Skip to content

Jonah

Making a Splash

Jonah

by Ian Fletcher, libretto by Jeffrey Lewis

National Symphony Orchestra and London Symphony Chorus at Cadogan Hall, Chelsea, 9th May

Review by Helen Astrid

Ian Fletcher

Cadogan Hall rides the waves, as the sea dominates a glorious and varied orchestral and choral programme, with a very special concert entitled Jonah, Theme of the Sea.  All the items in the first half with nautical references were indeed a voyage of discovery, but our destination was the world premiere of the oratorio, Jonah.

Read more…

Oliver! Jr

Fiery Red

Oliver! Jr

by Lionel Bart

Dramacube Productions, Hampton Hill Red Cast at Hampton Hill Theatre, until 7th May

Review by Sadie Williams

As the curtains drew back to reveal the brilliantly staged set (designed by Hannah Callarco), the audience was instantly transported to Victorian London.  The steps, the tunnel and the dreary but realistic brickwork simultaneously presented an atmosphere of destitution, but also gave the opportunity for endless theatrical possibilities.   The fantastic young cast of 8–12-year-olds set the tone with vigour and vibrancy, and I felt that a West End production would struggle to do Food Glorious Food more justice.   The orphans were brilliantly dressed by Jo Scholes and their dirty faces helped to convey their loveless, dire fate.  Just when I thought it couldn’t get any better, Huey Chalmers lit up the stage as Oliver with his angelic singing voice and heartfelt performance.  A larger- than-life Mr Bumble, played by Raphael Cavendish also helped to keep the energy high and contagious.

Read more…

Oliver! Jr

Dance, Music and Much More!

Oliver! Jr

by Lionel Bart

Dramacube Productions, Twickenham Green Cast at Hampton Hill Theatre, until 7th May 2023

Review by Sadie Williams

It may have been their final performance, but this young cast of 8-12-year-olds certainly showed no signs of complacency.  The wit and entertainment of this piece was conveyed with expert direction from seasoned performer and director Matthew Bunn, and he didn’t waste a moment as we were treated to a menacing, Cockney, pre- show announcement, threatening that we’d be “brown bread” if we didn’t turn off our electronic devices.  We’d been warned!

Read more…

Oliver! Jr

Singing the Blues

Oliver! Jr

by Lionel Bart

Dramacube Productions, Twickenham Blue Cast at Hampton Hill Theatre until 7th May

Review by Heather Moulson

Matthew Bunn’s prolific multi casting of this iconic and ambitious production paid off once again in his detailed directing Oliver! Jr.  The Twickenham Blue cast, like other casts before them, were impressive.  Each actor played these well-known characters with their own unique interpretation.   

Read more…

Oliver ! Jr

Mellow Yellow

Oliver! Jr

by Lionel Bart

Dramacube Productions, Twickenham Yellow Cast at Hampton Hill Theatre until 7th May

Review by Heather Moulson

With director Matthew Bunn’s huge cast and an ambitious musical, we looked forward to this production of Oliver! Jnr performed by Hampton Hill’s Yellow Cast.

With the standard silver bricked set, its centrepiece a sinister tunnel, the cast opened up with the exuberant Food Glorious Food.  The orphans of the workhouse were all credible with good voices and their black and white tattered attire.  Oliver, played by Imogen Logan, despite initial reticence, became fiery and engaging.  Oliver’s wistful song Where Is Love? and the moody lighting made the undertaker’s scene atmospheric.  Not to mention the formidable Mr Bumble, played beautifully by Wilf Perkins.

Read more…

Low Level Panic

Sharing Caring

Low Level Panic

by Clare McIntyre

The Questors at the Studio, Questors Theatre, Ealing until 13th May

Review by Brent Muirhouse

The play Low Level Panic, written by Clare McIntyre in the 1980s, is hugely thought-provoking, slaloming rapidly through a trail of dark comedy and serious dramatic themes to explore the pervasive issue of objectification, and the obstacles, invasiveness and fear it creates for a woman in modern society.  Despite being written in the 1980s, Low Level Panic remains all too relevant today.

Read more…

The Circle

Spiralling Round

The Circle

by W. Somerset Maugham

OT Theatre Productions at The Orange Tree Theatre, Richmond until 17th June

Review by Harry Zimmerman

Somerset Maugham’s 1921 comedy, which twists romantic fates across two generations of a squabbling family, is given a fast paced, yet effectively intimate treatment in Tom Littler’s first production as Artistic Director of The Orange Tree

Elizabeth is married to Arnold, a stolid, buttoned up MP obsessed with his career and ensuring that appearances are properly maintained at all times.  He appears to be the personification of the stiff upper lip.

Arnold has good reason to be as repressed as he is.  At the age of five, his mother, the famed society beauty Lady Catherine “Kitty” Champion-Cheney, scandalously ran off with her lover, Lord “Hughie” Porteus, whose apparently relentless march towards the Prime Ministership was derailed by his romantic entanglement with her.

Read more…

His Majesty, The King

King Charles III

6th May 2023

“Grant that I may be a blessing to all Thy children, of every faith and belief, that together we may discover the ways of gentleness and be led into the paths of peace”

The King’s Prayer

God Save the King

Oliver! Jr

Menace and Morrrrre !

Oliver! Jr

by Lionel Bart

Dramacube Productions, Twickenham Purple Cast at Hampton Hill Theatre until 6th May*

Review by Gill Martin

Rollicking, rumbustious, raucous one minute – plaintive, powerful with plenty of pathos the next.

That’s the mood of Oliver! Jr now rocking the stage of the Hampton Hill Theatre over a momentous weekend … with only the minor distraction of a coronation.

Four shows a day this weekend will offer a welcome break from all the pomp and pageantry as Charles Dickens’ classic tale comes to life with a Dramacube production, directed by Matthew Bunn, featuring teenage casts bursting with talent and enthusiasm.

Read more…

The Beekeeper of Aleppo

Land Milked of Honey

The Beekeeper of Aleppo

by Christy Lefteri, adapted by Nesrin Alrefaai and Matthew Spangler

Nottingham Playhouse at Richmond Theatre until 6th May, then on tour until 1st July

Review by Harry Zimmerman

Based on Christy Lefteri’s 2019 internationally bestselling novel, and adapted for the stage by Nesrin Alrefaai and Matthew Spangler, The Beekeeper of Aleppo tells the story of Nuri, a humble beekeeper from war-torn Aleppo, and his wife Afra, as they escape the perils of the Syrian civil war and travel across the Middle East and Europe to be reunited with Nuri’s cousin and mentor, Mustafa. 

Read more…