Search for screenings at your local cinema for National Theatre Live. Memorably, when one character exclaims "Jesus Christ!" For the latest updates about live broadcasts or encore screenings near you, get our newsletter. – the gentleman's agreement by which, when one member of parliament cannot attend to vote, a member of the opposing party removes themselves. This House National Theatre at Home 4 Stars Streaming until 3 June. Franklin’s Michael Cox forlornly observes “I imagined it would be like being a rock star”. CONTACT | At a point when Keir Starmer’s impressive holding of the government to account at PMQs is bringing public focus back on the importance of parliament, This House provides a fascinating insight into what motivates those who work there. Until, because he is literally at death’s door, he isn’t asked to attend the last vote of no confidence, and the opposition win by one vote. Streaming until 3 June. You can Update Your Preferences or Unsubscribe at any time by clicking the link in the footer of any email we send you. For further information visit the theatre’s website here. Lauren O’Neil is excellent as Ann Taylor, a rare female in this boy’s club, dealing well with the casual sexism of the time. The best of British theatre.On a cinema screen near you. and Hammed Animashaun (The Barber Shop Chronicles) lead the cast as Titania, Oberon, Puck and Bottom. Most poignantly we see one MP clearly on the brink of death fighting to save the party he loves. 'This House' takes us back to the period 1974-79 in the UK, when fashion led us to wear bell-bottom trousers and had (some of) us staggering around on mountainous platform shoes. Well, hardly ever, Brexit: The Uncivil War, Channel 4 review - Benedict Cumberbatch gets the best tunes, 15 Heroines, Jermyn Street Theatre online review - putting the women back into Greek myth, Death of England: Delroy, National Theatre review - a furious if fleetingly seen sequel, Little Wars, Union Theatre online review - richly emotional, but formulaic, Nine Lives, Bridge Theatre review - engaging if slim finale to ambitious solo season, The Great Gatsby, Immersive London review – a warm and electric tribute to the book, Quarter Life Crisis, Bridge Theatre review – slender and superficial, Hermione Lee: Tom Stoppard, A Life review - the last word on a theatrical wordsmith, Nights in the Garden of Spain & Miss Fozzard Finds Her Feet, Bridge Theatre review - potent mix of pain and comedy, Playing Sandwiches & A Lady of Letters, Bridge Theatre review - the darkness dazzles, twice over, Sunnymead Court, Tristan Bates Theatre review - a lovely lockdown romance, An Evening with an Immigrant, Bridge Theatre review – poetic and engaging, The Cheeky Chappie, The Warren Outdoors review - entertaining drama about risqué comic Max Miller. Would Cummings, some might ask, have achieved the influence he has now if it hadn’t been for his depiction in Graham’s brilliant TV drama Brexit: The Uncivil War in which he was played as an obsessive genius by Benedict Cumberbatch? Andrew Scott stars in Noël Coward’s provocative comedy, a giddy and surprisingly modern reflection on fame, desire and loneliness.