WALES MILLENNIUM CENTRE & WILTSHIRE CREATIVES’ THE MIRROR CRACK’D TO BE STAGED AT INDIA’S LARGEST PERFORMING ARTS CENTRE

WALES MILLENNIUM CENTRE & WILTSHIRE CREATIVES’ THE MIRROR CRACK’D TO BE STAGED AT INDIA’S LARGEST PERFORMING ARTS CENTRE

A new production of Wales Millennium Centre and Wiltshire Creative’s The Mirror Crack’d will be performed at India’s National Centre for the Performing Arts in in Mumbai, from 30 January to 9 February 2020.

The original stage production of Agatha Christie’s novel The Mirror Crack’d from Side to Side, adapted for the stage by Rachel Wagstaff and directed by Melly Still, was seen by more than 28,000 people Salisbury, Dublin, Cambridge and Cardiff February-April 2019.

The production will be reimagined for Indian audiences by writer Ayeesha Menon, with Melly Still returning as its director. It marks Wales Millennium Centre’s debut as a producer in Asia.

Announcing the new production, Mathew Milsom, Managing Director of Wales Millennium Centre, said: “We aim to make innovative and entertaining work that showcases Wales to the world, and which fires the imagination of the audience. Our productions have already toured to Africa, America and Australia and I’m thrilled that our next stop is Asia, working in collaboration with the NCPA to give this classic British thriller an exciting and original Indian twist.”

Visionary and Chairman of NCPA, Mr Khushroo N. Suntook said: The NCPA is delighted to be producing this celebrated production of The Mirror Crack’d, but with an utterly original Indian flavour. This new Indian interpretation is a great example of our ambition for NCPA productions: creating innovative content in collaboration with the very best artists here in India as well as on the international scene. Our audiences can look forward to a terrific evening’s entertainment in what promises to be a highlight of the Mumbai theatre calendar in 2020.”

Gareth Machin, Artistic Director of Wiltshire Creative, said: “We are delighted that our production of this Agatha Christie classic will be enjoyed by audiences in Mumbai and hope they will be enthralled by its clever plot twists as much as UK audiences have been.”    

Casting Announced for 200th Anniversary Show, Shackleton & His Stowaway

Park Theatre logo

Stolen Elephant Theatre in association with Park Theatre present

SHACKLETON AND HIS STOWAWAY

By Andy Dickinson

8th January – 1st February | Park Theatre

COMMEMORATING THE 200TH ANNIVERSARY OF THE DISCOVERY OF THE ANTARTIC ON 30TH JANUARY 1820

Following two sell-out runs at Edinburgh Festival Fringe in 2018 and at London’s Cervantes Theatre, Shackleton and his Stowaway opens the Park90 2020 season. The run will commemorate the 200th anniversary of the discovery of the Antarctic, with the anniversary date falling on 30th January 2020. This thrilling two-hander is based on historical facts, exploring a fictionalised relationship between Ernest Shackleton and the young stowaway who boarded Endurance. The production runs from 8th January – 1st February 2020.

Shackleton and his Stowaway was written by Andy Dickinson, with Simone Coxall directing. Richard Ede will be playing the role of Shackleton, and Elliott Ross will be playing the role of The Stowaway. The production features set and costume design by Kaajel Patel, lighting design by Pablo Fernandez Baz and projection design by Enrique Munoz.

Richard Ede plays the eponymous Ernest Shackleton. His theatre work includes: The 39 Steps (West End and UK Tour), Little History of the World (Watermill Theatre), It’s a Wonderful Life (Farnham Maltings), Arsenic and Old Lace (Nottingham Theatre Royal),Normal (Styx Theatre) and The Wife of Bath (Rude Mechanical Theatre Company). His television includes:Lord Lucan: My Husband The Truth (ITV1), Cuckoo Season 5 (BBC3/Netflix), Modern Manners (BBC1) and can also be regularly seen as the face ofThatcher’s Cider.

Elliott Ross plays the curious Stowaway. His theatre credits include: Admissions (West End & Tour), Queen Anne, Love for Love (RSC), A Midsummer Night’s DreamFrankenstein (US Tour), Sense & Sensibility (Cape Fear Regional Theatre) and Albee Vector the Sound Collector (Arcola). His film credits include: D-Day: First Hand (BBC Short), Room Tone (White Lodge Productions) and Brief Intermission (Third Eye Productions). 

Andy Dickinson is a writer, producer, and translator.  Currently, he is translating Enrique Jardiel Poncela’s Eloise is Under an Almond Tree. He produced Olivier Award winning playwrights Jack Shepherd’s In Lambeth (Southwark Playhouse), and Grae Cleugh’s Scottish Widows, which he also directed.

Simone Coxall: works as a Director and Movement Specialist in the UK, USA and Australia. Her director credits include The Kids Are Alright (Encounter Theatre, The Place & The Albany), Orlando: The Queer Element (Clay and Diamonds, National Trust). As an Associate Director at Fourth Monkey, she has directed several productions including The Tempest and Henry V. She also works as a Globe Practise practitioner at Shakespeare’s Globe.

Kaajel Patel is a London-based visual artist, set designer, dancer & actor, with her previous work shown across different theatres & community spaces around London such as Royal Court Theatre, The Vaults, Royal Central School of Speech & Drama, Africa Centre and Cervantes Theatre.

Pablo Fernandez Baz studied film and photography before graduating as a lighting designer at CSSD. Previous credits include: Hotel Medea (Hayward Gallery London & International tour), The Last Days of Lime House (Site Specific London), Sundowning (Tristan Bates), Jukai (BET), The Marked (UK Tour), Noodles (UK Tour).

Enrique Munoz is a lecturer in Visual Productions at Rose Bruford College and a freelance video designer and director. He has worked at the Fringe as an actor, director and lighting designer/technician, and worked at the Royal Opera House in their Digital Development and Technology Dept. 

www.parktheatre.co.uk

Box office: 020 7870 6876*

Samantha Barks and Camilla Kerslake amongst first guest stars announced for The Barricade Boys Christmas Cabaret at The Other Palace

THE BARRICADE BOYS

Announce the First Line-Up of Guest Stars

Joining Their Acclaimed

CHRISTMAS CABARET AT THE OTHER PALACE

Samantha Barks, Camilla Kerslake, Alice Fearn, Nadim Naaman & Kieran Brown Confirmed with More Star Names to Follow

It’s (almost) the most wonderful time of the year!  Back by public demand, The Barricade Boys today announce the first confirmed line-up of special guest stars who will be joining them during their Christmas residency from 10-28 December at The Other Palace in London’s West End.

Samantha Barks will guest star on 17 December, Camilla Kerslake on 16 December, Alice Fearn on 23 December, Nadim Naaman on 27 December and Kieran Brown on 28 December matinee.  More star names will be announced shortly.

Samantha Barks rose to fame after coming in third in the BBC series I’d Do Anything in 2008. In 2012, she starred alongside Jonathan Bailey in the Disney Channel series Groove High and made her film debut as Éponine in the film version of the musical Les Misérables, going on to win the Empire Award for Best Female Newcomer.  She has since starred in the UK Tour of Oliver!, Josie Rourke’s production of City of Angels and most recently made her Broadway debut originating the role of Vivian in the stage musical Pretty Woman which played for a year at the Nederlander Theatre.

Camilla Kerslake is a classical crossover soprano who has toured with Andrea Bocelli, Il Divo and Russell Watson.  After becoming the first artist to sign to Gary Barlow’s record label Future Records, she released her debut album Camilla Kerslake in 2009, and was subsequently nominated for a Classical Brit Award.  She has played Cosette in Les Misérables, opposite Samantha Barks and Nick Jonas. 

Alice Fearn started her career in the Woman In White before joining the cast of Les Misérables, both in the West End. Credits since include Princess Aurora in Awaking Beauty (Stephen Joseph Theatre, Scarborough written and directed by Alan Ayckbourn), Annie Get Your Gun (Young Vic), Rapunzel in Into The Woods (Regents Park Open Air Theatre), Renee in Dirty Rotten Scoundrels and Nancy in Oliver! at the Watermill Theatre, Newbury. Most recently, Alice starred as Elphaba in the West End production of Wicked.

Nadim Naaman’s credits include Gibran in Broken Wings (Theatre Royal Haymarket), Raoul in The Phantom of the Opera (Her Majesty’s Theatre); Charles Clarke in Titanic (Southwark Playhouse); Rolf in The Sound Of Music (London Palladium).

Kieran Brown has recently appeared in the 2019 Barricade Boys UK Tour.  His West End theatre credits include The Phantom of the Opera (Her Majesty’s Theatre), Wicked (Apollo Victoria Theatre) and Love Never Dies (Adelphi Theatre) and he appeared in The Les Misérables 25th Anniversary Concert at the O2 Arena.

Following a critically acclaimed season in 2017, The Barricade Boys, will return to London for three weeks only, from Tuesday 10 to Saturday 28 December. 

Join The Barricade Boys around the Christmas tree, escape the winter chill and enjoy the very best of festive cheer. Featuring fabulous harmonies, incredible vocals, dashing good looks and stacks of charm, The Barricade Boys, showcase the UK’s finest male voices from the world’s longest running musical – Les Misérables.  After sell-out performances in London, a season on Broadway and a major 2019 UK Tour, The Barricade Boys have rightfully secured their place as the world’s leading musical theatre super group.

This glittering Christmas Cabaret will be packed with a stocking full of family favourites, including classics from ‘White Christmas’ to ‘Winter Wonderland’, ‘Let it Snow’ and ‘Santa Claus is Coming to Town’.  And Christmas wouldn’t be Christmas without The Barricade Boys’ favourite crackers featuring songs from the musicals as well as some of the best pop, rock and swing numbers of all time.

The cast of the Christmas Cabaret are Simon Schofield (title role in Oliver! London Palladium, Joseph and The Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat, The Sound of Music, Les Misérables), Dougie Carter (Les Misérables, Sunset Boulevard, La Cage aux Folles), Lee Honey Jones ((Les Misérables, The Book of Mormon, Mamma Mia!, Whistle Down The Wind) and George Tebbutt (Les Misérables, Chitty Chitty Bang Bang). 

The Barricade Boys have played nearly every major role in musical theatre from The Phantom of The Opera, Wicked and Billy Elliot to Jersey Boys, The Sound Of Music and of course Les Misérables.

The Barricade Boys were devised and created in 2015 by Scott Garnham and Simon Schofield.

Listings Information:

★★★★★ “These guys are fantastic… DON’T miss this show!” – Alfie Boe

★★★★★ “Do you hear the people sing? Yes! With dashing good looks, incredible voices and outstanding musical magic!” – Elaine Paige, BBC Radio 2

THE BARRICADE BOYS CHRISTMAS CABARET

The Other Palace, 12 Palace St, London SW1E 5JA

To Book Tickets: www.TheOtherPalace.co.uk/BarricadeBoys

Box Office: 0207 087 7900

Tuesday 10 December – Saturday 28 December

Monday-Saturday at 20:00      

Saturday matinees on 14, 21 and 28 December at 14:00

Thursday matinee on 19 December at 14:00 and Tuesday matinee on 24 December at 14:00 

The Lovely Bones Review

Yvonne Arnaud Theatre, Guildford – until 23 November 2019

Reviewed by Antonia Hebbert

4****

Confession: I wasn’t 100 per cent looking forward to seeing this play about a 14-year-old girl who is gruesomely murdered, and then watches and comments as her family and friends struggle with their own lives afterwards. She knows and we know that the murderer lives next door, but she can only watch as the police fail to find the proof, the parents’ marriage is torn apart, and teenagers suffer – but then grow up, which she never can.

Amazingly, it’s enthralling. Or perhaps not completely amazingly, as it’s based on Alice Sebold’s hugely successul novel The Lovely Bones. It has been adapted for the theatre by Bryony Lavery, and the director is Melly Still. The stage is almost bare, except for a square marked out in chalk, but the entire backdrop is a mirror, so that all the action is reflected and seen from a different angle. This is an ingenious way of showing people overlapping in the different dimensions of life and afterlife, and to add to the layering, spotlit actors appear through the reflected layer. Linking the actual and the reflected is a spooky row of crooked, spiky corn plants, reminding us of the cornfield in which the murder took place. In this kind of space the acting doesn’t have to be completely literal, and at moments it feels more like a dance piece, performed with split-second precision.

Charlotte Beaumount is bright and engaging as the ever-young murdered Susie, Fanta Barrie is her sister Lindsey, and the tormented parents are played by Jack Sandle and Catrin Aaron. Nicholas Khan is a convincingly creepy killer Harvey, and Lynda Rooke is fun as a glamorous gran. Other members of the cast provide a fast-moving supporting crowd of friends, family, police and occasionally dogs. As with the book, you don’t exactly get a happy ending, but you do get a sense of renewal and rebuilding – the ‘lovely bones’ are a metaphor for the new strength that the family develops.

Circus 1903 Review

The Lowry, Salford – until Sunday 24 November 2019

Reviewed by Angharad Crabtree

4****

Circus 1903 gives a unique perspective of how it would have felt to watch an American circus over 100 years ago. This was done with the help of an amazing amalgamation of set, costumes, lighting, music and the raw talent of the performers. From the very beginning, the set and costumes made the audience feel fully immersed in the early 20th century, with the simplicity of the circus props somewhat juxtaposing the incredible acts that are being displayed. In addition, the clever use of dramatic lighting and music heightened the exciting anticipation of the audience. Both were used to cleverly reach a crescendo at just the appropriate times, which gave the audience direction in their applause and allowed the show to flow just as it would have in the real environment.

Despite the fantastic theatrical tools in play, the main treasure of this performance was the artists themselves. The ringmaster (David Williamson) seamlessly integrated humour into his navigation of the play, becoming part of the entertainment himself and providing extra delight with audience interaction. The most moving performance however, had to be the Flying Fredonis (Daria Shelest and Vadym Pankevych), who not only displayed immense talent and coordination, but paired their enchanting routine with beautiful choreography and a musical accompaniment to match. Similar demonstrations of incredible acrobatic skill were that of Natalia Leontieva (a hula hooping phenomenon), Les Incredibles (gravity-defying acrobat pair), The Remarkable Risleys (Fearless foot jugglers), Rokardy Rodriguez (strong man extraordinaire), the Sensational Sozonov (a pirouetting phenomenon) and The Daring Desafios (the energetic stuntmen).

In addition, it was great to see some more traditional circus acts had not been forgotten, with the performances from Senayet Asefa Amare (an astonishing contortionist), Francois Borie (an incredibly high speed juggler) and last but not least, the amazing elephant puppeteers, who somehow managed to give the elephants personalities and provoke both empathy and adoration from the audience. This combination of wonders made an all-round excellent production for all the family to enjoy.

Northern Ballet – Cinderella Review

Theatre Royal, Nottingham – until 23 November 2019 then touring until 6th June 2020

Reviewed by Boo Wakefield

3***

In its 50th anniversary year, the Northern Ballet are touring with a new version of Cinderella. Originally choreographed by David Nixon in 2013 and a score composed by Philip Feeney, this interpretation is set in Imperial Russia and differs from the classic Cinderella story we all know.

It starts with a long scene during which a young Cinderella is celebrating her birthday with a picnic in the countryside. The young Prince is also there and although both shy, they are attracted to each other. Her father gives her a shawl which her two stepsisters then take from her. Tragically, her father is killed trying to retrieve it and her stepmother blames Cinderella even though her own daughters are mainly to blame.

The family move to Moscow and Cinderella’s stepmother no longer sees as a daughter and confines her to the kitchen a maid. The story continues with an older Cinderella visiting the local market, a welcomed relief from the drudgery of work in the kitchen as it is full of entertainers and a magician. Cinderella helps the magician when one of his tricks fails. The Prince also happens to be at the market but does not recognise the bedraggled maid as the girl he danced with at her party. On returning home, her stepmother reminds her again of her place in the house and a tearful Cinderella takes refuge by visiting the Crustal Lake to skate. The Prince happens to be there too along with the magician, and all are impressed by Cinderella’s ice dancing.

The ballroom scene is very long, perhaps too long, although the group dancing is superb but it lacks the urgency the story needs when the clock strikes 12. Indeed, you are hardly aware this has happened, and it is followed by a curious almost pantomime chase across the stage with a bizarre backdrop with “Cinders’ in red lights which did nothing but leave you confused. It carries on on this strange note with the Prince not recognising Cinderella when he comes to the house the next day with the shoe for the ladies of the house to try on. Distraught, she goes to the Crystal Lake where the Prince, filled with remorse at his behaviour, finally declares his love.

The dancing from all the cast was breath taking and faultless, but credit must go to Antoinette Brooks-Daw as Cinderella whose performance was flawless. Minju Kang was superb as the wicked stepmother with her staccato dance steps impressing her evil character with every move. Mlindi Kulashe was also very impressive in his joint roles of Cinderella’s father and then the magician which was slightly confusing.

Overall this a very entertaining ballet, beautifully danced but was let down by some of the scenery looking as if was borrowed from a pantomime.

Casting announced for Peter Nichols: A Celebration

The British Library and Trafalgar Theatre Productions

Present

PETER NICHOLS: A CELEBRATION

TRAFALGAR STUDIOS

27 NOVEMBER, 3.00PM

STARRING

ROGER ALLAM, NIGEL LINDSAY,

LAYO-CHRISTINA AKINLUDE, LAURENCE BELCHER, JAMES HARKNESS, FAITH OMOLE,

ELLIOTT ROSS & GRACE COURTNEY

It’s been announced today that the Game of Thrones and Endeavour actor Roger Allam will lead a host of star names in a tribute show to celebrate one of the greatest playwrights of our generation – Peter Nichols: A Celebration will take place at Trafalgar Studios on Wednesday 27th November.

Roger Allam will be joined by an incredible line-up of actors from stage and screen, including Nigel Lindsay (Victoria), Layo-Christina Akinlude (The End Of The F***ing World), Laurence Belcher (X-Men: First Class), James Harkness (Star Wars – Rogue One), Faith Omole (Endeavour), Elliott Ross (Admissions) and Grace Courtney (Holby City).

They and others, under the direction of Peter Nichols‘ grandson George Nichols, will perform a series of extracts from his much loved television and stage plays including PromenadeThe National HealthForget-Me-Not-Lane and Poppy, as well as passages from his personal diaries and rare unproduced plays, kindly provided by The British Library.

George Nichols said: “I’m so proud to be working with this wonderful group of actors who are all helping us to celebrate my Grandfathers work. Its going to be a very special and emotional event.

All tickets are priced at £5 and are available to purchase from ATG Tickets and London Theatre Tickets.

With thanks to The British Library Collections Trust for supporting this event. The full  Archive and Oral History of Peter Nichols is accessible at The British Library for the public to view.

Peter Richard Nichols CBE, playwright, born 31 July 1927; died 7 September 2019, aged 92.

Peter Nichols: A Celebration

Wednesday 27th November at 3pm

Trafalgar Studios 1

Box Office: 0844 871 7632

https://www.atgtickets.com/venues/trafalgar-studios/

Magnificent cast announced for Hansel and Gretel | Chiswick Playhouse, 4 December 2019 – 4 January 2020

Cast announced for Hansel and Gretel
Chiswick Playhouse, 2 Bath Road, London W4 1LW
Wednesday 4thDecember 2019 – Saturday 4th January 2020

The magnificent cast has been announced for Chiswick Playhouse’s enchanting re-imagining of Hansel and Gretel. Leading the way into the magical forest is Pippa Conway (Oh, What A Lovely War!, Gulbenkian Theatre; Dracula, The Ballroom; Mary and Joseph, Southwark Playhouse) as Gretel alongside Joshua Oakes-Rogers (The Dead Room, BBC Four; Body and Sold, Park Theatre; Vespertilio, VAULT Festival) as Hansel.

Also joining the cast are Serena Flynn (Baubo: Goddess of Filth, Soho Theatre; Prune; Edinburgh Fringe) as Stepmother and Witch and Tomi Ogbaro (A Midsummer Night’s Dream, Regent’s Park Open Air Theatre; Sweet Charity, Watermill Theatre; Seagulls, Octagon Theatre) as Father and Tony The Cockroach.

With a dazzling original soundtrack by composer Leon Parris (Bananaman The Musical, Enid Blyton’s The Famous Five, Stig of the Dump), this musical extravaganza will take audiences on an exciting adventure away from the realm of computer games and social media to a charming forest with a tap-dancing cockroach, lollipops and a candycane house. As Hansel and Gretel become lost among the silver trees, they find themselves in the snare of a witch with penchant for single-use plastic and a hankering for the only remaining sustainable food source: children.

Director Lucy Jane Atkinson comments, It’s a joy to work with such a multi-talented and playful cast of actors and singers to bring this new exciting piece to life. We are having a fantastic time in the rehearsal room and are hopefully creating something very special!

FINAL CASTING ANNOUNCED FOR TOM STOPPARD’S LEOPOLDSTADT

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FINAL CASTING ANNOUNCED FOR THE WORLD PREMIERE OF

L E O P O L D S T A D T

 A NEW PLAY BY TOM STOPPARD, DIRECTED BY PATRICK MARBER

Sonia Friedman Productions today (20 November 2019) announces final casting for the world premiere of Tom Stoppard’s Leopoldstadt to be directed by Patrick Marber.

Now booking to 13 June 2020, Leopoldstadt begins previews at Wyndham’s Theatre on 25 January 2020 with opening night on 12 February 2020. 

Faye Castelow, Felicity Davidson, Avye Leventis and Sadie Shimmin join the previously announced adult cast – Sebastian Armesto, Jenna Augen, Rhys Bailey, Joe Coen, Mark Edel-Hunt, Clara Francis, Ilan Galkoff,Caroline Gruber, Sam Hoare, Natalie Law, Noof McEwanDorothea Myer-BennettJake NeadsAaron NeilAlexander NewlandYasmin PaigeAdrian ScarboroughGriffin StevensEd Stoppard, Luke Thallon, Eleanor Wyld and Alexis Zegerman.

Jarlan Bogolubov, Ramsay Robertson and Joshua Schneider join the previouslyannounced children’s cast – Toby Cohen, Zachary CohenOlivia Festinger, Tamar Laniado, Maya Larholm, Daniel Lawson, Louis Levy, Libby Lewis, Jack Meredith, Chloe Raphael, Beatrice Rapstone and Montague Rapstone comprising three sets of five children.

Set designs are by Richard Hudson, with costume designs by Brigitte Reiffenstuel, lighting by Neil Austin, sound and original music by Adam Cork, and movement by EJ Boyle. Casting is by Amy Ball CDG,with children’s casting by Verity Naughton.

Vienna in 1900 was the most vibrant city in Europe, humming with artistic and intellectual excitement and a genius for enjoying life. A tenth of the population were Jews. A generation earlier they had been granted full civil rights by the Emperor, Franz Josef. Consequently, hundreds of thousands fled from the Pale and the pogroms in the East and many found sanctuary in the crowded tenements of the old Jewish quarter, Leopoldstadt.

Tom Stoppard’s new play, directed by Patrick Marber, is an intimate drama with an epic sweep; the story of a family who made good. “My grandfather wore a caftan,” says Hermann, a factory owner, “my father went to the opera in a top hat, and I have the singers to dinner.”  It was not to last. Over the next fifty years this family, like millions of others, was to re-discover what it meant to be Jewish in the first half of the 20th century. Leopoldstadt is a passionate drama of love, endurance and loss. It is Stoppard’s most humane and heart-breaking play.

Leopoldstadt, the sixth collaboration between SFP and Tom Stoppard, reunites Stoppard, Marber and Friedman who last collaborated on Travesties in 2017.

Leopoldstadt is co-produced with Gavin Kalin Productions, Scott Rudin, Tulchin Bartner Productions, Scott M. Delman/Patrick Gracey in association with Rupert Gavin, 1001 Nights Productions, Nica Burns, Burnt Umber Productions, Bradford W. Edgerton, Eilene Davidson Productions, Richard Winkler.

LISTINGS INFORMATION

Theatre:                           Wyndham’s Theatre, Charing Cross Road, London, WC2H 0DA

Dates:                              25 January – 13 June 2020

Press Night:                       12 February 2020 at 7pm

Box Office:                         0844 482 5151

Performances:                    Monday – Saturday at 7.30pm, Thursdays (from 20 February) and Saturdays at 2.30pm

                                      Tuesday 17 March 2020 at 7.30pm Captioned Performance

Tuesday 24 March 2020 at 7.30pm Audio Described Performance

Website:                           leopoldstadtplay.com

Twitter:                           @LeopoldstadtLDN

Facebook:                         @LeopoldstadtLDN

Instagram:                        @LeopoldstadtLDN   

New Fame the Musical Casting Announced

NEW CASTING ANNOUNCED FOR FAME THE MUSICAL

TROUBADOUR WEMBLEY PARK THEATRE

New casting is announced for the extended run of the critically acclaimed 30th Anniversary production of Fame the Musical playing for a strictly limited season at the newly opened Troubadour Wembley Park Theatre, located in the heart of North West London’s new cultural neighbourhood from 23 Dec – 26 Jan.

Cast members Keith Jack, Hayley Johnston, Molly McGuire, Jamal Crawford, Louisa Beadel, Simon Anthony,  Alexander Zane, Katie Warsop, Duncan Smith, Spencer Lee Osborne, Courtney George, Tom Mussell, Ryan Kayode, Lauren Crooks,  Daisy Edwards, Jay Le Marrec will remain with the company in their current roles.

New cast include Kira Malou (Iris Kelly), Josie Benson (Miss Sherman) Georgia Tapp (Carmen Diaz) Joshua Steel (Joe Vegas) Rebecca French and Eddie Myles (Ensemble).

Based on the 1980 phenomenal pop culture film, Fame – The Musical is the international smash-hit sensation following the lives of students at New York’s High School For The Performing Arts as they navigate their way through the highs and lows, the romances and the heartbreaks and the ultimate elation of life. This bittersweet but uplifting triumph of a show explores the issues that confront many young people today: prejudice, identity, pride, literacy, sexuality, substance abuse and perseverance.

Fame the Musical is presented by Selladoor Productions (Footloose, Avenue Q, Little Shop of Horrors and Flashdance –  The Musical) with Gavin Kalin Productions, Dan Looney & Adam Paulden, Stephen McGill Productions and Jason Haigh-Ellery in association with BrightLights Productions and Big Dreamer Productions.

Fame is Directed and Choregraphed by Nick Winston with Design by Morgan Large, Lighting design by Prema Mehta and Sound Design by Ben Harrison. Mark Crossland is Musical Supervisor.

Featuring the Oscar-winning title song and a cast of outstanding dancers, singers, musicians and rappers as they transform from star struck pupils to superstars. Fame – The Musical will indeed live forever.

Tickets are on sale now at www.troubadourtheatres.com. – 0844 815 4865 or visit www.fameuktour.co.uk  for more information.