Reviewed for The Reviews Hub: Anybody who has been sober in the presence of drunk friends knows that, far from being the masters of wit they imagine themselves to be, the inebriated rarely make for the most entertaining of people. So the very concept of Shit-Faced Showtime – a musical offshoot of Magnificent Bastard Productions’ long-running Shit-Faced Shakespeare –…
Category: Musicals
Superhero, Southwark Playhouse, London ★★★★
Reviewed for Musical Theatre Review: Not every superhero wears a cape, and not everyone who wears a cape is a superhero. In the Southwark Playhouse’s new one-man musical Superhero, directed by Adam Lenson, Michael Rouse plays a man who struggles to be either. Rouse narrates the story of Colin predominantly in flashback, as he pleas…
Wind in the Willows, London Palladium ★★★
Reviewed for Musical Theatre Review: Appearing at last weekend’s benefit concert for the victims of the Grenfell Tower fire, composers George Stiles and Anthony Drewe introduced themselves as: “the chaps with two musicals in the West End at the moment – and it’s the only time in our lives when we’ll be able to say…
Blondel, Union Theatre, London ★★★
Reviewed for Musical Theatre Review: The knowledge that Blondel was Tim Rice’s first musical after his split with Andrew Lloyd Webber adds an extra piquancy to some of its knowing lines. Who needs lyrics, muses the show’s eponymous troubadour Blondel, when it’s the music that really makes people take notice? In this comic rock take…
Taj Express, Sadler’s Wells, London ★★★½
Reviewed for The Reviews Hub: It is not usual, one must admit, for a stage show to start with a voiceover warning that anybody expecting great theatre should leave. There are certainly some shows that could benefit from such a management of expectations. Taj Express, the latest Bollywood-inspired work from the Merchant family, is at…
Ordinary Days, London Theatre Workshop ★★★★
New York-based romantic comedies may be less popular in the cinema and on stage than they once were, but they are so plentiful that each needs to be distinctive to succeed. At first, Adam Gwon’s Ordinary Days seems to revel in its titular ordinariness. The cast comprises solely of a struggling artist, a similarly struggling…
La Strada, The Other Palace, London ★★★
Reviewed for Musical Theatre Review: Federico Fellini’s 1954 film La Strada (‘The Road’) chronicles the story of Gelsomina, a plaintive young girl who is sold by her poverty-stricken mother into servitude to the brutal strongman Zampanò. Their journey across the Italian landscape, including formative encounters with more circus folk, are brought to the stage by…
The Color Purple in Concert, Cadogan Hall, London ★★★★★
Reviewed for Musical Theatre Review: There are some musicals which grow in stature the more they get stripped back. The Color Purple is one such musical. The recent Broadway revival – a transfer of the Menier Chocolate Factory’s 2013 London production – shrugged off the original production’s cinematic look (designed to evoke memories of Steven…
Judy!, Arts Theatre, London ★★★★
Reviewed for Musical Theatre Review: Last year, Southwark Playhouse played host to Through the Mill, a loving warts-and-all tribute to the life of Judy Garland told through re-creations of her life at three crucial points. There are few Fringe productions for which a transfer to a larger, more central venue has seemed more appropriate. Writer/director…
Our Ladies of Perpetual Succour, Duke of York’s Theatre, London ★★★★
Reviewed for Musical Theatre Review: Anybody looking for a West End musical involving singing and dancing schoolchildren has a third choice supplementing those of Matilda and School of Rock. But even with a script by Lee Hall, the book writer of Billy Elliot, any parents choosing to take the children to see Our Ladies of…
Room, Theatre Royal Stratford East, London ★★★★
Reviewed for Musical Theatre Review: Emma Donoghue’s 2010 novel Room tells the harrowing story of a woman who is kept prisoner in a small room, told solely from the perspective of her five-year-old son Jack, fathered by their captor and to whom the wooden walls of their single room are the extent of the world….
tick, tick… BOOM!, Park Theatre, London ★★★★
Reviewed for Musical Theatre Review: That Jonathan Larson created the multi award-winning Broadway musical Rent would be enough to secure his place in musical theatre history. The tragedy of his death, on the last day of rehearsals for the show that would make his name, has elevated him to near-mythic proportions. tick, tick… BOOM! is…

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