£119.90
About the show
Dry Land is currently listed as an ended production in the British Theatre archive.
Dry Land is preserved in the British Theatre archive as a historical production.
Verified archive references place the production at Jermyn Street Theatre.
British Theatre coverage for this title is dated 12 November 2015.
Cancellation policy: theatre tickets cannot be cancelled, exchanged, or refunded once purchased.
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Review
REVIEW: Drowning On Dry Land, New Wimbledon Theatre Studio ✭✭✭✭✭
Drowning On Dry Land is one of Ayckbourn's most tonally surprising and unstable works; technically it is also one of his most sparingly and yet also elaborately written, combining apparent thinness of dialogue with intricately complex plotting, where motivation and reactions are typically merely suggested with the most delicate of shading, with hints, or shadows of meaning.
Julian Eaves
News & Reviews
News
REVIEW: Dry Land, Jermyn Street Theatre ✭✭✭✭
This was one of the most demanding nights I have had in the theatre as reviewer or audience member in a long while, and that was wholly justified by the challenge and revelation of the play. We shall hear more of this author and these actors before long, to be sure.
Tim Hochstrasser
News & Reviews
News
REVIEW : Thérèse Raquin, Studio 54 ✭✭✭✭
Cabnet's clear and perceptive direction is sound for the most part, and there is an emphasis on visual aspects of the production which make it something special. Thérèse, alone on a rock, contemplating escape; the awkward, near inept, murder of Camille followed by the images of the sodden lovers, breathless on dry land; Madame's hand creeping into view, just as the stroke fells her; the restless sense of Camille's spirit having possessed the bedroom where Thérèse and Laurent cuckolded him. Using silence as expressively as sound, Cabnet presides over a production rich in detail and incredibly tense to experience.
Stephen Collins
News & Reviews
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Dry Land