Reviews

Evening All Afternoon Review ★★☆☆☆

Anna Ziegler’s world premiere two-hander arrives at the Donmar trailing the kind of critical warmth that tends to get spritzed about liberally on opening nights, and it would be churlish to pretend there isn’t something here. It would also be wrong to pretend there’s quite enough. The play is a drama, part domestic portrait, part […]

American Psycho Review ★★★★☆

Rupert Goold’s revival of American Psycho at the Almeida Theatre in Islington is a sleek, menacing, often magnificent production that builds nearly three hours of sustained dread, then collapses in the final stretch. It is very nearly a five-star evening, and the gap between what it achieves and what it squanders is genuinely painful. The […]

Starlight Express Review ★★★★☆

Andrew Lloyd Webber’s roller-skating insanity is back, and it is, against all reasonable odds, completely magnificent. That it happens to be playing in a repurposed warehouse a brisk wind’s throw from Wembley Stadium is either the show’s one genuine flaw or its most characterful joke. Luke Sheppard’s immersive production of the 1984 musical drops you […]

The Virgins Review ★★★☆☆

For its first hour, Miriam Battye’s new coming-of-age play is one of the funniest things you will see in London this year, raw, fizzing, and unnervingly accurate about what it feels like to be sixteen and convinced that everyone else has already figured it out. Then something shifts, the laughs dry up, and the play […]

Moulin Rouge! The Musical Review ★★★☆☆

There is no show in the West End that tries harder to make you forget you are watching a show, and for long stretches it succeeds magnificently. Arrive early, drink it in, and enjoy the spectacle while it lasts, because once the plot gets going, so does your patience. Moulin Rouge! is Alex Timbers’s stage […]

Oh, Mary! Review ★★★☆☆

There is a moment in Oh, Mary! when Mason Alexander Park, crinoline swaying like a circus tent in a gale, simply cannot work out how to climb down from a desk. The audience falls apart. Whether that image strikes you as the most joyfully absurd thing you’ve seen all year, or as an elaborate exercise […]

Così Fan Tutte Review ★★★★☆

The current production of Mozart’s Così fan tutte at the English National Opera is not one to miss. A combination of a bright fairground spectacle, quick humour and a very special aria from a hot air ballon, makes for an entertaining evening. The colourful staging and modern English translation make the opera accessible for anyone, […]

The Unlikely Pilgrimage of Harold Fry Review ★★★★★

The Unlikely Pilgrimage of Harold Fry is already a contender for my favourite musical of 2026. This folk musical, adapted by Rachel Joyce from her 2012 novel with songs by Passenger, arrives in the West End after selling out Chichester last summer, carrying with it hugely likeable characters and a willingness to find grace in […]

Already Perfect Review ★★☆☆☆

Already Perfect arrives at the King’s Head Theatre trailing clouds of Tony Award glory from its writer, but the show itself never quite earns the standing ovation its creator seems to expect. This autobiographical musical from Levi Kreis – who wrote the book, music and lyrics, and stars as himself, is a curiously flat affair, […]

Ballad Lines Review ★★★☆☆

Ballad Lines at Southwark Playhouse Elephant arrives with impressive vocal firepower and admirable ambition. The production falters, however, when its songs struggle to match the emotional weight its story demands. This folk musical from Finn Anderson and Tania Azevedo spans three centuries, connecting women through bloodlines and ballads. In present-day New York, Sarah receives a […]