DAVID HARBOUR AND BILL PULLMAN TO STAR IN THE WORLD PREMIÈRE OF THERESA REBECK’S NEW PLAY MAD HOUSE

DAVID HARBOUR AND BILL PULLMAN TO STAR IN

THE WORLD PREMIÈRE OF

THERESA REBECK’S NEW PLAY MAD HOUSE

David Harbour and Bill Pullman will star in the world première of Theresa Rebeck’s dark and funny new play Mad House. Directed by Moritz von Stuelpnagel, the production opens on 26 June at the Ambassadors Theatre, with previews from 15 June, and runs until 4 September.

Theresa Rebeck said today, “There are those projects when the stars simply align, and to see David and Bill together on stage is beyond my wildest dreams. I’m very much looking forward to being back in the rehearsal room with Moritz as we bring the play to production here in London.”

David Harbour added, “So excited to return to the London stage with Theresa’s blistering new dark comedy.  It features two of my favourite things: the abyss of madness that lies at the pit of every family as they stare blankly, incomprehensively into the nature of our fleeting existence, and real estate.”

The production reunites Rebeck and von Stuelpnagel following their collaborations on Bernhardt/Hamlet and Seared.

Public on sale is 12pm today via ATG Tickets, with ATG TheatreCard holders able to book from 10am.

AMBASSADOR THEATRE GROUP PRODUCTIONS PRESENT

THE WORLD PREMIÈRE OF

MAD HOUSE

BY THERESA REBECK

Directed by Moritz von Stuelpnagel

at the Ambassadors Theatre


15 June – 4 September

A family reunion. Time to pay your last disrespects.

In rural Pennsylvania, Michael has returned to his childhood home to look after his dying father. His siblings Ned and Pam soon arrive, determined to work out how much money Dad actually has left and how they’re getting their hands on it.

David Harbour and Bill Pullman return to the West End in the world première of Theresa Rebeck’s dark and funny new play. Directed by Moritz von Stuelpnagel, Mad House opens at the Ambassadors Theatre this June for a strictly limited season.

David Harbour plays Michael. His theatre work includes Cal in Camo (Rattlestick Theater), Glengarry Glen Ross (Gerald Schoenfeld Theatre), Romeo and Juliet (Delacorte Theatre 50th Anniversary reading), The Merchant of Venice (Broadhurst Theatre), The Coast of Utopia: Part 1 – Voyage, The Coast of Utopia: Part 2 – Shipwreck, The Coast of Utopia: Part 3 – Salvage (Vivian Beaumont Theatre), Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf? (Longacre Theater – Tony Award nomination for Best Featured Actor in a Play – also Apollo Theatre in the West End), The Invention of Love (Lyceum Theatre), and The Rainmaker (Brooks Atkinson Theatre). For television his work includes as series regular Jim Hopper in Stranger Things – winner of SAG Award for Outstanding Performance by an Ensemble in a Drama Series and Critics Choice Television Award for Best Supporting Actor in a Drama Series, and nominations for Emmy and Golden Globe Awards for Best Supporting Actor;  Star Wars: Visions, Q-Force, Big City Greens, The Simpsons, Animals, Drunk History, Crisis in Six Scenes, Banshee, State of Affairs, Manhattan, Rake, Elementary, Blue, The Newsroom, Midnight Sun, Pam Am, Royal Pains, Lie to Me, Law & Order, The Unit and Hack; and for film, Violent Night, Black Widow, No Sudden Move, Extraction, Hellboy, Human Affairs, Sleepless, Suicide Squad, Black Mass, The Equalizer, A Walk Among the Tombstones, X/Y, Parkland, Snitch, Knife Fight, Between Us, End of Watch, The Green Hornet, Every Day, State of Play, Quantum of Solace, Revolutionary Road, Awake, The Wedding Weekend, War of the Worlds, Brokeback Mountain, Confess, and Kinsey.

Veteran of the stage and screen Bill Pullman returns to the London stage to play Daniel – he previously appeared in All My Sons at The Old Vic. His other theatre work includes The Other Place (Samuel J. Friedman Theatre), Oleanna, The Goat, or Who Is Sylvia?  (John Golden Theatre), and Off-Broadway, The Jacksonian, Peter and Jerry – Drama Desk Award for Outstanding Actor in a Play, and The Sad Lament of Pecos Bill on the Eve Killing His Wife Killer’s Head/Action. For television, his work includes The Sinner (as series regular Harry Ambrose), Halston, Ten X Ten, 1600 Penn, Innocent, Torchwood (as series regular Oswald Danes), Too Big to Fail, Nathan vs. Nurture, Revelations, American Masters, The Virginian, and Fallen Angels; and for film, his extensive work includes The High Note, Dark Waters, The Coldest Game, The Equalizer 2, Trouble, Battles of the Sexes, A Thousand Junkies, The Ballad of Lefty Brown, LBJ, Independence Day: Resurgence, American Ultra, The Equalizer, Peacock, The Killer Inside Me, Your Name Here, Surveillance, Phoebe in Wonderland, Bottle Shock, You Kill Me, Nobel Son, Dear Wendy, Igby Goes Down, Ignition, A Man is Mostly Water, Titan A.E., The Guilty, Brokedown Palace, Zero Effect, Lost Highway, Independence Day, Mr Wrong, Casper, While You Were Sleeping, Wyatt Earp, The Last Seduction, Malice, Sleepless in Seattle, Sommersby, Singles, A League of Their Own, Newsies, The Accidental Tourist, Rocket Gibraltar, The Serpent and the Rainbow, and Ruthless People.

Theresa Rebeck is a prolific and widely produced playwright, whose work has been staged across the globe. Her work on Broadway includes Bernhardt/Hamlet, Dead Accounts, Seminar and Mauritius. Other notable New York and regional plays include Seared (MCC), Downstairs (Primary Stages), The Scene, The Water’s Edge, Loose Knit, The Family of Mann and Spike Heels (Second Stage), Bad Dates, The Butterfly Collection and Our House (Playwrights Horizons), The Understudy (Roundabout), View of the Dome (NYTW), What We’re Up Against (Women’s Project), Omnium Gatherum (Pulitzer Prize finalist). As a director, her work has been seen at The Alley Theatre (Houston), the REP Company (Delaware), Dorset Theatre Festival, the Orchard Project and the Folger Theatre. Major film and television projects include Trouble – with Anjelica Huston, Bill Pullman and David Morse (writer and director), NYPD Blue, the NBC series Smash (creator), and the female spy thriller 355 (for Jessica Chastain’s production company). As a novelist, Rebeck’s books include Three Girls and Their Brother and I’m Glad About You. Rebeck is the recipient of the William Inge New Voices Playwriting Award, the PEN/Laura Pels Foundation Award, and a Lilly Award.

Moritz von Stuelpnagel directs. His work on Broadway includes Bernhardt/Hamlet (Roundabout Theatre Company), Present Laughter (St James Theatre), Hand to God (Booth Theater – nomination for Tony Award for Best Direction of a Play, and also in the West End at the Vaudeville Theatre). Off-Broadway, his credit include Seared – also Williamstown Theatre Festival, The Thanksgiving Play, Teenage Dick – also Pasadena Playhouse, Huntington Theatre Company and Woolly Mammoth, Important Hats of the 20th Century, Verité, Bike America, TheaterJam IV: Sleep, Love Song of the Albanian Sous Chef, Trevor, Drop of a Hat, My Base and Scurvy Heart, I F*cking Love Winning, Gentrifusion, The Second Son, The Bird and the 2-Ton Weight, Best Sex Ever, Spacebar, Turnabout, Cerebral Planning, Too Little Too Late, Deathpod!, The Building Party, Mel & El: Show & Tell, The Clause, Historie of the Barber-Surgeons, Two Gentlemen of Verona, and Lunch with Bonnie; as well as extensive work regionally, including Found: A New Musical, Tell Me I’m Not Crazy, Twelfth Night, Tiger Style!, Romance Novels for Dummies, All Is Calm, Bike America, Macbeth and Fat Pig.

Mad House is produced by Ambassador Theatre Group Productions and Gavin Kalin Productions.

Ambassador Theatre Group Productions is the award-winning producing and general management arm of the Ambassador Theatre Group.

Upcoming and current productions include: Cabaret starring Eddie Redmayne and Jessie Buckley (West End); Pretty Woman the Musical (Savoy); Fatal Attraction starring Kym Marsh and Louise Redknapp (UK Tour); Cyrano de Bergerac starring James McAvoy and The Seagull starring Emilia Clarke (West End) via the Jamie Lloyd Company; The Doctor starring Juliet Stevenson (West End); Plaza Suite starring Sarah Jessica Parker and Matthew Broderick(Hudson Theatre, Broadway); and Sunday in the Park With George starring Jake Gyllenhaal and Annaleigh Ashford (West End).

Recent productions and co-productions include: Cyrano de Bergerac starring James McAvoy (Playhouse Theatre); Touching the Void (Duke of York’s Theatre); Ghost Stories (Ambassadors Theatre/UK tour) and 9 to 5 the Musical (Savoy Theatre and UK tours).

Previous productions and co-productions in London and the West End include: Ian McKellen On Stage (Harold Pinter Theatre/UK tour/Hudson Theatre, Broadway); The Lehman Trilogy (Piccadilly Theatre); Betrayal starring Tom Hiddleston (Harold Pinter Theatre); The Curious Incident of The Dog in the Night-Time (Piccadilly Theatre); Pinter at the Pinter Season (Harold Pinter Theatre); King Lear starring Ian McKellen (Duke of York’s Theatre); Caroline, or Change (Playhouse Theatre); the Tony Award-winning Oslo (Harold Pinter Theatre); Glengarry Glen Ross starring Christian Slater (Playhouse Theatre); Buried Child featuring Ed Harris in an Olivier Award-nominated performance (Trafalgar Studios); Big Fish starring Kelsey Grammer (The Other Palace); Hamlet starring Andrew Scott (Harold Pinter Theatre); The Maids and The Homecoming (Trafalgar Studios); Doctor Faustus (Duke of York’s Theatre); Oresteia (Trafalgar Studios); and Dirty Rotten Scoundrels (Savoy Theatre/UK tour).

Recent Broadway productions include: Caroline, Or Change (Roundabout Theatre, Broadway); Betrayal starring Tom Hiddleston (Bernard B Jacobs Theatre); Sea Wall/A Life (Hudson Theatre); Sunday in the Park with George (Hudson Theatre); and Pretty Woman the Musical (Nederlander Theatre).

ATG Productions is also committed to bringing high quality shows to the UK regions and abroad. Recent touring productions and co-productions include: Baskerville (Beijing and Nanjing, China)Abigail’s Party starring Jodie Prenger; Glengarry Glen Ross starring Nigel Harman and Mark Benton; Strangers on a Train based on Patricia Highsmith’s novel; the Victorian thriller Gaslight starring Kara Tointon, Keith Allen and Rupert Young.

MAD HOUSE

LISTINGS

Ambassadors Theatre

West Street, London WC2H 9ND

www.atgtickets.com

Box Office: 0844 871 7615

15 June – 4 September

Tickets start from £25 (£20 in previews)

Performances: Tuesday – Saturday at 7.30pm

Thursday, Saturday and Sunday at 2.30pm

Group Booking Line: 020 7206 1174

Access Booking Line: 0800 912 6971

Facebook:          /MadHouseThePlay

Instagram:         @MadHouseThePlay

Twitter:               @MadHouseThePlay

#MadHouseThePlay

MARK RAVENHILL TO DIRECT A CONTEMPORARY QUEER REINVENTION OF LA BOHEME AT THE KING’S HEAD THEATRE 26 APRIL – 28 MAY

LA BOHÈME

MARK RAVENHILL TO DIRECT A CONTEMPORARY QUEER REINVENTION OF PUCCINI’S CLASSIC OPERA

AT THE KING’S HEAD THEATRE
26 APRIL – 28 MAY 2022

Mark Ravenhill, Co-Artistic Director of The King’s Head Theatre, will direct a contemporary queer reinvention of Puccini’s classic opera LA BOHÈME, opening at the world-renowned Islington pub theatre’s stage from 26 April and playing until 28 May, with a press night on Tuesday 3 May. 

With Puccini’s score and a new English libretto originally conceived by David Eaton and Adam Spreadbury-Maher with additional material by Philip Lee, and with Musical Direction from David Eaton, thisclassic tale of love and loss amongst a community of struggling artists returns to the King’s Head Theatre in a new version which relocates the story to contemporary London. Full casting will be announced shortly.

Penniless writer Rudolfo struggles to monetise his online writing but a Grindr hookup with a Liberty perfume salesman- known to his friends as Mimi -leads to unexpected blossoming of romantic passion.  Meanwhile Rudolfo’s flatmate, Marcello pursues an on/off relationship with sometime model Musetta who is torn between the idealism of loving an artist and the material possibilities offered by a hedge fund manager.  As a year passes from one Christmas to the next, the four friends struggle to reconcile love with artistic aspiration and the need to pay the bills.

Puccini’s story has been constantly reinvented since its premiere in 1896 most notably with the Broadway musical Rent.  A previous production for Opera Up Close enjoyed a successful run at the King’s Head Theatre, and received an Olivier award. Subsequently in 2018 another incarnation of La Boheme from the King’s Head Theatre West End season was nominated for Best New Opera at the Oliviers. 

Tickets from £10 are on sale now here

Mark Ravenhill explains: “Our version of La Bohème is the story of a group of friends who started partying in the 1990s.  As they reach middle age, they are faced with the possibility that now may be the time to sell out and settle down.  But romantic passion, sexual desire and the hedonistic pleasures of partying remain as strong as ever.  It’s exciting to honour the overwhelming romantic beauty of Puccini’s score with his eye for telling social detail in this new version”.

Musical Director David Eaton continues, “It is really exciting to be returning to the King’s Head to work on this new production of La Bohème with Mark Ravenhill.  I’m always looking for ways to bring opera to new audiences and to reframe the outdated tropes and narratives that can make Opera feel elitist and alienating.  The King’s Head is the perfect space to come and experience something new – up close, personal and modern, far from the old-fashioned conventions of the Opera House.  There are some great singers on board and an inspiring Director – I can’t wait to get started!”

The King’s Head Theatre was established in 1970. Passionate about great theatre, it is known for its challenging work and support of early career artists.

The King’s Head is committed to fighting prejudice through the work it stages, and the artists and staff it works with. The team believes in fair pay for all on the fringe and create accessible routes for early career artists to stage their work – work they are passionate about. In 2022, subject to a fundraising campaign, the King’s Head Theatre will move into a custom-built space in the heart of Islington Square, directly behind its current home securing the future of the venue for generations to come.

Darren Murphy is an Olivier Award Nominated producer and writer who in 2014 founded his production company Making Productions. He has gone on to produce bold new writing and existing work in new and exciting ways to engage and entertain audiences. Combining newly discovered talent with experienced collaborators, partner organisations and other producers, the aim is to extend the scope of creativity in the performing arts. Darren is passionate about exploring relevant and current work for education and community organisations for the betterment of all and is unique in this practice by championing Women, BAME and LGBT+ creatives. @Make_Prods 

@kingsheadthtr
@kingsheadtheatre

#KHTLaboheme

Marvellous Review

New Vic Theatre, Newcastle Under Lyme – Saturday 9th April 2022

Reviewed by Lesley Eagles

5*****

“Marvellous” by Neil Baldwin & Malcolm Clarke-adapted for the stage by Neil Baldwin & Teresa Heskins

An absolute, not to be missed, treasure of a production. If you’re thinking about going please do not hesitate as you’re in for an absolute treat. I quite literally could not take the smile of my face throughout.

Marvellous tells the heart-warming true story of a local legend Neil Baldwin (Nello) which was originally retold for a BAFTA Award winning drama for the BBC. The story tells of a boy with learning difficulties who left school at the tender age of 14 with no qualifications and ended up with an honoury degree from Keele University.

The production was specifically commissioned for the New Vic as it is Neil’s local theatre therefore created in conjunction with Neil Baldwin himself.

This unique play is staged “in the round” with a remarkable directoral style that I have not seen before which quite simply left me in awe of the talent of the production team involved.

The fact that it was staged in the round with the colourful signage was perfect to replicate the circular staging of the circus from which Neil’s stage name Nello was created.

The way in which Neil (Nello) Baldwin’s story was told was utterly brilliant with faultless performances from the entire cast.

I do not like to single out characters, as all performances were outstanding however credit needs to go to Michael Hugo who played the part of “The Real Neil” guiding the other cast members through the retelling of his life. The seven strong cast played out versions of themselves playing both Neil himself and an endless number of other characters that Neil encountered during his life. His portrayal of Neil was incredible demonstrating his quirky, warm and endearing nature to perfection.

Another stand out performance was delivered by Gareth Cassidy. His comic timing was genius along with his ability to deliver many voices, dialects and impersonations. He was quite clearly an audience favourite as a result.

The play demonstrates through Neil Baldwin’s positive outlook on life that you can realise your dreams despite any labels society tries to bestow.

He didn’t see obstacles but rather opportunities that weren’t to be missed. As a result, he always seemed to manage to get what he wanted. His achievements as a result were outstanding. His colourful life led him to becoming a clown (Nello), a kit man for Stoke City Football club, meet many famous people including HRH, receive a BEM and many more weird and wonderful achievements.

The mainly comedic script is a celebration of these life achievements, which allows for playful banter between the characters involved. The cast genuinely appeared to be having a blast with their clever use of props from their ‘bottomless’ bag for life!

Marvellous”… it’s exactly that from beginning to end

The Addams Family Review

Hull New Theatre – until 19th March 2022

Reviewed by Catherine McWilliams

5*****

As the Band started up with the familiar finger clicking theme tune, I wasn’t at all sure what to expect of The Addams Family, what I got was a fun-filled heart-warming musical full of fabulous music. Lighting, scenery and costumes added to the atmosphere and made this a cracking night out.

The Addams Family The Musical Comedy is based on the characters created by Charles Addams with the book by Marshall Brickman and Rick Elice and music and lyrics by Andrew Lippa. The story revolves around Wednesday Addams (Kingsley Morton) who has grown up and fallen in love with Lucas Beineke (Ahmed Hamad), Lucas’s family are coming to dinner and Wednesday is pleading with her family to behave “normally”. Of course, this is The Addams Family who do not do “normal” so things do not go to plan which leads to delightfully delicious chaos!

The entire cast is superb, music and singing is outstanding, the choreography (Alistair David) is tight and visually very effective and Diego Pitarch’s design superbly gothic and spooky. From the moment the music starts you will be hooked, timing is fabulous, there are laugh out loud moments and the most wonderful throw away lines from the cast. However, in the middle of the fun there will suddenly be the most touching moment as The Addams Family may be kooky and very, very odd but ultimately, they are a strong family unit who love each other and it is family love that drives this musical.

Joanne Clifton as Morticia and Cameron Blakely as Gomez lead the family and what a partnership this is, they play off one another so well and both have the most incredible singing voices. Joanne Clifton’s Morticia is cool and understated as she glides around the stage, whilst Cameron Blakely’s Gomez is almost frenetic at times but then he will show a much softer side to the character. From start to finish they are both incredible, I particularly loved “Not Today” sung by Gomez, and Morticia’s rendition of “Just Around The Corner”.

Matt Slack is a brilliant Uncle Fester, perhaps the most eccentric of all the family but caring about them all. There were many superb moments but “The Moon And Me” was a sheer delight.

Kingsley Morton’s Wednesday was suitably strong and feisty yet still had the edge of uncertainty of youth, Ahmed Hamad (Lucas) bounced off her beautifully as he so clearly wondered at times what he was getting himself into.

Sean Kingsley as Mal and Kara Lane as Alice were so right as Lucas’s parents, uptight and totally out of their depth. Grant McIntyre was a pugnacious and obnoxious Pugsley, Carol Ball a mischievous eccentric Grandma and Ryan Bennett delivered a slightly menacing Lurch.

The ensemble who played the Ancestors were excellent. In their wonderfully spooky costumes they added to the atmosphere. Their singing and choreography was tight and beautifully performed.

The Band led by Bob Broad was excellent, whether they were delivering tango rhythms, Charleston or music which gave a nod to the early Broadway musicals.

Everything about The Addams Family shouts quality, from the lighting to the costumes to the music and to the outstanding performances of all this supremely talented cast. This really is the most fantastic night out. At the end of the performance the audience at the Hull New Theatre quite rightly roared their approval, we had just watched a fabulous performance. I cannot recommend The Addams Family highly enough, there was absolutely nothing to criticise this is not a 5-star performance but a 5 star + performance.

The Da Vinci Code review

Theatre Royal, Brighton – until 19th March 2022

Reviewed by Sue Bradley and Francois Craig

3***

Credit: Johan Persson

With a best -selling book and film of the same name, it would be hard not to have heard of the Da Vinci Code. The film, book and now this stage adaption combine a fast-moving conspiracy thriller with just enough detail to make you wonder if, just perhaps, there might be some truth to the conspiracy … you may also be familiar with the territory of the plot if you have read The Holy Blood and the Holy Grail by Michael Baigent, Richard Leigh and Henry Lincoln, or books by Umberto Eco such as The Name of the Rose or Foucault’s Pendulum.

With the action starting in Paris (a series of announcements and projections cause us to believe that we are in the Louvre) and then moving to London, our hero and his companion must decrypt a set of clues to a monumental religious secret hidden within various artworks and public buildings. Aided by – or is it manipulated by – an eccentric Grail scholar, the pair race to uncover the secret whilst being chased by a shadowy organisation, determined, at all costs, to prevent the secret being uncovered and made public.

This is a story reliant on visual clues, so it was intriguing to see how a theatre production would bring the story alive on the stage.

Nigel Harman leaves his Eastenders’ “Dennis Rickman” persona behind as the sometimes baffled art historian Robert Langdon. Hannah Rose Caton, as cryptologist Sophie Neveu, is spirited in her UK stage debut, becoming his partner in adventure, rather than simply a sidekick. Danny John Jules gives no hint of the Red Dwarf “Cat” that defined his earlier career, playing Teabing, the enigmatic expert.

The three principals lead the action at a breathless pace, ably supported by the rest of the cast, who take on multiple roles to bring us a larger number of diverse characters and a ‘chorus’ choreographed by movement director Tom Jackson Greaves.

Perhaps the real star of the show is the production itself. A deceptively simple set provides an effective backdrop to clever projections. These deliver the clues that drive the plot and you won’t need your opera glasses to read them, and a well-written musical score contributes to create an almost film-like experience.

The story’s twists and turns are brought to a satisfying conclusion although the secret-within-a-secret ending felt a little rushed. Nevertheless, this reviewer found it an entertaining diversion and if you are a fan of the book or the film, you will not be disappointed.

Everybody’s Talking About Jamie Review

New Victoria Theatre Woking – until 19th March 2022

Reviewed by Emma Barnes and Gill Gardiner

5*****

Based on the real story of Jamie Campbell,   Everybody’s Talking About Jamie is a musical portrayal of a gay teenager who knew from a young age that he wanted to be a drag queen. 

The story covers all of the trials and tribulations that sadly you might expect both in school and the wider society,  it is skillfully portrayed with a perfectly balanced mixture of comedy and sensitivity. Jamie’s desire to wear a dress for the school prom explores all the prejudices that a teenager could expect at the time not just from other pupils but also parents and staff.  

The legendary Layton Williams is charismatic and lovable as Jamie.  His ability to sing, dance in killer heels and portray the powerful emotions of a teenage boy seeking acceptance from his father is highly commendable.   His performance takes us on a rollercoaster ranging from magnificent high energy sequences in “ the wall in my head “ to emotionally charged scenes where his character is left totally overwhelmed. 

Amy Ellen Richardson’s wonderful performance of “He’s My Boy” captures the intense emotional spectrum of motherly love for her son, a beautiful moment which had many audience members reaching for a tissue.  Later came the thought provoking “If I Met Myself Again” song which explores past mistakes and the realisation that memories however painful cannot be regrettable as they resulted in a much loved son. This was accompanied by two exceptional dancers who’s physical interpretation of the inner turmoil was absolutely on point. 

Shane Richie oozed fabulousness as Hugo/Loco Chanelle the aging drag queen and mentor to Jamie. He helps Jamie on his journey to find his inner drag queen character.   It was a pleasure to hear Shane sing. 

Additional notable performances were given by Sharan Phull as Pritti, Lara Denning as Miss Hedge and Sasha Latoya as Ray. This was an exceptional cast which had the whole audience applauding leading to a well deserved prolonged standing ovation at the end.

This production is a feel good modern musical theatre at its very best, including stand out vocal solos, heart warming storylines and toe tapping singalongs that you are guaranteed to be humming for days. 

SIX REVIEW  

FESTIVAL THEATRE, EDINBURGH – UNTIL MARCH 26th 

 REVIEWED BY RACHEL FARRIER  

5*****

Six began life as a student show at the Edinburgh Fringe in 2017, and returns to the city this week for a 10 day run at the Festival Theatre, having conquered Broadway and the West End in between.  

And what a show it is – telling the stories of Henry VIII’s six wives,  if I could give it six stars (one for each of the cast of Queens) then I would. This is a sassy, exuberant, incredibly clever, sexy, witty, funny and sometimes unexpectedly poignant musical, with brilliant tunes that match each character and story perfectly. The underlying feminist battle cry of women who are ‘just in some rhyme’ trying to reclaim their own histories (or HERstories, as they point out) is never heavy but nevertheless by the culmination of the show, the audience has learned a lot about the background and (often horrific) experiences of the Queens, before they reached their demises (‘divorced, beheaded, survived..’). 

As they sing towards the end of the show, many of the stories contain what we would now recognise as trauma and abuse, and it is incredibly skilful writing that this is acknowledged and sung about, whilst maintaining a (dark) sense of humour that keeps the show moving.  

All six of the actors were outstanding in their own way – Chloe Hart as Katherine of Aragon is the first Queen to tell her story and immediately captivated the audience, although we didn’t need much encouragement – clearly a lot of the audience were already familiar with the show and there was clapping and cheering in anticipation even before the curtain went up. All six possessed stunning voices and rightly all received prolonged applause after each of their ‘turns’. 

Another brilliant aspect of the show is that the all-women band are also on stage throughout the show and are incorporated throughout. The costumes themselves deserve a mention in their own right – a dazzling cross between the styles of the tudor period and maybe the Spice Girls (showing my age here..), they marry perfectly with the whole tone of the show. My personal favourite song ‘Haus of Holbein‘ – which manages to be clever, informative and also hilarious – is brilliantly augmented by the addition of luminous accessories which brings in a raucous clubbing vibe.  

Although I had imagined the demographic of the audience might be mostly young women and perhaps their mums, there was actually a very mixed crowd present last night and the standing ovation at the end demonstrated that it had been enjoyed by one and all.  

If you can possibly get tickets for this show, GO, and take your friends – it is an absolute treat.  

Hackney Empire announce 2022 Christmas panto Mother Goose

Hackney Empire presents
MOTHER GOOSE

●     HACKNEY EMPIRE TODAY ANNOUNCE THEIR PANTOMIME FOR CHRISTMAS 2022: MOTHER GOOSE

●   IN ITS 120TH BIRTHDAY YEAR, HACKNEY EMPIRE STAGE THIS HISTORIC PANTOMIME, ITSELF FIRST PERFORMED 120 YEARS AGO

●   CLIVE ROWE WILL DIRECT AND STAR AS MOTHER GOOSE IN HIS 15TH PANTOMIME AT HACKNEY EMPIRE

●  MOTHER GOOSE  WILL RUN FROM 19TH NOVEMBER – 31ST DECEMBER, WITH TICKETS ON SALE FROM MIDDAY ON 22ND MARCH WWW.HACKNEYEMPIRE.CO.UK

Hackney Empire today announces their Christmas 2022 pantomime, Mother Goose, which will open on 19th November and run until 31st December, with the press performance at 7pm on 1st December. Tickets go on sale to the public from midday on 22nd March at www.hackneyempire.co.uk. Priority booking for Friends and Supporters opens on 16th March at noon. To find out how to become a Friend, please visit www.hackneyempire.co.uk/membership-support/membership.

In what will be his 15th pantomime at Hackney Empire, Olivier award-winning panto royalty Clive Rowe will direct and star as the Dame, Mother Goose, with full cast and creative team to be announced. The pantomime Mother Goose was first created for another Hackney Empire legend, Music Hall comedian Dan Leno, who first performed the show in 1902. 120 years on, Hackney are proud to present the mother of all pantomimes in their 120th birthday year.

What would you do if you found a magical goose who lays golden eggs?! That’s exactly what’s in store for Mother Goose, and she soon discovered that this priceless talent isn’t all it’s cracked up to be! Packed full of all your favourite pantomime ingredients, this reimagining of the classic rags-to-riches tale is the perfect festive treat. Expect larger than life characters, gloriously outrageous costumes, incredible live music, uncontrollable laughter and loads of audience participation… oh yes, there definitely is..!

Clive Rowe said: “I’m incredibly proud, in Hackney Empire’s 120th birthday year, to be directing and playing Mother Goose, which was first created for music hall legend Dan Leno 120 years ago. Big shoes to fill but I will do my very best to make the walls shake with the love and laughter we’ve come to expect from Hackney’s pantomime.”

The 2022 festive season will burst into life with the 23rd Hackney Empire pantomime, providing joy for all the family, and in some cases, a vital introduction to the magic of theatre.

The Play That Goes Wrong announces (brave) new touring cast

THE PLAY THAT GOES WRONG ANNOUNCES [BRAVE] NEW TOURING CAST 
CRASHING INTO THEATRES NATIONWIDE FROM 20 APRIL 

The Play That Goes WrongMischief’s Olivier Award-winning box office hit that continues to entertain audiences on a global scale, today announces casting for its 2022 UK Tour. The cast includes new and returning performers: Kazeem Tosin Amore as Robert, Colin Burnicle as Chris, Damien James as Dennis, Beth Lilly as Annie, Edi De Melo as Max, Aisha Numah as Sandra, Gabriel Paul as Trevor and Steven Rostance as Jonathan, with understudies Harry BoydMary McGurkClare Noy and Will Taylor.

Embarking on its fifth national tour, the production will open at Theatre Royal Bath on 20 April before visiting Mold, Southend, Leicester, Birmingham, Liverpool, Manchester, Newcastle, Cardiff, Plymouth, Bristol, Sheffield, Hull, Milton Keynes, Dartford and Guildford, until 13 August 2022.

Awarded the 2014 WhatsOnStage Award for Best New Comedy, the 2015 Olivier Award for Best New Comedy and a Tony Award for the Broadway transfer, The Play That Goes Wrong is now booking into its ninth year in the West End and continues to delight audiences around the world, also currently running off Broadway and in Chicago. The show’s success is a testament to the hard work and determination of a group of drama school graduates who became friends, set up a company under the name ‘Mischief’ and created an extraordinary body of work. Now celebrating 10 years since its first performance at The Old Red Lion fringe venue, with only four paying customers, The Play That Goes Wrong shows no signs of slowing down. Since then, it has played to an audience of over two million in over 35 countries and on every continent, except for Antarctica, which it has avoided for fear of a chilly reception. 

The play features the (fictional) Cornley Drama Society who are putting on a 1920s murder mystery, but as the title suggests, everything that can go wrong… does! As the accident prone thesps battle against all the odds to reach their final curtain call, hilarious results ensue!

Mischief’s other West End successes include Magic Goes Wrong, Groan Ups, Peter Pan Goes Wrong, Mischief Movie Night and A Comedy About A Bank Robbery. Magic Goes Wrong is also currently touring the UK until 29 May 2022. The second series of their award-winning television comedy, The Goes Wrong Show, launched on BBC One in September 2021. The five-part series was broadcast weekly and is currently available on BBC iPlayer. The company is owned and controlled by its original members and is led by a creative group and its directors Henry Lewis and Jonathan Sayer. 

The Play That Goes Wrong is co-written by Mischief company members Henry Lewis, Jonathan Sayer and Henry Shields. The tour is directed by Sean Turner, originally directed by Mark Bell, with set designs by Nigel Hook, costumes by Roberto Surace, lighting by Ric Mountjoy, sound design by Andy Johnson and resident director Amy MarchantThe Play That Goes Wrong is produced by Kenny Wax Ltd and Stage Presence Ltd. 

THE WITCHES OF EASTWICK IN CONCERT AT SONDHEIM THEATRE STARRING GILES TERERA MBE

THE WITCHES OF EASTWICK

IN CONCERT

AT SONDHEIM THEATRE

FOR ONE NIGHT ONLY

ON MONDAY 20 JUNE 2022

STARRING GILES TERERA MBE

Producer Jack Maple, by arrangement with Cameron Mackintosh Ltd, is delighted to announce a special one-off concert of THE WITCHES OF EASTWICK at the Sondheim Theatre on Monday 20 June 2022. THE WITCHES OF EASTWICK has a book and lyrics by John Dempsey and music by Dana P. Rowe, based on the novel by John Updike and the Warner Brothers motion picture. Maria Friedman will direct with musical staging by Stephen Mear. Olivier Award-winning actor Giles Terera will star as Darryl Van Horne. This will be the first time the musical has been seen in London since it originally played at the Theatre Royal Drury Lane in 2000, transferring to the Prince of Wales Theatre in 2001. Tickets are on sale from 10am on Thursday 17 March.

Further all-star casting is to be announced.

The Witches of Eastwick tells the tale of the people of the little town of Eastwick. It is a town where everyone knows everything about everyone else, and it is presided over by the indomitable Felicia Gabriel. Bored with their small town lives, three women – Alexandra (Alex), Sukie, and Jane–share a desire for “all manner of man in one man” to provide excitement and variety. That man arrives, literally in a flash, in the devil-like form of Darryl Van Horne. Darryl seduces the women and teaches them powers, which they never knew they had. 

Cameron Mackintosh said “I’m really thrilled that Jack Maple is conjuring up the wickedly funny WITCHES OF EASTWICK again, for one night only in concert with a glorious cast at the Sondheim Theatre.  It has always been one of my favourite scores, which I’m very much looking forward to hearing in its full splendour.”

Maria Friedman said “I’m so incredibly excited to be revisiting Eastwick after all these years. To be reunited with the fantastic Stephen Mear and to have the opportunity to bring this beloved musical back to London, and at the simply stunning Sondheim Theatre, for one night only is an absolute thrill and I can’t wait to get started.” 

Giles Terera MBE is an award-winning actor, musician and writer. He is best known for originating the role of Aaron Burr in the London production of the award-winning musical Hamilton, for which he won the 2018 Olivier Award for Best Actor in a Musical. Giles’s other work on stage includes RosmersholmThe TempestAvenue QThe Book of Mormon125th StreetRent (West End); Ma Rainey’s Black BottomHamletDeath and the King’s HorsemanThe Hour We Knew Nothing of Each OtherTroilus and CressidaCandideHonk! (National Theatre); The Merchant of Venice (Shakespeare’s Globe/international tour); The Resistible Rise of Arturo Ui (Donmar Warehouse); Pure Imagination – The Songs of Lesley Bricusse (St. James’s); King John (Shakespeare’s Globe/UK tour);  The Ratpack (West End/international tour); Jailhouse Rock (Theatre Royal Plymouth/West End); The Tempest (RSC) and Generations of the Dead (Young Vic). As a writer, his theatre work includes The Meaning of Zong (Bristol Old Vic), The Ballad of Soho Jones (St. James’) and Black Matter (Crazy Coqs). Giles was appointed a Member of the Order of the British Empire (MBE) in the 2020 New Year Honours for services to theatre.

The winner of three Olivier Awards and an Evening Standard Award, Maria Friedman is one of Britain’s most successful and acclaimed Musical Theatre actresses. Maria starred in the original West End production of The Witches of Eastwick as Sukie alongside Lucie Arnaz as Alex and Joanna Riding as Jane. Her many other West End acting credits include PassionRagtimeMerrily We Roll Along, Blues in the Night, ChicagoThe Woman in White and, most recently, she played Golde in the Olivier Award-winning Trevor Nunn production of Fiddler on the Roof at the Playhouse Theatre. Maria won over a whole new audience when she joined the cast of long-running soap EastEnders, playing Elaine Peacock.  In 2013, Maria made her directorial debut at the Menier Chocolate Factory with a production of Stephen Sondheim’s musical Merrily We Roll Along.  After a series of 5-star reviews, the Critics’ Circle Award for Best Musical and a sell-out extended run, it transferred to the West End and played Boston.  In 2014, it won the Olivier for Best Musical Revival. It was recently announced that Maria will stage Old Friends, a celebration of the work of Stephen Sondheim at the Sondheim Theatre, with Matthew Bourne in May, as well as an Off-Broadway production of Merrily We Roll Along starring Daniel Radcliffe as part of New York Theatre Workshop’s 2022/23 season.

The multi award-winning Stephen Mear, is one of the world’s most celebrated choreographers, with two Olivier Awards, an LA Drama Critics Circle Award, and a Helpmann Award. His theatre work includes Mary Poppins with co-choreographer Matthew Bourne (Prince Edward Theatre 2004 & 2019); Funny Girl and Guys and Dolls, as director/choreographer (Marigny Theatre); Guys and Dolls Concert, as director/choreographer (Royal Albert Hall); Chess (ENO); Sunset Boulevard (ENO and Broadway); On the Town (ENO and Théâtre du Châtelet); 42nd Street as director/choreographer (Théâtre du Châtelet); Singin’ In The Rain (Grand Palais);  City of AngelsThe Vote and The Resistible Rise of Arturo Ui (Donmar); White Christmas (Dominion Theatre and Curve, Leicester);  Mack and MabelThe Pajama GameShe Loves Me as director/choreographer, Amadeus, The Music Man, Funny Girl, How to Succeed In Business, Putting it Together and The Grapes of Wrath (Chichester Festival Theatre);  Die Fledermaus (The Metropolitan Opera, New York)and The Little Mermaid (Broadway). Stephen will be choreographing Old Friends at the Sondheim Theatre this May.

John Dempsey wrote both the book and lyrics for Zombie Prom (Off Broadway & Germany), The Fix directed by Sam Mendes at the Donmar Warehouse (Olivier Award & Helen Hayes Award nominations) and lyrics for The Reluctant Dragon, A Country Christmas Carol, and the Ringling Bros. Barnum & Bailey Circus. Plays include; One Miracle in a Lifetime (Ohio Arts Council Award), The World Today and The Greater Goode.

Dana P. Rowe wrote the music for Zombie Prom (Off Broadway & Germany) and The Fix, directed by Sam Mendes at the Donmar Warehouse (Olivier Award & Helen Hayes Award nominations). He also  prepared the score for The Ballad of Bonnie & Clyde which premiered at the 2005 New York Musical Theater Festival as a featured production.

Website: www.sondheimtheatre.co.uk

Twitter: @jackmapleprods @DMTWestEnd

LISTINGS INFORMATION

Monday 20 June, 7pm

Sondheim Theatre

51 Shaftesbury Avenue

London

W1D 6BA

Tickets: from £35

Box office: 0344 482 5151*

*Calls to Delfont Mackintosh Theatres: 03 numbers cost no more than a national rate call to an 01 or 02 number