Spring Travels: Theatre in London

I’m not the only traveler who plots escapes around theatre or museum exhibitions – I’ve added a few days in London to see Ralph Fiennes and Tom Hiddleston, our Man in London always has the best seats, even at the last minute!  I’ve included an extra day in Paris for blockbuster Exhibition at Foundation Louis Vuitton or a special performance at Opera Garnier.

London is especially enticing as the small playhouses rarely have a bad seat. Some theatres now offer beverage delivery services, we were tucked into our stall seats, when our seat neighbors popped the bubbly and began noshing on fine nibbles! Who knew? Our heads spun at the burst of the cork, how did we miss this stylish feature?!

Plot now for spring in London, to see one of my favorite stage actors, Ralph Fiennes. He is slated to star in David Hare’s play Grace Pervades at the Theatre Royal Haymarket in London’s West End, with performances scheduled to begin in April 2026 for a limited run. He will be joined by Miranda Raison in the production, which tells the story of Victorian actors Henry Irving and Ellen Terry. Directed by Jeremy Herrin, the play tells the story of Henry Irving and Ellen Terry, stars of the Victorian stage, and Ellen’s troubled yet brilliant children, Edith Craig and Edward Gordon Craig. The creative team also includes set designer Bob Crowley, costume designer Fotini Dimou, lighting designer Peter Mumford, sound designer Elizabeth Purnell, composer Paul Englishby, and movement director Lucy Cullingford.

The play premiered at the Theatre Royal Bath in 2025 before transferring to the London theatre.  Legendary star of stage and screen, Ralph Fiennes, stars opposite Miranda Raison (Spooks) in David Hare’s ‘fascinating, absorbing and very funny’ (FT) play, transferring from a sell-out season at Theatre Royal Bath. Ralph Fiennes gives a career defining performance as Sir Henry Irving, the first actor ever to be knighted and the greatest star of the Victorian stage. Miranda Raison plays Ellen Terry, the most loved and highest paid actress in England and recruited by Irving to join his renowned company at the Lyceum Theatre.

The National Gallery London – Picasso and Ingres

Lesser artists borrow; great artists steal.
Pablo Picasso

The National Gallery London where I just visited the stunning Raphael exhibit is hosting for the first time, Pablo Picasso’s ‘Woman with a Book’ (1932) from the Norton Simon Museum, California. It will be paired with the painting that inspired it, ‘Madame Moitessier’ by Jean-Auguste-Dominique Ingres.


Picasso first encountered the enigmatic ‘Madame Moitessier’ at an exhibition in Paris, in 1921, and was enthralled. Over the next decade, he repeatedly referenced Ingres in his art, and painted ‘Woman with a Book’, one of his most celebrated portraits, in homage to Ingres’s famous work.

For Ingres, a 19th-century French artist steeped in the academic tradition, the beautiful and wealthy Madame Moitessier represented the classical ideal. Wearing her finest clothes and jewelry, she gazes at the viewer majestically, the embodiment of luxury and style during the Second Empire.

Dominique Ingres - Mme Moitessier.jpg
Madame Moitessier is a portrait of Marie-Clotilde-Inès Moitessier begun in 1844 and completed in 1856 by 
Jean-Auguste-Dominique Ingres

Picasso, born 100 years after Ingres, is famous for a very different, abstract, style of art, but his inspiration is clear. The model for ‘Woman with a Book’, Picasso’s then young mistress, Marie-Thérèse Walter, mimics Madame Moitessier’s distinct pose. The painting balances sensuality and restraint, striking a chord with the eroticism latent beneath Ingres’s image of bourgeois respectability.

‘Picasso Ingres: Face to Face’ is a unique opportunity to see these two portraits, side by side, for the first time, and to trace the continuous thread between 19th and 20th-century artistic development.

Exhibition organized in partnership with the Norton Simon Museum, California.

From The National Gallery Press