Monday, December 22

REVIEWS

<strong>SHREK The Musical – Liverpool Empire</strong>
North West

SHREK The Musical – Liverpool Empire

This family-focused musical with music by Jeanine Tesori is based on the Oscar-winning DreamWorks Animation film, Shrek, with book and lyrics by David Lindsay-Abaire; it brings all the familiar characters from the film to life. It is a very funny, unusual fairy-tale in which curses are reversed, donkeys and dragons find love, princesses in all shapes and sizes are beautiful and monsters get the girls. The moral of the story is that it's important to accept people who are different and the title character, who is a green ogre, definitely fits the bill. Shrek is a swamp-dwelling ogre who, in a make-believe land, embarks on a quest to reclaim his land.  He encounters a smart-aleck donkey with the gift of the gab, who becomes a good friend, battles a scarey fire-breathing dragon and...
<strong>Dick Whittington: The Rock ‘n’ Roll Panto – Leeds City Varieties</strong>
Yorkshire & Humber

Dick Whittington: The Rock ‘n’ Roll Panto – Leeds City Varieties

The festive period for theatre critics is an odd one as this week started with Gallic misery fest Les Misérables and finished with this classic example of what is a quintessentially British art form that has even survived into the digital age. Pantos work (oh yes, they do) because they are plain daft, and everyone in the family can enjoy them.  Whole families are out tonight as pantos don’t get any sillier than the Rock ‘N’ Roll brand, which had been offering music and fun in this historic venue for over a decade. There is something undeniably surreal and utterly joyous watching a six-foot Brummer rat belting out Pretty Vacant for reasons that weren’t entirely clear. And let’s be honest Dick Whittington is a gift that keeps giving (oh yes, it is) for any decent panto writer. Pet...
<strong>The Possibility of Colour – Online Stream</strong>
North West

The Possibility of Colour – Online Stream

The Possibility of Colour, written, directed and produced by Pete Carruthers, is an exploration of mental health, synaesthesia, neurodiversity and how healthcare institutions, compulsory treatment, and relationships with friends and family affect people’s lives. Set in a terrifying dystopia in the near future, this play is a fantastic meeting of One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest and Black Mirror which takes you on a rollercoaster of emotions and will leave you with plenty to reflect on in terms of your own mental health and that of others around you. Joseph (Pete Carruthers) is a socially awkward architect with a seemingly insurmountable problem. His latest clients have bought a beach house in a neighbourhood where everything has to be white, but they want him to inflect “the possibility ...
<strong>Mother Goose – Hackney Empire</strong>
London

Mother Goose – Hackney Empire

Mother Goose feels like that glass of mulled wine on a cold Christmassy evening. It has the rounded flavours, tastiest spices and leaves you smiling. If you want to join festive spirits, this is one celebration you wish to attend. The pantomime pays a fitting tribute to the ongoing 120 years that Hackney Empire came into being. The play brings together the familiar pantomime elements with some spectacular performances. A true testimony to this production's universality is to have younglings, grandparents and a 25-year-old celebrating their birthday in the audience! You will not be disappointed. Mother Goose is bright! Clive Rowe's presence and voice soar to the skies. The set is technicolour rainbow bursts of sunshine, the music lifts spirits while the improvised lyrics make you giggle ...
<strong>A Christmas Carol – Shakespeare North Playhouse</strong>
North West

A Christmas Carol – Shakespeare North Playhouse

Shakespeare North Playhouse is one of the most stunning venues in the country, there is absolutely no doubt about that. Home to the only timber-built “cockpit” theatre outside London, it was built throughout lockdown and is an experience unlike anything else you can find in the North West. The play is a mixture of modern and traditional costumes, dialogue, movement and northern references, and is a pantomime musical with original songs delivered by the four actor-musicians. The folk music involved at least 10 instruments, all played by the incredible multi-skilled ensemble and musically directed by Jessica Dives. Even for a pantomime there was a lot of audience involvement, with some exciting things for us to do during the performance. I don’t want to spoil the surprises, but the kids i...
<strong>Charlie and the Chocolate Factory: The Musical – Leeds Playhouse</strong>
Yorkshire & Humber

Charlie and the Chocolate Factory: The Musical – Leeds Playhouse

Every festive season Leeds Playhouse tick off the work of a brilliant children’s writer and this time it’s the undisputed master of devilish delights Roald Dahl. It’s a doubly bold move taking on his most beloved book that had already spawned West End and Broadway versions of this production, two film versions, and Gene Wilder’s cinematic take on mysterious sweet factory owner Willy Wonka is rightly seen as the definitive version. Wonka launches a worldwide competition for five kids to visit his factory if they can find a golden ticket in one of his chocolate bars, and among the loathsome children who win is Charlie Bucket.  He’s a decent kid full of ideas living in grinding poverty with his single mum, and four grandparents who share a bed in the attic. Once inside the factory ...
The Wind in the Wilton’s – Wilton’s Music Hall
London

The Wind in the Wilton’s – Wilton’s Music Hall

This enchanting adaptation of The Wind in the Willows captures the spirit of community with a magical, fantastical element from the talking animal characters. The home of a sheltered mole is destroyed by weasels as they construct a private road to the river. Mole finds companionship in Rat, and she endeavours to help him find a new home. On their journey, they encounter more problems, all of which can be traced back to the weasels. Piers Torday’s script makes a clear allusion to our current social climate with careless, wealthy people in power. The stunning set designed by Tom Piper and Emma Brunton’s movement direction wove the plot together to a symbiotic effect. The scene changes with ropes hinted at manual labour and gave the piece a community/village feel. The story was set in Lond...
<strong>Best of Enemies – Noel Coward Theatre</strong>
London

Best of Enemies – Noel Coward Theatre

It is 1968 in the United States of America. The elections are approaching, ABC news trails behind NBC and CBS. To catch up with the competition, they setup an experimental debate between Gore Vidal, a left-wing writer and William Buckley, a pamphleteer for the Conservatives; in one of a kind prime time show. The conflict is simple. Conservatives goes against Libertarianism. (And we can never get enough of it). ‘Which country do you belong to?’ The right or the left? Democratic or Republican? The incorrect question is the backbone of the conflict. It simply assumes the answer has to be an either, or. Throughout the play, one kept wondering what happens if a citizen chooses neither, nor? Or what happens to the subjective benefits and failures that come with choosing one and vice versa. Du...
<strong>The Nutcracker – Hull New Theatre</strong>
Yorkshire & Humber

The Nutcracker – Hull New Theatre

My favourite ballet, The Nutcracker, came to the Hull New Theatre stage on Wednesday evening, bathing us all in a welcome festive glow. And, to my untrained eye, the Northern Ballet company performed this wintry tale to perfection. Even before a ballet pump had performed one relevé (I Googled) on the stage, we in the packed theatre got into the Christmas spirit just my looking at the wonderful stage setting - huge, many-paned windows, warmly lit from within and laden with snow. Set on Christmas Eve, the Edwards family are excitedly preparing for Christmas. Clara (Rachael Gillespie), her sister Louise (Saeka Shirai) and brother Frederick (Filippo Di Vilio) are all enjoying themselves with typical sibling shenanigans, which includes Frederick’s teasing of Clara. Uncle Drosselmeye...
<strong>Les Misérables – Leeds Grand Theatre</strong>
Yorkshire & Humber

Les Misérables – Leeds Grand Theatre

An expectant audience finally sat down after a two year wait for this musical juggernaut, and any fears that this wouldn't be the full West End experience were dashed from the first chord as massive sets rumbled on and off this vast stage. Les Misérables is an epic in every sense, based on Victor Hugo's sprawling novel of redemption and obsession set against the backdrop of a France riven by poverty and doomed petit bourgeois revolutionaries. It is perfect fodder for a sung through piece that sits somewhere between musical theatre and opera as reformed convict Jean Valjean seeks redemption after breaking his parole after stealing bread for his sick nephew, but is pursued over decades by implacable lawman Javert, who loses his reason as he tries to bring his quarry to justice.  i...