MARIA DUARTE, FIONA O’CONNOR and ANDY HEDGECOCK review Savage House, Enzo, Madfabulous, and Erupcja
The Lynching
Friends' Meeting House, Manchester/Touring
JACKIE WALKER is now well-known because of her suspension from the Labour Party over alleged anti-semitic comments.
But this one-woman show, at least initially, is very much the story of her family and a history and tradition of fighting for civil rights.
It starts in the US, where her Jamaican mother Dorothy Brown and Jewish father Jack Cohen were involved in the civil rights movement in the 1950s. Walker recounts the moving story of her parents holding hands as they sit on a segregated bus in the US south while being beaten by the police.
Hundreds in Berlin gathered on January 15 to honour the US-born socialist who made East Germany his home. Florentine Morales Sandoval reports
The daughter of a legendary blacklisted Hollywood screenwriter has spoken out against the reactionary move, says MIKE SCHNEIDER
Maggie Bowden was a trailblazing campaigning lawyer at Birnberg and Thompsons, women’s organiser of the Communist Party, and general secretary of Liberation
GORDON PARSONS is disappointed by an unsubtle production of this comedy of upper middle class infidelity


