longtime artistic director David Lan, who stepped down in 2018 after 18 years in the job. During that time, he oversaw a major renovation which created the current box office area from an old butcher's shop (you can still see traces of the original tiles), spruced up the theatre's fully flexible 420-seater auditorium, and added two smaller studio spaces, the Maria and the Clare. And he presided over an eclectic programme with a striking international focus. 

The Young Vic's popular Cut bar and restaurant is perma-busy with crowds drawn by its bright, airy set-up and central location. But it's just the most public-facing part of the theatre's many efforts to get people through its doors. The Taking Part team puts on parallel productions devised by local residents, building on a community focus that's been present from the theatre's earliest days. It started life as a youth-focused offshoot of the National Theatre in 1969, then housed in the Old Vic down the road, and its current breeze-block building was hastily thrown up in 1970. It was only designed to last for five years, but after a full-on refurb and with an impressive artistic legacy to hold onto, it looks all set to last for another half century. 

Details

Address
66
The Cut
London
SE1 8LZ
Transport:
Tube: Waterloo
Do you own this business?Sign in & claim business

What’s on

Bengal Tiger at the Baghdad Zoo

4 out of 5 stars
Flex time: 14 years ago I caught Bengal Tiger at the Baghdad Zoo on Broadway. It was good, although I was definitely distracted by both my jet lag and the fact it starred Robin Williams. The subject matter – the Second Iraq War – was a popular one at the time, and the play perhaps just seemed like the starry culmination of a wider phenomenon.  It never made it to the UK. Or not until now. Omar Elerian’s Young Vic production is Bengal Tiger’s British debut, coming as part of a belated wave of interest in playwright Rajiv Joseph, whose King James was performed at Hampstead earlier this year and whose Archduke will form part of the Royal Court’s 70th birthday season next year. What’s most immediately striking is how weird it is. Much of it comes from the point of view of the ghost of a tiger (Kathryn Hunter), who starts the play alive but soon gets shot dead after Tom (Patrick Gibson) – astonishingly only the second stupidest of its two US soldier characters – taunts it with food, which leads to the big cat biting his hand off.  Although there is a through thread, Joseph's play is best viewed as a series of vignettes or playlets about the nightmare of post-Saddam Iraq, stalked by ghosts, madness and greed for the deposed dictator’s fabled hoarded wealth.  It’s a portrait of a world upended, where the only person not losing their mind is Hunter’s Tiger who is – broadly speaking – entirely unfussed about having been killed. There is the vaguest suggestion of tigerishness in...
  • Comedy

Museum of Austerity

3 out of 5 stars
A major London trend this year has been the glut of tech-enhanced immersive exhibitions, that have typically taken some great historical disaster – the sinking of the Titanic, the eruption of Vesuvius – and made it ‘fun’ via AR, VR, film and other such gubbins. They’re certainly more appealing to kids than the average British Museum exhibition – but they are of course also basic as hell. That’s not the only way to use tech to craft an exhibition, though. As you’d probably gather from the title, The Museum of Austerity is an altogether more sober affair. A collaboration between the Young Vic, English Touring Theatre, Trial and Error Studio and the National Theatre, it contains accounts of the last days of those who died in Britain's so-called ‘austerity’ era after having their benefits cut by the DWP. Although there are a few facts and figures on the sterile white walls erected within the Young Vic’s Maria studio, the meat of the ‘exhibition’ is an AR experience in which you don a helmet that reveals eight virtual figures dotted throughout the space. Walk up to one and it triggers the testimony of a member of the subject’s family on the circumstances that led to their loved one’s death. Although the subjects and details vary, the stories are depressingly similar: the person was vulnerable or very ill; they died either because their benefits were cut as a result of the clampdown instigated by the Cameron government (most commonly by suicide), or their last days were simply...
  • Experimental
Advertising
London for less
    You may also like
    You may also like