My Recommendations

Harry Potter and the Cursed Child at Palace Theatre ***** Fiddler on the Roof ***** My Neighbour Totoro ***** Witness for the Prosecution ***** Back to the Future ****

Friday, February 9, 2024

My Top Recommendations


Harry Potter and the Cursed Child- Part 1 and Part 2  ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️

This magical show opened in July 2016 and has had sold out notices outside the Palace Theatre ever since and on 15th October 2024 launched its eighth cast, with around half staying on from the Year 7 cast. It remains one of the best productions in the West End at every level, the central story arc is strong and emotionally engaging, the characterisations are superb and honour the originals in the film franchise, the illusions that bring the magic to the stage are sensational and the lighting and sound are brilliant in creating the magical world.

 The central themes of father and son relationships and student friendships remains as strong as ever but what shines are the performances and acting which bring an emotional heart to the show and make every parent tingle at the thought of their own relationship with their children as they watch Albus, Scorpius and Delphi seeking to understand and earn the trust of their fathers. Are we all blinded by love?

The production scripted by John Thorne under the watchful eye of JK Rowling and directed by John Tiffany creates a fresh new theatrical style, a two-part play (that must be seen together in sequence) that is a combination of spectacular magical illusion show, cleverly choreographed dance sequences with luggage, wands, and staircases and narrative description between characters, often in quiet long speeches but which are very engaging and interesting. There are so many delightful details in the production that are joy to see from the swift choreographed scene changes with a swoosh of a cape, the spectacular flying sequences, and wonderful lighting design by Neil Austin which not only brilliantly hides the means by which the illusions are delivered but creates even small intimate spaces on a bare open stage.

The story depends quite heavily on knowing the back stories of the adults and having seen the films or read the books (although two pages in the programme seek to feel the gaps for newcomers!) but Potter super fans will not be disappointed seeing familiar scenes and characters live. The familiarity with stories means scenes can be created with a minimum of setting allowing the audience to fill in the missing details from their own memories.  The Dursley’s cupboard under the stairs, the hut where Hagrid finds Potter, the girls toilet washing fountain, the Hogwarts headmasters’ study, the forbidden forest, the Triwizard tournament and Godric’s Hollow are all created with a minimum of props, but each atmospheric setting is very effectively staged.

The story picks up from the books and films twenty-two years after the final battle and defeat of Voldemort with the characters grown up with their own families. We see the strained relationship between Harry Potter (a deeply troubled David Ricardo-Pearce) and his son Albus (a West End stage debut in  cast year 7 for Ellis Rae) and between Draco Malfoy (a formidable Steve John Shepherd) and his son Scorpius (a delightfully engaging West End stage debut from Harry Acklowe). Indeed, it is Scorpius who often dominates the scenes with the best written characterisation of the show obviously not relying on or fitting in with our prior knowledge of the characters. All are sharply contrasted with Thomas Aldridge’s Ron, more a buffoon than ever as he is always desperate to get in on the action that has left him behind.

There are strong performances from the female characters too. Jade Ogugua continues as Hermione, Sophie Matthew joins the show as scene stealing  Moaning Myrtle (if only we could see more of her in the show). Catherine Russell is the formidable Professor Umbridge and Australian, Debra Lawrence makes an excellent Professor McGonagall. Another critical character created for the stage show is Delphi, Amos Diggory’s niece, now played by Julia Kass with a devilish charm and strong stage presence. Claire Lams brings a quiet authority to Ginny Potter, providing the stability behind Harry.

What makes the show special is the extraordinary number of special effects now under the supervision of John Bulleid which recreate the magical world without the aid of cameras and CGI! The Polyjuice transformation is truly astounding, Transfiguration happens before our eyes, papers tidy themselves up, books talk, the Floo Network delivers characters in a flash, flying broomsticks rise off the stage, magic wands fire plumes of flames across the stage, the Ministry of Magic phone box disappearance is extraordinary, flying Dementors descend on the stage and in auditorium and a Patronus illuminates as it rises out of the stage. They live long in the memory and set new standards for cast and crew in theatrical staging. The Stage Management team do a truly remarkable job every performance in making this complex staging work so seamlessly and efficiently. Things must surely go wrong each performance despite their efforts for perfection but we in the audience remain spellbound by what they create.

This is over five hours of theatre that now must be watched in two sittings on a Wednesday, Friday, Saturday, or Sunday that deserves the multitude of awards it has earned. The International versions may have cut some of the back story scenes so it can be seen in a single visit but as I watch the Palace Theatre original in two parts I appreciate the time taken to tell the story, the chance to reflect on the action between each part and ultimately believe that the unique two-part version is fully justified. It is a wonderful piece of Theatre, emotionally engaging, spectacular to watch and a joyous celebration of JK Rowling’s franchise. It is set to run and run here in London and I hope all round the world and on my fifth visit I can confirm that it stands multiple viewings as there is always something new to spot in the glorious show.

Nick Wayne

Five stars


Back to the Future (Third visit Feb 2024)⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️

We reviewed this wonderful musical version of the 1985 film Back to the Future in October 2021 after it finally opened following a long Covid delay when its premiere in Manchester was cut short in   2020 but a year on after a fairly extensive cast change it was definitely time to revisit the show. IMDb ranked the film as one of the top 50 movies of all time and its creators’ writers Bob Gale and Bob Zemeckis decided after the second sequel in 1990 that the story was told, and the Film Franchise was concluded. Its enduring popularity to new generations of fans is testament to the quality of its writing and performances and therefore it was somewhat bold to tinker with that legacy by turning the original film into a stage musical. What’s more to do it with the original creative team showed not just a loving care to protect the memory but also a risk to damage it by getting it wrong in the transfer to stage. It may have been a long development path from the original idea in 2005 but Back to the Future – The Musical is now firmly established in the West End as a hit show.

I am delighted to report that the show, like the films, has matured with age and Cory English has brilliantly filled the shoes of the original Doc Brown (Roger Bart). He seems to relish every moment he is on stage,  milks the audiences’ reactions and delights in the ludicrous Busby Berkeley style musical numbers that burst on stage for no logical reason except to simple entertain us. Some of it is bizarre like the opening to Act 2 with a fantasy sequence with the Doc belting out the song “21st Century” together with a dancing chorus of lab coated assistants; it may not be the “Time Warp”, but it seems to pay tribute to other Musical films and stage shows as does “Future Boy”, with a chorus in top hats and tails. But as with so  much of the this show it simply makes you smile with pleasure at the exuberant fun .

By the end of two hour forty show we were celebrating the fact that the creators have pulled off a magical trick of honouring the original in style and content but giving it a fresh new life that matches the movie’s cult status. Indeed, the tongue in cheek comedy acknowledges the transition to stage, celebrates the iconic movie moments with neat twists and sets out to create a new cult stage musical to rival the longevity of the Rocky Horror Show. It won’t be long before audiences are shouting out the responses and lines and dressing up to be Marty or Doc Brown to watch!


 The staging by Tim Hatley is wonderful with a revolve, automation, graphical effects and the magical DeLorean car brilliantly integrated to create the iconic scenes such as Doc Brown’s garage laboratory, the tree outside Lorraine’s house, the Hill Valley High School Enchantment under the sea ball and of course the square outside the clock tower. Critical details like the picture of Marty’s family are cleverly projected to explain where we are on the space time continuum. Of course, the star of the show is the DeLorean car (magnificently recreated by Twins FX, the world leaders in stage flying effects) which feels like it is traveling at 88 mph across the stage before finally taking off as at the end of the first film to go back to the future with a stunning twist.

Alongside the magical Cory English as Doc Brown is Ben Joyce as Marty McFly. Their energetic performances acknowledge the original stars but add a delightful knowing charm to the stage. They have the same quirky chemistry between them, bouncing off each other and letting us know that this is a stage musical of a cult movie at every opportunity.

 The music and lyrics by Alan Silvestri and Glan Ballard are not instantly hummable or memorable but will grow on us with repeated listening. “For the Dreamers” is the strongest new song, a Doc Brown ballad to the inventors who have gone before. The new songs are outshone by the classics from the Movie” Back in time”, “Earth Angel”, “The Power of Love” and “Johnny B Goode” in the climatic sequence around the High School Ball although it is rather too obvious that Marty is not playing the guitar!

The supporting cast is excellent, recreating the look of the original stars but also directed by John Rando to bring the comedy to the forestage. Oliver Nicholas continues as George McFly and is gloriously over the top as he practices his challenge to Lorraine’s abuser, “Hey you get your hands off her”! Sarah Coggins pulls of the challenge of Lorraine as the 1985 motherly self and as the 1955 young girl well and we can feel her confusion as she lovingly seduces her own son! Jay Perry has great fun in the elevated role of Goldie Wilson and the guitarist Marvin Berry adding a nice modern uplift to the show. Sophie Naglik is charming as Marty’s 1985 girlfriend Jennifer and Jordan Pearson gets the unenviable role of recreating the bully Biff. Lee Ormsby recreates the teacher Strickland.

This is a show enjoyed equally on a third visit with so many little details to look out for like the Tardis spinning across the back cloth or references to the celebrated features of 1955 such as fossil fuel, cigarettes, asbestos, and spam (what a difference the passage of time makes!). The original creative team have pulled off a marvellous trick, honouring their great film franchise, but reinventing it as a stage show to delight 21st century audiences. It is a perfect feelgood show for the post pandemic time that puts a smile on you face and a spring in your step as you are thoroughly entertained by a fine cast and wonderful staging and are taken “back in time” and shown “the power of love”.

 Nick Wayne  

Four stars

Review of 2021

We will all remember 2021 for the uncertainties and disruption to theatre productions and the challenges for those performers and creatives who make a living from the sector but also for the creative response from them that still produced some amazing shows to entertain those willing to go back and join a live audience.  The large-scale West End venues could not open until mid-July and shows were steadily remounted until October only for Covid to hit cast and crews and gradually shut over twenty by December. Let’s hope for a more certain world in 2022.

“The show must go on” led the way with its merchandise to raise funds for those affected and then a wonderful show at the Palace theatre featuring music from all those shows with the irrepressible Bonnie Langford and the wonderful Trevor Dion Nicholas as compères in June. 

REVIEW: The Show Must Go On at the Palace Theatre | Pocket Size Theatre

Trafalgar Entertainment also used the time well with a beautiful refurbishment of the Trafalgar Theatre back to its 1920’s glory with a reopening of the ever entertaining “Jersey Boys” in July.

Across the city at the Barbican, they produced a huge box office and critical success with “Anything Goes” from August to October, starring the amazing Sutton Foster opposite Robert Lindsay

in what must be one of the best musical revivals of the last decade ran from and then went on to capture it for the Cinema and BBC 2 on Boxing Day.

REVIEW: Anything Goes at the Barbican Centre | Pocket Size Theatre

To serve the regional audiences they rolled out the ever green “Rocky Horror Show” for a tour with a tour de force performance from Philip Franks as the narrator .

“Back the Future” finally made it to the West End stage in August having had the Manchester opening cut short by the pandemic outbreak and offered the upbeat fun show that audiences craved with a fresh take based on the classic film with a brilliant Roger Bart as Doc. 

For those seeking a more immersive experience the “Dr Who Time Fracture” production opened and then closed due to floods in the basement before reopening stronger and tighter in its narrative and offering an astonishing experience travelling in time to save the World while meeting so many of the classic Dr Who enemies along the way. Both will surely remain fixture in London for many years.

REVIEW: Doctor Who: Time Fracture at UNIT HQ | Pocket Size Theatre

 Another opening delayed by Covid was the transfer of the “Shark is broken” from 2019 Edinburgh Fringe with Ian Shaw doing a very good impression of his own father during the filming of another classic movie Jaws offering a fascinating insight into those actors between takes.

REVIEW: The Shark is Broken at the Ambassadors Theatre | Pocket Size Theatre

While the “Circus 1903” provided an astonishing spectacle returning to the Southbank Theatre that is full of the most daring and exciting acts from around the World. If you seek real magical staging, then “Harry Potter and the Cursed Child” reopened in October and is sure to entertain full houses for many years ahead. See below review

“A Splinter of Ice” made it’s a debut streamed before transferring to the Jermyn Street Theatre with a fascinating play about the life of Kim Philby after defecting to Russia. 

REVIEW: A Splinter of Ice by Original Theatre at the Cheltenham Everyman Theatre (Online) | Pocket Size Theatre


In the regions the “Beauty Queen of Leanne” and “South Pacific” maintained Chichester Festival Theatre for quality productions and revivals but even they were out shone by the amazing Mill at Sonning with another brilliant Christmas Musical revival of “Top Hat”.

REVIEW: Top Hat at the Mill at Sonning | Pocket Size Theatre

 

For those not able to go back to a Theatre the producers who innovated in streamed content deserve our applause . Original theatre’s excellent capture of “Being Mr Wickham”, the Barn Cirencester’s  wonderful updating of “Picture of Dorian Grey”, Huddersfield Lawrence Batley Theatre streamed film “Going Distance”, and “Touching the Void” from Bristol Old Vic demonstrated how filmed productions can be more engaging than the live show with the additional camera angles .

REVIEW: Being Mr Wickham at the Regency Theatre Royal Bury St Edmunds, by Original Theatre Online | Pocket Size Theatre

REVIEW: The Picture of Dorian Gray (Online) | Pocket Size Theatre

Of course, as the year closes the uncertainties continue with Pantomimes in Scotland and Wales being prematurely closed by Devolved Government's politically intent on trying to pre-empt or act differently from Westminster. But in England Pantomimes in Manchester Opera House , “Aladdin”, Birmingham Hippodrome “Goldilocks and the three bears”, Bristol Hippodrome “Snow White and seven Dwarfs” and Mayflower Southampton “Cinderella” offer top quality family entertainment. 

And as we look forward to 2022 there is a growing list of shows still to see in London like “Frozen”, “Cabaret”, “Moulin Rouge”, “Life of Pi”, “Prime Facie”  with Jodie Cromer from April, “My Fair Lady” at the Coliseum  from May, and “Jerusalem” with Mark Rylance from June . 

It may have been a disrupted year and a difficult time for everyone involved in the productions, but their creativity and innovation surely has not been dampened and with the support of their financial backers and enthusiastic audiences it must be hoped that the industry will bounce back stronger than ever in 2022 and beyond .

 

Nick Wayne 

 

Tuesday, October 19, 2021

Harry Potter and The Cursed Child is back in the West End

 “It’s time to believe in magic again” is the new by-line for the promotion of the return of Harry Potter and the Cursed Child to the West End stage and its long-awaited reopening does not disappoint. Indeed, the hiatus caused by the Pandemic seems to have freshened it and our third visit to the show left us even more excited by this extraordinary production. Many of the Year 4 cast have stayed on for another year and therefore bring a unique combination of thorough understanding and experience of the show with a freshness & eagerness that the enforced layout has created to tell this story. We know and expect the magic and illusions to be outstanding and they still are, we love the references to the story and characters films and books in this stage version but what now shines are the performances and acting which bring an emotional heart to the show and make every parent tingle at the thought of relationship with their children as they watch Albus, Scorpius and Delphi seeking to understand and have a relationship with their fathers. Are we all blinded by love?

The production scripted by John Thorne under the watchful eye of JK Rowling and directed by John Tiffany creates a  fresh new theatrical style, a two-part play (that must be seen together in sequence) that is a combination of spectacular magical illusion show, cleverly choreographed dance sequences with luggage, wands, and staircases and narrative description between characters, often in quiet long wordy speeches but which are very engaging and interesting. There are so many delightful details in the production that are joy to see from the swift choreographed scene changes with a swoosh of a cape, the spectacular flying sequences, and wonderful lighting design by Neil Austin which not only brilliantly hides the means by which the illusions are delivered but creates even small intimate spaces on a bare open stage.

The story depends quite heavily on knowing the back stories of the adults and having seen the
films or read the books (although two pages in the programme seek to feel the gaps for newcomers!) but Potter super fans will not be disappointed seeing familiar scenes and characters live. The familiarity with stories means scenes can be created with a minimum of setting allowing the audience to fill in the missing details from their own memories.  The Dursley’s cupboard under the stairs, the hut where Hagrid finds Potter, the girls toilet washing fountain, the Hogwarts headmasters’ study, the forbidden forest, the Triwizard tournament and Godric’s Hollow are all created with a minimum of props, but each atmospheric setting is created with a minimum of props and effort.

What makes the show special is the extraordinary number of special effects which recreate the magical world in front of our eyes without the aid of cameras and CGI! The Polyjuice transformation is truly magical, Transfiguration happens before our eyes, the Floo Network delivers characters in a flash, flying broomsticks rise off the stage, magic wands fire plumes of flames across the stage, the Ministry of Magic phone box disappearance is extraordinary, flying dementias descend on the stage and in auditorium and a Patronus illuminates  as it rises out of the stage. They live long in the memory and set new standards for cast and crew in theatrical staging.


Writer Jack Thorne and director John Tiffany weave all this together, takings JK Rowling’s original stories as a springboard background to tell a story about Father and Son relationships. The story picks up twenty-two years after the final battle and defeat of Voldemort with the characters grown up with their own families. We see the strained relationship between Harry Potter (a deeply troubled Jamie Ballard) and his son Albus (a nervously withdrawn Dominic Short) and between Draco Malfoy (a very serious James Howard) and his son Scorpius (a wonderfully funny Luke Sumner in his professional debut). Indeed, it is Scorpius who often dominates the scenes with the best written characterisation of the show obviously not relying on or fitting in with our prior knowledge of the characters. All are sharply contrasted with Thomas Aldridge’s Ron, more a buffoon than ever as he is always desperate to get in on the action that has left him behind.

There are strong performances from some of the female characters too. Michaele Gayle returns as Hermione and acquits herself well showing she is an accomplished actress. Lucy Mangan as Moaning Myrtle has a fun cameo role in part one and Kathryn Meisle is excellent as Professor Umbridge. Another critical character created for the stage show is Delphi, Amos Diggory’s niece, played by Madeleine Walker with a devilish appeal.

This is five hours of theatre that now must be watched in two sittings on a Wednesday , Friday , Saturday, or Sunday that deserves the multitude of awards it has earned. The Broadway version will reopen in November in a revised three- and half-hour version by cutting some of the back story scenes so can be seen in a single visit but as I watch the Palace Theatre original in two parts I appreciate the time, they take to tell the story, the chance to reflect on the action between each part and ultimately believe that the unique two-part version is fully justified. It is a wonderful piece of Theatre, at times like a Theme park stunt show merged with a therapy counselling session and is set to run and run here in London and I hope all round the world.

Nick Wayne

Five stars

Monday, May 10, 2021

 After a year since the 1st lockdown started the green shoots of a full reopening of the UK Theatres are beginning to emerge. After the challenges found in reopening in the autumn 2020 only to be closed again before Christmas it is no wonder some producers are reluctant to make the big commitment to open new shows.

Government steps

Officially if the Government timetable is maintained the steps are:

17th May- Indoor venues with half capacity up to maximum of 1000.

19th July- Indoor venues fully reopen (delayed from 21st June)

When you look through the list of announced shows for the West End only a handful of smaller low-cost production announced openings in the period 17th May to 21st June with some of the West End returning musicals, presumably sitting on large rolled over ticket advances have announcing openings this summer. Those shows opening for the first time like Back to the Future and Frozen have announced a cautious approach (end of August), presumably to allow a safe time to manage any delays in the timetable and allow plenty of rehearsal time before opening. Moulin Rouge is less specific at the Piccadilly saying Autumn 21.


The Mousetrap at St Martins after their failed attempt to reopen last year breaking its 67-year run opened on 17th May with an all-star cast. But Dear Even Hansen at the Noel Coward delayed restart until 26th October (despite announcing in July 2020 that it would be as early as practical) and the show that surely carries the biggest advance Harry Potter and the Cursed Child at the Palace (and perhaps the biggest weekly running costs) now opens on 14th October with tickets on sale from that date with many of the Year 4 cast staying on for another year.

Covid Testing

The big challenge is Covid testing for cast, crew, and audiences. It seems essential to do weekly or possibly daily testing on cast and crew and practical to do using the front of house spaces with an earlier call to check everyone with a well administered lateral flow test giving results within 30 minutes. This is a must to ensure the safe working backstage in confined spaces where social distancing & face masks are impossible and to prevent the loss of the cast as happened in Bath late last year but at a what additional cost? We have already seen Deathdrop and Hairspray miss performances due to self isolation impact , a heavy cost for Producers to bear.

The audience testing for all, but the smallest venues feel impossible. Where do people wait safely for the results even if the cost can be met? Passports or vaccinations/antibody certificates might help as used at the Wembley Euro events but will preclude many under 20’s for the foreseeable future and children can still carry the virus so how do you manage these? So realistically while reassurance measures (like face masks, one-way systems, and temperature checks) will be in operation for 2021 at least there can be no guarantees. This exposes Front of house staff as well as customers to risk. It will be interesting to see whether this risk puts off audiences desperate to return to theatre to any noticeable extent. In any case the greater risk is the train or tube journey to the venue not the theatre experience itself.

However, the real risk is another wave of infection and reimposing by Government restrictions on indoor venues with no chance of economically buying insurance for this risk. This is what will give producers (and their backers) and the casts sleepless nights until we all start to feel the virus is permanently under control. It is why Government is right to delay full reopening's until more are double vaccinated.

 

Audience Demand

While there is plenty of anecdotal and survey evidence of audiences’ willingness to return to live theatre and perhaps a sector of them willing to pay more for a safe experience, will this rush of enthusiasm be sustained and reach the smaller scale productions?  What impact will lack of overseas tourists have on the overall sales and even will the closure of West End offices for more home working have an impact of sales of tickets. Walk up will surely be reduced and it will, for a while, be a booked planned trip to watch a must-see show. I am ready to go and have booked Back to the Future (the perfect feelgood fun show) and for Ian McKellen’s Hamlet out of town in Windsor (opening 21st June).

In the meantime, the ever-improving streaming services partially fills the void in our lives.

The West End Reopening plans

Here are the current opening plans for West End at time of writing (with original opening year in bracket)

Title

Venue

Reopening Date

 Type

Capacity

Austentious/Woman in Black (1989)

Fortune

17 May 2021

Returning

432

Mousetrap (1952)

St Martins

17 May 2021

Returning with all-star cast

550

ReEmerge Season

Harold Pinter

22 May 2021

Season of 3 plays

796

Love Letters

Haymarket

19 May 2021

Transfer from Windsor

889

DeathDrop (2020)

Garrick

19 May 2021

Returning with new cast for short run

732

Season opens

Globe

19 May 2021

3 Shakespeare plays

400

Amelie

Criterion

20 May 2021

Transfer from Other Palace

588

Everybody’s talking about Jamie (2017)

Apollo

20 May 2021

Returning

775

Les Mis- Concert (1985)

Sondheim

20 May 2021

Returning for short run

1074

Magic Mike (2018)

Hippodrome

21 May 2021

Returning

325

Six (2019)

Lyric

21 May 2021

Returning for short run

967

Dr Who Time Fracture

UNIT HQ

26 May 2021

New Immersive theatre

 600

After Life

NT Dorfman

2 June 2021

New play

120

 

 

 

 

 

Under Milk Wood

NT Olivier

16 June 2021

Revival in the round

500

The play that goes wrong (2014)

Duchess

18 June 2021

Returning

479

Full opening allowed over 1000 seats

 

Now delayed until 19 July 2021

 

 

Hairspray

Coliseum

22 June 2021

Delayed revival for limited run

2359

Tina Turner (2018)

Aldwych

24 June 2021

Returning

1200

Cinderella

Gillian Lynne

25 June 2021

New Premiere

1024

Prince of Egypt (2020)

Dominion

1 July 2021

Returning

2069

Joseph (2020)

Palladium

1 July 2021

Returning/Revival until 5th September

2286

Pretty Woman (2020)

Savoy

8 July 2021

Returning transfer from Piccadilly

1158

Come From away (2019)

Phoenix

22 July 2021

Returning

1012

Phantom of Opera (1986)

Her Majesties

21 July 2021

Returning

1216

Jersey Boys

Trafalgar

28 July 2021

Revival

630

The Lion King (1999)

Lyceum

29 July 2021

Returning

2100

Leopoldstadt (2020)

Wyndhams

7 August 2021

Returning for short run

759

Mary Poppins (2019)

Prince Edward

7th August 2021

Returning

1716

Hamilton (2017)

Victoria Palace

19 August 2021

Returning

1550

Back To Future

Adelphi

20 August

Transfer from Manchester

1500

Six

Arts

24 August

Transfer from lyric

350

Frozen

Drury Lane

27 August

UK Premiere

2196

Mamma Mia (1999)

Novello

25 August 2021

Returning

1105

Matilda (2011)

Cambridge

16 September 2021

Returning

1231

Wicked (2006)

Apollo Victoria

15 September 2021

Returning

2328

& Juliet (2019)

Shaftesbury

24 September

Returning

1400

Les Mis (1985)

Sondheim

25 September

Restaged

1074

Harry Potter & Cursed Child (2016)

Palace

14 October 21

Returning

1400

Only Fools and Horses (2019)

Haymarket

1 October 2021

Returning

893

Get up Stand Up

Lyric

1 October 2021

New Bob Marley Musical

967

Magic Goes wrong (2019)

Vaudeville

21 October

Returning

690

Ocean at the end of the lane (2019)

Duke of York

26 October

Transfer from NT

640

Moulin Rouge

Piccadilly

Autumn 21

UK Premiere

1232

Drifters Girl

Garrick

4 November

New Drifters musical

732

Life of Pi

Wyndhams

14th November 2021

Transfer from Sheffield

759

Dear Evan Hansen (2019)

Noel Coward

26 October

Returning

872

The Book of Mormons (2013)

Prince of Wales

5th November 2021

Returning with some rewrites

1160

To Kill a Mockingbird

Gielgud

10 March 2022

New production

986