MARY CONWAY applauds the revival of a tense, and extremely funny, study of men, money and playing cards
Different but the same
GORDON PARSONS sees an imagined confrontation between Queen Elizabeth I and the jailed Mary Queen of Scots which reveals them as equally confined by personal and political traumas

Mary Stuart
Duke of York Theatre, London
WE ARE all prisoners of our own personalities and of history and no-one understood this better than Friedrich Schiller, widely regarded as Germany’s Shakespeare.
His epic historical drama Mary Stuart, transferred from the Almeida theatre to the West End, focuses on the tragic conflict between the Catholic Mary Queen of Scots and England’s Protestant Queen Elizabeth.
The complex family web of the Tudors left Mary with a valid claim to the English crown in the event of Elizabeth’s death and was consequently a rallying point for Catholic dissidents.
More from this author

GORDON PARSONS recommends an ideal introduction to the writer who was first to give the English a literary language

GORDON PARSONS welcomes a graphic biography of George Sand, the most popular French novelist in 19th-century Britain

GORDON PARSONS relishes a fast moving production of Sheridan’s comic masterpiece

GORDON PARSONS relishes a play that reveals how language carries much more than simple communication