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62 Years Informing International & UK Visitors<br />

Est. 1956 <strong>Is</strong>sue 3117<br />

Friday <strong>14th</strong> <strong>Sept</strong>ember, 2018


Welcome to <strong>London</strong><br />

3<br />

CONTENTS<br />

Events 4<br />

Witness For The Prosecution<br />

The Last Tsar: Blood and Revolution<br />

Stephen Sondheim’s Company Opens<br />

Music 8<br />

<strong>London</strong> Mozart Players Piano Explored<br />

Chris Barber Band 70th Anniversary<br />

Monteverdi Choir Verdi Requiem<br />

Exhibitions 12<br />

British Art Fair<br />

Exhibition Road Pedestrianised<br />

Body Worlds Opens in <strong>London</strong><br />

Theatre 16<br />

Allelujah!<br />

Kinky Boots Final <strong>London</strong> Company<br />

Pinter at the Pinter<br />

Twelfth Night at Wilton’s<br />

© <strong>This</strong> is <strong>London</strong> Magazine Limited<br />

<strong>This</strong> is <strong>London</strong> at the Olympic Park<br />

Stour Space, 7 Roach Road,<br />

Fish <strong>Is</strong>land, <strong>London</strong> E3 2PA<br />

Telephone: 020 7434 1281<br />

www.til.com www.thisislondonmagazine.com<br />

Whilst every care is taken in the preparation of this<br />

magazine and in the handling of all the material<br />

supplied, neither the Publishers nor their agents<br />

accept responsibility for any damage, errors or<br />

omissions, however these may be caused.<br />

<strong>London</strong> is the undisputed theatre capital of the<br />

world. I am delighted that last year was a record<br />

year for the capital’s theatre business with box<br />

office revenues topping the £700 million mark<br />

and the success of musicals in particular helping<br />

to push theatre audiences past 15 million for the<br />

first time since audience records began more<br />

than 30 years ago.<br />

<strong>London</strong> Theatre is also great value for money – a lot cheaper than across the pond.<br />

I am delighted to currently be producing the astonishing Broadway revival of The<br />

King and I at the <strong>London</strong> Palladium with a range of tickets prices to suit all budgets.<br />

We opened to extraordinary reviews at the <strong>London</strong> Palladium, a magnificent<br />

2,286-seat Grade II heritage listed theatre in Argyll Street near Oxford Circus. From<br />

the roster of stars that have played there and many televised performances, it is<br />

arguably the most famous theatre in the world, especially for musical variety shows.<br />

Throughout my career, I have been lucky enough to produce or co-produce musicals<br />

and drama in the West End, internationally and on national tours, but what I really<br />

relish is the sheer enjoyment that live entertainment brings to people of all ages as<br />

well as all walks of life.<br />

Night after night The King and I is bringing such pleasure to theatregoers many of<br />

whom are on their first visit to <strong>London</strong>. The musical's plot is as significant now as<br />

ever, relating the experiences of Anna, a British schoolteacher hired as part of the<br />

King of Siam’s (Thailand) drive to modernise his country. The relationship between<br />

the King and Anna is marked by conflict through much of the piece, as well as by a<br />

love to which neither can admit. Making their West End debuts are the original<br />

Broadway stars; reprising her Tony Award-winning performance and ‘Broadway<br />

musical’s undisputed Queen’ – The Sunday Times, Kelli O’Hara (Anna), Tony and<br />

Oscar nominee Ken Watanabe (The King) ‘A powerhouse’ – The Times.<br />

With one of the finest scores ever written, The King and I is a testament to the lavish<br />

heritage of gloriously romantic musical theatre. I hope you have an unforgettable<br />

time in <strong>London</strong> – theatre capital of the world!<br />

Sir Howard Panter Producer, The King and I<br />

VISITOR INFORMATION<br />

Emergencies 999 Police Ambulance Fire<br />

24 Hour Casualty 020 8746 8000<br />

Dentistry 0808 155 3256<br />

Victim Support 0845 30 30 900<br />

free and confidential service<br />

Visit <strong>London</strong> 020 7234 5833<br />

Heathrow Airport 0844 335 1801<br />

Gatwick Airport 0844 892 0322<br />

Taxis 020 7272 5471<br />

Dry Cleaner 7491 3426 Florist 7831 6776<br />

Optician 7581 6336 Watches 7493 5916<br />

Weather 0870 9000100<br />

t h i s i s l o n d o n m a g a z i n e • t h i s i s l o n d o n o n l i n e


4<br />

Photo: Sheila Burnett<br />

Photo: Ellie-Kurttz<br />

WITNESS FOR THE PROSECUTION<br />

BY AGATHA CHRISTIE<br />

Leonard Vole is accused of murdering<br />

a widow to inherit her wealth. The stakes<br />

are high. Will Leonard survive the<br />

shocking witness testimony? Will he be<br />

able to convince the jury of his innocence<br />

and escape the hangman’s noose? The<br />

acclaimed production of Agatha Christie’s<br />

classic courtroom play, Witness For The<br />

Prosecution, was recognised at this year’s<br />

Olivier Awards with a nomination for Best<br />

Revival, as well as being the only work by<br />

a female writer included in the categories<br />

of Best Revival, or Best New Play.<br />

The production has captured the<br />

imagination of audiences who have<br />

experienced the drama inside the unique<br />

setting of County Hall’s ornate Chamber<br />

on <strong>London</strong>’s iconic South Bank. Eleanor<br />

Lloyd Productions and Rebecca Stafford<br />

Productions have also received ongoing<br />

support from Lambeth Council, following<br />

the news that Witness for the Prosecution<br />

is shortlisted as a finalist in the <strong>London</strong><br />

Building Excellence Awards 2018.<br />

Director Lucy Bailey (Love From A<br />

Stranger, The Graduate, Titus Andronicus)<br />

thrillingly places the audience in the thick<br />

of the action, with some even watching<br />

from the jury box, as this gripping tale of<br />

justice, passion and betrayal unfolds<br />

around them.<br />

Tickets are available from the box office<br />

on 0844 815 7141, and the production is<br />

booking through to 31 March next year.<br />

SCIENCE MUSEUM TO EXPLORE<br />

MURDER OF RUSSIA’S LAST TSAR<br />

A new exhibition, opening at the<br />

Science Museum on 21 <strong>Sept</strong>ember will<br />

investigate the role of science in the<br />

extraordinary lives and deaths of Tsar<br />

Nicholas II and his family, and take<br />

visitors behind the scenes of one of the<br />

greatest mysteries of the 20th century.<br />

Set against a turbulent backdrop of<br />

social upheaval and war between 1900<br />

and 1918, The Last Tsar: Blood and<br />

Revolution will explore the significant<br />

influence of medicine on the private<br />

lives of the imperial family during this<br />

period and the advances in medicine<br />

and forensic science over 70 years later<br />

that transformed the investigation into<br />

their sudden disappearance. Visitors will<br />

be able to examine evidence from the<br />

scene of the execution, from dentures of<br />

the imperial physician and a diamond<br />

earring belonging to the Tsarina, to an<br />

icon peppered with bullet holes, and<br />

delve into the remarkable modern<br />

forensic investigation which set out to<br />

piece together the events of that night.<br />

Xray of the hand of Nicholas II, Emperor of Russia © Harvard Medical Library<br />

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6<br />

Photo: Dewynters.<br />

MAMMA MIA! THE PARTY TO OPEN<br />

AT THE O2 IN SPRING 2019<br />

Executive producer Björn Ulvaeus and<br />

producer Ingrid Sutej have announced<br />

that Mamma Mia! The Party, an<br />

immersive theatrical and dining<br />

experience launched in Stockholm, will<br />

take up residency in a specially-adapted<br />

venue within <strong>London</strong>’s The O2. The<br />

<strong>London</strong> production of Mamma Mia! The<br />

Party is set to open late Spring 2019,<br />

with tickets going on sale this Autumn.<br />

When Björn Ulvaeus watched people<br />

at the musical Mamma Mia! having such<br />

a good time, getting into party mood by<br />

the end of the show, he thought to<br />

himself, ‘What if this could continue<br />

somewhere else?’ The obvious place<br />

would be in a taverna on the island of<br />

Skopelos, where most exteriors of the<br />

first Mamma Mia! film were shot. <strong>This</strong><br />

imagined and wonderfully exotic Greek<br />

taverna – and its equally exotic landlord<br />

Nikos, his family and friends – became<br />

the home of Mamma Mia! The Party,<br />

which first opened in Stockholm in<br />

January 2016 where it is now in its third<br />

sold-out year.<br />

Led by Steve Tompkins of architects<br />

Haworth Tompkins, work has begun on<br />

transforming one of the venues within<br />

The O2 into Nikos’ Taverna, and guests<br />

will feel as if they’re right in the heart of<br />

a Greek island paradise, sitting around<br />

tables in the taverna’s courtyard<br />

complete with a fountain, amongst olive<br />

trees and bougainvillea. While the story<br />

of Nikos and his family plays out in front<br />

of them, an audience of around 500<br />

people will be able to eat great<br />

Mediterranean food, drink, and even<br />

have the opportunity to dance along to<br />

ABBA songs.<br />

Björn Ulvaeus said of Mamma Mia!<br />

The Party’s future <strong>London</strong> home, ‘We<br />

have long admired The O2 and the huge<br />

entertainment success it has become<br />

under the ownership and management of<br />

AEG. We believe bringing Mamma Mia!<br />

The Party to The O2 will add to this<br />

already vibrant cultural destination and<br />

provide the perfect location for our<br />

exciting new show.’<br />

The cast of Company.<br />

STEPHEN SONDHEIM AND GEORGE<br />

FURTH’S MUSICAL COMPANY<br />

Marianne Elliott’s highly anticipated<br />

new production of George Furth and<br />

Stephen Sondheim’s Company opens at<br />

the Gielgud Theatre on 17 October.<br />

At Bobbie’s 35th birthday party, all<br />

her friends are wondering why she isn’t<br />

married; why she can’t find the right man<br />

and why she hasn’t settled down to have<br />

a family. The multi-award winning<br />

musical comedy about life, love and<br />

marriage includes Stephen Sondheim’s<br />

iconic songs, The Ladies who Lunch,<br />

Being Alive, Side by Side and You Could<br />

Drive a Person Crazy.<br />

Marianne Elliott, Artistic Director of<br />

Elliott & Harper Productions, a company<br />

she founded in 2016 with producer<br />

Chris Harper, was awarded an OBE in<br />

the 2018 Queen’s Birthday Honour’s List<br />

for her services to theatre. Elliott is the<br />

first woman in Broadway history to win<br />

two Tony Awards for Best Director and<br />

her recent Broadway transfer of Tony<br />

Kushner’s Angels in America received<br />

the 2018 Tony Award for Best Revival of<br />

a Play. Marianne’s ground-breaking<br />

production of The Curious Incident of<br />

the Dog in the Night-Time received<br />

7 Olivier Awards in <strong>London</strong>, including<br />

Best New Play and Best Director and<br />

5 Tony Awards for its run on Broadway,<br />

including Best Play and Best Director<br />

and continues to tour internationally.<br />

War Horse, which she co-directed has<br />

been seen by 7 million people worldwide<br />

to date.<br />

Photo: Helen Maybanks.<br />

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HARD ROCK CAFE LONDON TO HOST<br />

FASHION SHOW<br />

There’s only one place to be for this<br />

season’s forthcoming Fashion Week and<br />

that’s the Hard Rock Cafe <strong>London</strong><br />

Fashion Show on Wednesday<br />

19 <strong>Sept</strong>ember. Celebrating Fashion<br />

Week in style, Hard Rock Cafe <strong>London</strong><br />

will host what promises to be a very<br />

special preview of some of the hottest<br />

autumn period Hard Rock fashions<br />

including the ‘<strong>This</strong> <strong>Is</strong> My Journey’ line<br />

and the classic and timeless original<br />

Hard Rock tee, all available from the<br />

Rock Shop.<br />

Modelling in the show will be this<br />

year’s Hard Rock Ambassadors, who will<br />

take to the stage for a live music night<br />

after the fashion show. For £2,<br />

fashionistas will be treated to the fashion<br />

show with doors opening from 18.00.<br />

For entry to the live music night that<br />

follows, tickets are £5.<br />

Beginning with an Eric Clapton guitar,<br />

Hard Rock owns the world's greatest<br />

collection of music memorabilia, which<br />

is displayed at its locations around the<br />

globe. Hard Rock is also known for its<br />

collectible fashion and music-related<br />

merchandise, Hard Rock Live<br />

performance venues and an awardwinning<br />

website.<br />

The nearest tube station to Hard Rock<br />

Cafe is Hyde Park Corner, which is on<br />

the Piccadilly Line. For bookings,<br />

telephone 020 7514 1700.<br />

HOGWARTS AFTER DARK RETURNS<br />

TO WARNER BROS STUDIO TOUR<br />

Following last year’s incredibly<br />

popular ‘Hogwarts After Dark’ events,<br />

Warner Bros. Studio Tour <strong>London</strong> is<br />

once again inviting brave witches,<br />

wizards and Muggles to enjoy a magical<br />

Hallowe’en evening on the set of the<br />

Hogwarts Great Hall on 26-28 October.<br />

Guests attending ‘Hogwarts after Dark’<br />

will begin their magical evening with<br />

smoking dry ice cocktails and canapés<br />

before stepping onto the red carpet<br />

through the doors of the wizarding<br />

school into the Great Hall, which will be<br />

completely transformed for Hallowe’en.<br />

The Great Hall will be decorated with<br />

over 100 floating pumpkins, as seen on<br />

screen in Harry Potter and the<br />

Philosopher’s Stone.<br />

After stepping into the actual Great<br />

Hall set that was used for filming, guests<br />

will enjoy a delicious two-course dinner<br />

and drinks surrounded by the original<br />

props and costumes. All before grabbing<br />

a lantern and following the spiders into<br />

the newly opened Forbidden Forest<br />

where dessert will be served in the<br />

company of magical creatures such as<br />

Buckbeak the Hippogriff and Aragog the<br />

Acromantula.<br />

Throughout the evening, Death Eaters<br />

will be roaming the Tour dressed in the<br />

original costumes from the film series<br />

allowing guests to see up close the<br />

intricate details of the embroidered robes<br />

and hand-painted masks.<br />

HARVEST STOMP FESTIVAL AT<br />

QUEEN ELIZABETH OLYMPIC PARK<br />

Visitors will be able to join in the end<br />

of summer celebration at the Harvest<br />

Stomp festival at Queen Elizabeth<br />

Olympic Park on Sunday 23 <strong>Sept</strong>ember<br />

and embrace the music, dance, activities<br />

and entertainment taking place<br />

throughout the day.<br />

There will be something for everyone<br />

on the Main Stage with live music and<br />

dance, including performances from the<br />

Belles of <strong>London</strong> City and License to<br />

Ceilidh. Or simply stroll into the autumn<br />

season by visiting the variety of world<br />

food and drink stalls with vegan and<br />

vegetarian options. Alternatively, enjoy<br />

a range of outdoor activities and<br />

workshops for all ages including<br />

traditional garden games, arts and crafts<br />

with Makendo along with micro brewery<br />

demonstrations for adults.<br />

Queen Elizabeth Olympic Park opened<br />

in April 2014 following the 18 month<br />

transformation programme of the<br />

<strong>London</strong> 2012 Olympic Park. It is now<br />

home to six former Olympic and<br />

Paralympic venues, the Copper Box<br />

Arena, Lee Valley Hockey and Tennis<br />

Centre, Lee Valley VeloPark, <strong>London</strong><br />

Aquatics Centre and <strong>London</strong> Stadium<br />

where visitors can take part in sport,<br />

enjoy watching world class athletes<br />

compete or experience concerts or arts<br />

and culture events.<br />

The Harvest Stomp will take place<br />

near the Timber Lodge Café.<br />

7<br />

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8<br />

LONDON MOZART PLAYERS<br />

PIANO EXPLORED CONCERT SERIES<br />

<strong>London</strong> Mozart Players celebrates its<br />

70th birthday season with an exciting<br />

Piano Explored lunchtime series from<br />

October 2018 to March 2019 at<br />

St John’s Smith Square (SW1). In a<br />

whistle-stop hour, Howard Shelley will<br />

lead the orchestra in his much loved and<br />

hugely engaging repertoire<br />

deconstructions, followed by a full<br />

performance of the chosen works: and<br />

this season he is joined by LMP<br />

musicians performing double and triple<br />

concerti alongside him at the piano.<br />

All lunch time concerts will take place<br />

from 13.05 - 14.00.<br />

Packed with music to highlight the<br />

talent within the LMP, this season<br />

includes a sparkling selection of works<br />

by Beethoven, Shostakovich, Hummel<br />

and Haydn, alongside Mozart, with a few<br />

surprises along the way. It’s a superb<br />

way to celebrate this significant<br />

milestone birthday in the orchestra’s<br />

history; the concerts are lots of fun and<br />

there’s a real connection between<br />

orchestra, soloists and audience.<br />

Founded in 1949 by Harry Blech, the<br />

<strong>London</strong> Mozart Players is known for its<br />

unmistakable British roots. Over its<br />

seventy years at the forefront of<br />

<strong>London</strong>’s music scene, the LMP has<br />

developed a reputation for adventurous<br />

programming, from Baroque to genrecrossing<br />

contemporary music.<br />

Acclaimed pianist, conductor and<br />

recording artist Howard Shelley has<br />

performed worldwide at major venues<br />

and with top-flight orchestras,<br />

particularly in the combined role of<br />

conductor and soloist.<br />

Whether you work at Westminster,<br />

travel in from the country, or you are<br />

taking a break in <strong>London</strong>, the LMP<br />

Piano Explored series is truly the best<br />

way to spend a lunch break. The<br />

concerts are an hour long, and tickets<br />

are just £15, so if you have no time<br />

limits, why not grab a bite to eat in the<br />

Footstool Restaurant in the crypt at the<br />

stunning St John’s, enjoy a sublime<br />

concert, and then wander around this<br />

iconic historic area with visits to<br />

Westminster Abbey or the Houses of<br />

Parliament?<br />

Tickets are available from the box<br />

office on 020 7222 1061. For more<br />

information visit www.sjss.org.uk<br />

VERDI’S REQUIEM PERFORMED BY<br />

MONTEVERDI CHOIR<br />

Monteverdi Choir and Orchestre<br />

Révolutionnaire et Romantique, led by<br />

Sir John Eliot Gardiner will stage a<br />

special one-off performance of Giuseppe<br />

Verdi’s legendary Messa da Requiem at<br />

<strong>London</strong>’s Westminster Cathedral on<br />

18 <strong>Sept</strong>ember at 19.30. The performance<br />

is dedicated to the memory of Richard<br />

Fitzgerald, Monteverdi Choir &<br />

Orchestras’ long-standing stage manager<br />

who sadly passed away from lung<br />

cancer in August 2016. All the profits<br />

from this performance will be donated to<br />

Cancer Research UK in his memory.<br />

The Monteverdi Choir and Orchestra<br />

will be at full strength for this unique<br />

concert with more than 140 musicians<br />

taking to the stage using traditional and<br />

period instruments They will be joined<br />

by a stellar line-up of international<br />

soloists: American soprano Corinne<br />

Winters, Swedish Mezzo-soprano Ann<br />

Hallenberg, Lithuanian tenor Edgaras<br />

Montvidas and Italian bass Gianluca<br />

Buratto. <strong>This</strong> special concert marks 20<br />

years since the Monteverdi ensembles’<br />

last <strong>London</strong> performance of Verdi’s<br />

monumental work which took place at<br />

St Paul’s Cathedral on 13 July, 1998.<br />

Tickets on 0844 844 0444.<br />

Westminster Cathedral.<br />

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10<br />

THE BIG CHRIS BARBER BAND<br />

70TH ANNIVERSARY TOUR<br />

Chris Barber OBE (87) is one of the<br />

last British Jazz legends around and an<br />

icon of traditional jazz in the United<br />

Kingdom. <strong>This</strong> season, he starts<br />

celebrating his 65th anniversary as<br />

leader of his band on a full-time<br />

professional basis and 70th anniversary<br />

on starting his musical career. The<br />

celebratory concert will take place on<br />

21 <strong>Sept</strong>ember at 19.30 at Cadogan Hall.<br />

Since 1949, Chris has been active in<br />

the music scene with promoting,<br />

recording and releasing music and<br />

touring his band. So far, he has released<br />

hundreds of recordings, performed more<br />

than 15,000 concerts in 50 different<br />

countries in five different continents. An<br />

incredible milestone!<br />

Chris Barber is one of the initiators of<br />

pop music today, as he gave stage to<br />

many American blues musicians during<br />

the ’50s for the first time in Europe.<br />

Musicians like Muddy Waters, Sonny<br />

Terry & Brownie McGhee and Big Bill<br />

Broonzy. These musicians later inspired<br />

bands like The Rolling Stones, The<br />

Beatles, and Eric Clapton. Chris and his<br />

band are respected by many other jazz,<br />

blues and pop musicians, like Van<br />

Morrison, John Mayall, Eric Clapton,<br />

Bill Wyman, Mark Knopfler, Paul Jones<br />

and many more.<br />

Chris Barber is last of the Mohicans<br />

with a spectacular band with one of the<br />

best British jazz musicians on stage. The<br />

BIG (10-piece) Chris Barber Band,<br />

inspired by the great Ken Colyer Jazz<br />

Men, features everything from New<br />

Orleans to blues to late 20’s Ellington,<br />

played with extraordinary panache and<br />

skill. On this special night, you will hear<br />

songs from that age and Chris’<br />

favourites songs like Bourbon Street<br />

Parade, Jubilee Stomp, Petite Fleur, Ice<br />

Cream, When the Saints Go Marching<br />

In, and many more. The audience can<br />

count on an exciting evening of high<br />

quality jazz and blues, which will appeal<br />

in equal measure to the aficionado and<br />

the newcomer.<br />

For tickets, telephone the box office<br />

on 020 7730 4500.<br />

Chris Barber.<br />

AT LAST – THE ETTA JAMES STORY<br />

At Last – The Etta James Story,<br />

returns to the UK this autumn, starring<br />

the sensational Vika Bull. Having wowed<br />

British audiences in 2017, Vika and the<br />

Essential R&B Band start a 23 date visit,<br />

kicking off in High Wycombe next week<br />

and concluding with a performance at<br />

Cadogan Hall on Tuesday 23 October.<br />

Following its world premiere in<br />

Melbourne in 2013 At Last – The Etta<br />

James Story repeatedly packed theatres<br />

throughout Australia and New Zealand.<br />

In 2016 the show returned to Melbourne<br />

for a sell-out season at The Arts Centre<br />

and July saw the show triumph for a<br />

third season at The Sydney Opera House.<br />

The show tells the story of soul<br />

legend Etta James’ turbulent life and<br />

features some of her most beloved<br />

songs including Tell Mama, Something’s<br />

Got A Hold On Me, Sugar On The Floor,<br />

the heart rending I’d Rather Go Blind,<br />

her iconic signature song At Last and<br />

more. Vika puts her heart and soul into<br />

this unforgettable show and is joined on<br />

stage by some of Australia’s finest and<br />

funkiest musicians.<br />

During a long and tumultuous career<br />

that saw her win six Grammy Awards<br />

and a star on The Hollywood Walk Of<br />

Fame, Etta James has influenced a vast<br />

array of artists from Diana Ross, Janis<br />

Joplin, Stevie Wonder, The Rolling<br />

Stones and Rod Stewart and is<br />

acknowledged as inspiring the careers of<br />

a new generation of singers from<br />

Christina Aguilera, Joss Stone, Adele<br />

and the late Amy Winehouse.<br />

Vika Bull.<br />

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WICKED <strong>London</strong> Company. Photo: Matt Crockett.<br />

WICKED PLAYS LANDMARK<br />

5000th PERFORMANCE<br />

WICKED, the ‘gravity-defying Wizard<br />

of Oz prequel’ (Time Out) that tells the<br />

incredible untold story of the Witches of<br />

Oz, played its landmark 5000th<br />

performance on 9 August at <strong>London</strong>’s<br />

Apollo Victoria Theatre.<br />

The hit musical ‘with brains, heart<br />

and courage’ (The Sunday Telegraph)<br />

will celebrate its 12th birthday this<br />

month and is already the <strong>14th</strong> longest<br />

running West End show of all time.<br />

‘One of the most successful West End<br />

shows ever’ (Radio Times), WICKED has<br />

now been seen by more than 9 million<br />

people in <strong>London</strong> alone and is the 7th<br />

longest running show currently playing<br />

in the West End (and the 5th longest<br />

running musical).<br />

Based on the acclaimed, best-selling<br />

novel by Gregory Maguire that<br />

ingeniously re-imagines the stories and<br />

characters created by L Frank Baum in<br />

‘The Wonderful Wizard of Oz’, it tells the<br />

story of an unlikely but profound<br />

friendship between two sorcery students.<br />

Their extraordinary adventures in Oz will<br />

ultimately see them fulfil their destinies<br />

as Glinda The Good and the Wicked<br />

Witch of the West.<br />

The <strong>London</strong> production of the Tony<br />

Award-winning Broadway musical is the<br />

recipient of ten theatregoer-voted<br />

WhatsOnStage Awards (winning ‘Best<br />

West End Show’ on three occasions),<br />

two Olivier Audience Awards and an<br />

Evening Standard Theatre Award.<br />

WICKED UK Executive Producer<br />

Michael McCabe said: ‘We are thrilled to<br />

celebrate 5000 performances of Wicked<br />

at the Apollo Victoria Theatre. It is a<br />

testament to all the incredible work that<br />

goes into maintaining this gigantic<br />

production that we have reached this<br />

remarkable milestone and we are greatly<br />

indebted to all of our production staff,<br />

cast members and musicians. <strong>London</strong><br />

audiences have passionately embraced<br />

Stephen Schwartz and Winnie Holzman’s<br />

extraordinary musical since its UK<br />

premiere in 2006 and we thank them all<br />

for their continued support.’<br />

Alice Fearn and Sophie Evans as Elphaba and Glinda.<br />

WICKED has music and lyrics by<br />

multi Oscar, Golden Globe and Grammy<br />

Award winner Stephen Schwartz and is<br />

adapted for the stage by Winnie<br />

Holzman. Musical staging is by Tony<br />

Award-winner Wayne Cilento and the<br />

production is directed by two-time Tony<br />

Award-winner Joe Mantello.<br />

Through its FOR GOOD programme<br />

and other charitable endeavours, Wicked<br />

supports the remarkable work the Anti-<br />

Bullying Alliance (ABA); Great Ormond<br />

Street Hospital Children’s Charity (GOSH<br />

Charity); the National Literacy Trust; and<br />

the Woodland Trust.<br />

The Tony Award-winning original<br />

Broadway production remains<br />

‘Broadway’s biggest blockbuster’ (The<br />

New York Times) after almost 15 years<br />

and over 6000 performances at the<br />

Gershwin Theatre. Winner of over 100<br />

major awards, the original production<br />

has been performed in more than 130<br />

cities in 16 countries around the world.<br />

WICKED is produced around the<br />

world by Marc Platt, Universal Stage<br />

Productions, The Araca Group, Jon B.<br />

Platt and David Stone. Executive<br />

Producer (UK) Michael McCabe.<br />

Experience this unforgettable musical<br />

and discover that you’ve not been told<br />

the whole story about the Land of Oz...<br />

Box Office telephone 0844 871 3001.<br />

Official UK website and 24hr online<br />

bookings: www.WickedTheMusical.co.uk<br />

Photo: Darren Bell.<br />

11<br />

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12<br />

Gertler: Still life with pears, courtesy Richard Green.<br />

BRITISH ART FAIR AT SAATCHI<br />

GALLERY<br />

The thirtieth edition of the British Art<br />

Fair (previously the 20/21 British Art<br />

Fair) opens at the Saatchi Gallery on<br />

Thursday 20 <strong>Sept</strong>ember.<br />

With 50 galleries and three special<br />

projects, the event promises to be a true<br />

celebration of British art. It remains the<br />

only fair entirely dedicated to Modern<br />

British Art and is timed to take place at a<br />

moment when the market is in a strong<br />

position. Writing in June in the Daily<br />

Telegraph, the art market analyst Colin<br />

Gleadell observed: ‘When you measure<br />

results against expectations, however,<br />

modern British art is outperforming<br />

impressionism and modern art.’ Gleadell<br />

noted the strong performance of<br />

sculpture and Scottish colourists as well<br />

as some significant price inflation. For<br />

example, a relief construction of painted<br />

wooden rectangular shapes by Victor<br />

Pasmore that sold in 1999 for £6,000<br />

sold for £125,000 to an online bidder<br />

and a jazzy abstract by Bridget Riley<br />

quadrupled its price of seven years ago,<br />

selling for £1.6 million.<br />

The presentations at the British Art<br />

Fair range from well-known names<br />

through to discoveries of overlooked<br />

artists. The visitor has the chance to<br />

acquire works ranging from previously<br />

unoffered works by the key names of<br />

Modern British Art through to prints and<br />

works on paper at the more affordable<br />

end of the market.<br />

Amongst the many highlights in the<br />

fair, Richard Green will be showing Mark<br />

Gertler’s ‘Still life – pears’ (1932) and<br />

Terry Frost’s ‘Olive Sun Ride’. Gertler’s<br />

work was commissioned by Cadbury’s as<br />

James Reeve at work. Long & Ryle.<br />

part of a ‘Famous Artist’ series of<br />

chocolate boxes designed by a number<br />

of artists that also included Paul Nash,<br />

Laura Knight and Arthur Rackham.<br />

Frost’s ‘Olive Sun Ride’ (1987)<br />

celebrates the bright sunshine and olive<br />

groves of the Mediterranean and was<br />

acquired directly from the artist by the<br />

leading photographer Roger Mayne.<br />

The Mayor Art Gallery will be<br />

showing works from the collection of<br />

Ray Hughes. The Australian art dealer<br />

acquired British artworks for both his<br />

gallery (located initially in Brisbane and<br />

then in Sydney) and his own collection.<br />

The presentation will include 9 works by<br />

Alfred Wallis from Hughes’ own<br />

collection. It will also include works by<br />

Roger Hilton, Howard Hodgkin, Allen<br />

Jones and Alan Green amongst others.<br />

The critic Richard Dorment described<br />

James Reeve (b.1939) as ‘one of a long<br />

line of British eccentrics’, ‘a miraculous<br />

draughtsman’ and also ‘a true original’.<br />

Reeve painted landscapes in the<br />

Australian outback, Uganda, Haiti and<br />

Madagascar before settling on Mexico<br />

where he produced his most interesting<br />

paintings produced with a virtuoso<br />

technique and filled with idiosyncratic<br />

detailing. Long & Ryle will be showing<br />

works by Reeve at their stand at the fair.<br />

The British Art Fair takes place at the<br />

Saatchi Gallery, Duke of York’s HQ,<br />

King’s Road, SW3 4RY between<br />

Thursday 20 and Sunday 23 <strong>Sept</strong>ember.<br />

The fair is an incarnation of the 20/21<br />

British Art Fair under the new ownership<br />

of Robert and Johnny Sandelson.<br />

Participating galleries in the 2018<br />

edition include Richard Green, Robin<br />

Katz Fine Art, Offer Waterman, Flowers,<br />

Piano Nobile, Beaux Arts, Jonathan<br />

Clark, Osborne Samuel and Redfern<br />

amongst others across all three floors of<br />

the Saatchi Gallery.<br />

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14<br />

Tom Kitchin is an Edinburgh-based<br />

chef and restauranteur with Michelinstarred<br />

The Kitchin to his name, as well<br />

as The Scran & Scallie gastro-pub and<br />

its award-winning sister, Castle Terrace<br />

Restaurant.<br />

For the dinner on 27 <strong>Sept</strong>ember, Tom<br />

has created a unique four-course menu<br />

that celebrates seasonal Scottish<br />

ingredients, highlighting the best of both<br />

land and sea. Guests will be welcomed<br />

with a glass of Moet & Chandon and a<br />

selection of canapes before sitting for<br />

dinner. To begin, there will be Handdived<br />

Orkney scallops baked in their<br />

shell and served with seasonal<br />

vegetables and a white wine, vermouth<br />

and herb sauce, followed by the king<br />

of the sea in a dish of roast fillet of<br />

halibut with Jerusalem artichoke and<br />

black truffle.<br />

Render by Waugh <strong>This</strong>tleston of the Exhibition Road Day of Design.<br />

EXHIBITION ROAD PEDESTRIANISED<br />

FOR LONDON DESIGN FESTIVAL<br />

The Victoria and Albert Museum<br />

(V&A) is collaborating with the Natural<br />

History Museum, Science Museum,<br />

Design Museum, Imperial College<br />

<strong>London</strong> and Brompton Design District to<br />

pedestrianise a section of Exhibition<br />

Road for one day only on Sunday<br />

23 <strong>Sept</strong>ember for the Exhibition Road<br />

Day of Design, a free day of activities<br />

celebrating 10 years of <strong>London</strong> Design<br />

Festival at the V&A.<br />

The <strong>London</strong> Design Festival<br />

(15-23 <strong>Sept</strong>ember) is a city-wide<br />

festival, now in its 16th year, with a<br />

vision to celebrate and promote <strong>London</strong><br />

as the design capital of the world.<br />

As the official Festival hub, the V&A<br />

is presenting a programme of exciting<br />

and innovative installations, displays<br />

and events by some of the world’s most<br />

exciting and innovative designers,<br />

alongside a broad events programme<br />

covering all aspects of design.<br />

Further details are available at the<br />

website www.vam.ac.uk<br />

THE GAME BIRD WELCOMES TOM<br />

KITCHIN FOR GUEST CHEF SERIES<br />

Earlier this year, The Game Bird<br />

launched a series of guest chef dinners,<br />

welcoming many of the greatest chefs<br />

from around the UK to cook in the<br />

critically-acclaimed restaurant within<br />

The Stafford <strong>London</strong>. Following the great<br />

success of events with Michael Wignall<br />

and Lisa Allen, legendary Scottish chef<br />

Tom Kitchin will be hosting the third<br />

dinner in the series on 27 <strong>Sept</strong>ember.<br />

Tom Kitchin<br />

For the main course, guests will be<br />

treated to roasted loin of Borders<br />

venison, autumn fruits and vegetables<br />

and a red wine sauce. Tom is rounding<br />

off the evening with a dessert of Set<br />

Knochraich Farm yogurt, orange<br />

meringue, Granny Smith apple sorbet<br />

and East Lothian sea buckthorn<br />

consomme.<br />

Tom Kitchin will cook alongside the<br />

team at The Game Bird and Culinary<br />

Director of The Stafford <strong>London</strong>, Ben<br />

Tish. Reservations: 020 7518 1234.<br />

Following Tom, the fourth dinner in<br />

The Game Bird Guest Chef Series will be<br />

held on 9 November with the renowned<br />

Mark Sargeant.<br />

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GUNTHER VON HAGENS’ ORIGINAL<br />

BODY WORLDS OPENS IN LONDON<br />

The world-famous exhibition of the<br />

human body, Body Worlds, will open its<br />

new flagship venue, a permanent<br />

museum experience at the <strong>London</strong><br />

Pavilion on 6 October.<br />

Body Worlds will be taking over<br />

28,000sq feet of one of the capital’s<br />

iconic buildings, The <strong>London</strong> Pavilion,<br />

which has been subject to a multimillion-pound<br />

restoration to prepare for<br />

its arrival in the heart of the capital.<br />

Having already attracted over 47<br />

million visitors in more than 130 cities<br />

worldwide, this journey through the<br />

human body comprises an extraordinary<br />

series of exhibitions, the most unique of<br />

which are real human bodies, donated to<br />

be preserved by plastination – the<br />

process invented by Body Worlds’<br />

creator Dr. Gunther von Hagens.<br />

Body Worlds <strong>London</strong>’s 200 exhibits,<br />

curated by creative director Dr. Angelina<br />

Whalley, explore the reproductive,<br />

nervous, cardiovascular, respiratory,<br />

locomotive and metabolic systems in<br />

more detail than has ever previously<br />

been possible, offering an unparalleled<br />

insight into the human body, how it<br />

works, and how best to look after yours.<br />

<strong>This</strong> life-changing experience is a<br />

unique convergence of art, science and<br />

education, defined by its creators’<br />

missions: to make people more healthconscious<br />

– with nearly 70% of visitors<br />

leaving determined to lead a healthier<br />

lifestyle.<br />

Body Worlds is being brought to<br />

<strong>London</strong> by Peter Tabernal, who says: ‘<br />

‘After years of preparation, we’re proud<br />

to be opening the flagship Body Worlds<br />

in the heart of central <strong>London</strong>. It’s the<br />

biggest Body Worlds ever and sure to be<br />

an epic, immersive journey to discover<br />

the magic and mysteries that lie<br />

underneath the skin. We’re incredibly<br />

grateful to the donors who have made<br />

this happen, and to Westminster<br />

Council for the warm welcome and<br />

support. We look forward to forming an<br />

integral part of the local economy and<br />

making a significant contribution to<br />

<strong>London</strong>’s cultural landscape.’<br />

Permanent Body worlds exhibitions<br />

can currently be found in Amsterdam,<br />

Guben, Berlin and Heidelberg, with no<br />

fewer than 7 more travelling exhibitions<br />

currently found all over the world. What<br />

all of these exhibitions have in common,<br />

and what makes them unique, is the use<br />

of the most up-to-date plastination<br />

technology having been created by the<br />

inventor of the process Dr Gunther von<br />

Hagens, and its own morally and legally<br />

fair and robust donation programme.<br />

The glorious nineteenth century<br />

former Music Hall was built as part of<br />

the construction of Shaftesbury Avenue<br />

and is situated at 1 Piccadilly Circus.<br />

The building’s cultural history includes<br />

playing home in its early days to Dr<br />

Khan’s Delectable Museum of Anatomy.<br />

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16<br />

Samuel Barnett (Colin). Members of the cast of Allelujah!. Photos: Manuel Harlan.<br />

ALLELUJAH!<br />

The Bridge Theatre<br />

‘Nobody likes old people. Not even old<br />

people like old people,’ opines a man in a<br />

pinstripe suit. He turns out to be the<br />

Chairman of an NHS Trust fighting the<br />

closure of a local hospital, but you can<br />

hear Alan Bennett’s voice in this<br />

observation – not bitter, but twinkly eyed.<br />

It is possibly the truest statement in the 85<br />

year old playwright’s latest drama,<br />

‘Allelujah’, which is set in a geriatric ward<br />

and would almost certainly not be a top<br />

pick of most theatre goers, were it not<br />

from the pen of a man widely esteemed as<br />

a national treasure.<br />

The drama is both political and<br />

personal, if low key. Colin (Samuel<br />

Barnett) a lycra-clad racing cyclist on an<br />

athletic jaunt from <strong>London</strong> to visit his<br />

old Dad, has grown up to be a gay<br />

management consultant with no<br />

sympathy for the inefficient ‘cosiness’ of<br />

local hospitals. Indeed his advice to the<br />

Minister responsible has been to close it<br />

down. His Dad is an ex-coal miner who<br />

has never forgiven Colin for his sexual<br />

orientation, but vacillates between<br />

hostility and well-hidden paternal pride.<br />

Their relationship could be interesting,<br />

but it is frozen in a snapshot here. You<br />

could say old people’s personalities<br />

rarely develop – unless you count the<br />

mellowing due to memory loss.<br />

Other characters are also more two<br />

dimensions than three. There’s a line-up<br />

of old dears, of course, with their past<br />

lives sketched in like a faded<br />

watercolour. And there’s the staff – a<br />

jolly nurse who runs the geriatric choral<br />

society for example, resulting in unlikely<br />

bursts of song and dance on the ward,<br />

and a stentorian Sister who keeps a<br />

careful list of which patients succumb to<br />

incontinence (as you might suspect, this<br />

turns out badly in the end.)<br />

The most engaging persona on stage<br />

is the warm, intelligent and caring<br />

Dr Valentine, (Sacha Dhawan) an Indian<br />

medic who loves old people (the only<br />

one!), has anglicised his name in order<br />

to fit in locally and lives in terror of<br />

being repatriated since his visa ran out.<br />

We would empathise more with his trials<br />

if they were really believable, however.<br />

No matter how subtly obnoxious<br />

immigration officials may be, I doubt<br />

they would get away with requiring<br />

interviewees to sing ‘Land of Hope and<br />

Glory’ as a test of patriotism.<br />

On the other hand, the saving grace<br />

of the play is its musical interludes and<br />

those are far from realistic. Both Dhawan<br />

and Barnett get to sing solos and their<br />

voices are striking – Colin’s reluctant<br />

Sacha Dhawan (Dr Valentine) and<br />

Simon Williams (Ambrose).<br />

version of ‘Blow the Wind Southerly’<br />

brings a lump to the throat.<br />

In the big numbers, dementia and<br />

disability, loneliness and death are all<br />

pushed joyfully aside as the<br />

octogenarians rise from their wheel<br />

chairs to belt out ‘Good Golly, Miss<br />

Molly’, ‘On the Sunny side of the Street’<br />

and similar. They are reliving their youth<br />

and we live it with them – allelujah!<br />

Sue Webster<br />

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18<br />

Photo: Matt Crockett.<br />

KINKY BOOTS REVEALS FIRST LOOK<br />

AT FINAL LONDON COMPANY<br />

A hit with audiences since it opened in<br />

<strong>Sept</strong>ember 2015, Kinky Boots, the winner<br />

of every major Best Musical award, will<br />

play its final performance at <strong>London</strong>’s<br />

Adelphi Theatre on 12 January 2019. After<br />

celebrating its third birthday in the West<br />

End in <strong>Sept</strong>ember, Kinky Boots will also<br />

embark on an extensive UK tour from<br />

autumn 2018 through 2019.<br />

With a book by Broadway legend and<br />

four-time Tony® Award-winner Harvey<br />

Fierstein (La Cage aux Folles), songs by<br />

Grammy® and Tony® Award-winning<br />

pop icon Cyndi Lauper and direction<br />

and choreography by two-time Tony®<br />

Award-winner Jerry Mitchell (Legally<br />

Blonde, Hairspray), this joyous musical<br />

celebration is about the friendships we<br />

discover, and the belief that you can<br />

change the world when you change your<br />

mind.<br />

Inspired by true events, Kinky Boots<br />

takes you from a gentlemen’s shoe factory<br />

in Northampton to the glamorous catwalks<br />

of Milan. Charlie Price is struggling to<br />

live up to his father’s expectations and<br />

continue the family business of Price &<br />

Son. With the factory’s future hanging in<br />

the balance, help arrives in the unlikely<br />

but spectacular form of Lola, a fabulous<br />

performer in need of some sturdy new<br />

stilettos.<br />

With direction and choreography by<br />

two-time Tony® Award-winner Jerry<br />

Mitchell (Legally Blonde, Hairspray),<br />

Kinky Boots is the winner of every major<br />

Best Musical award including three Olivier<br />

Awards, three WhatsOnStage Awards as<br />

well as six Broadway Tony® Awards.<br />

ARISTOCRATS<br />

Donmar until 22 <strong>Sept</strong>ember<br />

The ‘Big House’ in Lyndsey Turner’s<br />

slow burn revival of the late Brian Friel’s<br />

1979 family drama is tiny – Es Devlin’s<br />

design reduces Ballybeg Hall to a<br />

perfectly fitted out doll’s house which<br />

retains the memories of earlier days when<br />

life was very different for those born and<br />

raised there.<br />

The Catholic O’Donnells’ once splendid<br />

Georgian home is crumbling – just like<br />

the dying paterfamilias Father, a retired<br />

judge now reduced to communicating<br />

with his family via a baby monitor. Four of<br />

his adult offspring have gathered for the<br />

forthcoming marriage of the youngest –<br />

fragile, piano-playing Claire – to a much<br />

older and far from suitable man. <strong>This</strong> is<br />

no love match.<br />

But the siblings’ reunion proves to be<br />

the occasion of a funeral rather than a<br />

wedding. And, as visiting American<br />

academic Tom (there to research the<br />

‘upper strata of Roman Catholic society in<br />

rural Ireland’) soon realises, fact and<br />

fantasy merge in the memories of this<br />

dysfunctional family, historically isolated<br />

by status from the local villagers and by<br />

religion from wealthy Protestant<br />

landowners.<br />

Elaine Cassidy’s elegant, unhappy<br />

alcoholic Alice now lives in <strong>London</strong> with<br />

her husband. Older Judith (Eileen Walsh)<br />

who stayed at home is worn down by the<br />

efforts of caring for their father and a<br />

house falling into disrepair, despite the<br />

devoted efforts of David Ganly’s robust<br />

handyman, Willie.<br />

David Dawson invests misfit son<br />

Casimir (who admits that he might well<br />

have been seen as the village idiot had he<br />

come from a less privileged background)<br />

with a febrile intensity. Unable – or<br />

unwilling – to distinguish reality from<br />

fantasy, he’s constantly making attempts to<br />

establish telephone contact with a wife<br />

and children back in Hamburg (who may<br />

or may not exist) and recounting<br />

impossible details of past visitors to the<br />

house.<br />

And as Friel’s play (with its undeniable<br />

Chekhovian influence) progresses, the<br />

splendour of what once was is gradually<br />

revealed as, sliver by sliver, piece by<br />

piece, the layers are peeled away from the<br />

painted backdrop.<br />

Louise Kingsley<br />

Elaine Cassidy (Alice) and Emmet<br />

Kirwan (Eamon) in Aristocrats at the<br />

Donmar Warehouse.<br />

Photo: Johan Persson<br />

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Kimberley Blake.<br />

NEW CAST FOR THE PHANTOM OF<br />

THE OPERA<br />

As The Phantom of the Opera heads<br />

in to its 33rd year, Andrew Lloyd Webber<br />

and Cameron Mackintosh have<br />

announced that Tim Howar will play<br />

‘The Phantom’ from 3 <strong>Sept</strong>ember to<br />

8 December. Also joining the cast will be<br />

Kimberly Blake as ‘Carlotta Giudicelli’<br />

and Ross Dawes as ‘Monsieur Firmin’.<br />

Tim Howar joins Phantom following<br />

his recent triumph as ‘Freddie Trumper’<br />

in Chess at the <strong>London</strong> Coliseum. His<br />

West End theatre credits include ‘Stacee<br />

Jaxx’ in ‘Rock of Ages’ at the Shaftesbury<br />

Theatre and Garrick Theatre, ‘Stu’ in<br />

‘Tonight’s The Night’ at the Victoria<br />

Palace and ‘Ozzie’ in ‘On The Town’ at<br />

the <strong>London</strong> Coliseum.<br />

In October 2016, the <strong>London</strong><br />

production of The Phantom of the Opera<br />

celebrated its 30th Anniversary with a<br />

special gala performance at Her<br />

Majesty’s Theatre. It opened at Her<br />

Majesty's Theatre on 9 October 1986<br />

starred Michael Crawford as 'The<br />

Phantom' and Sarah Brightman as<br />

'Christine.' It is produced by Cameron<br />

Mackintosh and The Really Useful<br />

Theatre Company Limited.<br />

Her Majesty’s Theatre box office is<br />

on 020 7087 7762.<br />

PINTER AT THE PINTER<br />

Marking the 10th anniversary of the<br />

revered playwright’s death, Pinter at the<br />

Pinter features all Pinter’s short plays,<br />

alongside a selection of his poems and<br />

sketches.<br />

Pinter at the Pinter is an unparalleled<br />

event featuring the short plays written by<br />

the greatest British playwright of the<br />

20th Century, in the theatre that bears<br />

his name. They have never been<br />

performed together in a season of this<br />

kind. Each play runs for a limited<br />

number of performances.<br />

The season will be presented in<br />

repertoire by a world-class cast, many of<br />

whom were Harold Pinter’s friends and<br />

frequent collaborators. The cast includes<br />

Keith Allen, Jessica Barden, Ron Cook,<br />

Phil Davies, Danny Dyer, Paapa Essiedu,<br />

Lee Evans, Martin Freeman, Rupert<br />

Graves, Tamsin Greig, Jane Horrocks,<br />

Celia Imrie, John Macmillan, Emma<br />

Naomi, Tracy Ann Oberman, Kate<br />

O’Flynn, Jonjo O’Neill, Abraham<br />

Popoola, Sir Antony Sher, John Simm,<br />

Hayley Squires, Maggie Steed, David<br />

Suchet, Meera Syal, Luke Thallon,<br />

Russell Tovey, Penelope Wilton and<br />

Nicholas Woodeson.<br />

Mark Rylance will make two special<br />

charity performances of Art, Truth and<br />

Politics, Pinter’s Nobel Prize Lecture, in<br />

aid of the Stop the War Coalition.<br />

Harold Pinter.<br />

Photo: Martin Rosenbaum.<br />

WATERMILL THEATRE’S TWELFTH<br />

NIGHT AT WILTON’S MUSIC HALL<br />

Following the success of its run at<br />

The Watermill and its UK and<br />

international tour last year, The<br />

Watermill Ensemble will revive Twelfth<br />

Night at Wilton’s Music Hall from 12 to<br />

22 <strong>Sept</strong>ember.<br />

Renowned for its bold, progressive<br />

and collaborative approach to<br />

Shakespeare, The Watermill Ensemble<br />

re-imagines the play in the hedonistic<br />

1920s, where prohibition is rife. Fused<br />

with innovative staging and actormusicianship,<br />

the radical spirit of Duke<br />

Ellington and Ella Fitzgerald collides<br />

with the contemporary influence of<br />

Postmodern Jukebox to create a dizzying<br />

and beautiful version of Shakespeare’s<br />

perfect play.<br />

Twelfth Night is directed by Paul Hart<br />

and designed by Katie Lias. Sound<br />

design is by David Gregory, movement<br />

by Tom Jackson Greaves and musical<br />

direction by Ned Rudkins-Stow.<br />

Director, Paul Hart: ‘A jazz club seems<br />

the perfect setting for Twelfth Night,<br />

given the play's obsession with music,<br />

love and excess. Featuring live music<br />

performed by our multi-talented<br />

company, the soundtrack is 1920's<br />

influenced with a modern twist.’<br />

Wilton’s is between Wapping and<br />

Whitechapel, close to the historic Tower<br />

of <strong>London</strong> and St Katherine Docks.<br />

Box office 020 7702 2789.<br />

Photo: Scott Rylander<br />

19<br />

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20<br />

Cult! will be performed on Monday<br />

24 <strong>Sept</strong>ember as part of From Page to<br />

Stage. Cult! is a musical comedy based<br />

on the true psychological study of a<br />

modern day cult that predicted the end<br />

of the world.<br />

CASTING ANNOUNCED FOR THE<br />

SEVEN NEW MUSICALS<br />

The full cast has been announced for<br />

Aria Entertainment’s prestigious festival<br />

of new musical theatre, From Page To<br />

Stage (FPTS), which returns with gusto<br />

for a 6th successful year from<br />

<strong>Sept</strong>ember at <strong>London</strong>’s Southwark<br />

Playhouse. Jane Deitch has cast the<br />

37-strong company, who will each star<br />

in one of the seven brand new musicals<br />

featured in the 2018 festival.<br />

PLAYS<br />

FOXFINDER<br />

Olivier Award-winner Iwan Rheon stars in the<br />

West End premiere of Dawn King’s awardwinning<br />

thriller. The play explores belief,<br />

desire and responsibility as the Foxfinder<br />

arrives at a farm to investigate a potential<br />

contamination.<br />

AMBASSADORS THEATRE<br />

West Street, WC2 (020 7395 5405)<br />

ALLELUJAH!<br />

Alan Bennett’s new play is directed by<br />

Nicholas Hytner, and tells the story of a<br />

hospital in a small town in the Pennines<br />

threatened with closure as the NHS looks to<br />

improve efficiency. Until 29 <strong>Sept</strong>ember.<br />

BRIDGE THEATRE<br />

One Tower Bridge, SE1 (0843 208 1846)<br />

THE COMEDY ABOUT A BANK ROBBERY<br />

One enormous diamond, eight incompetent<br />

crooks and a snoozing security guard. What<br />

could possibly go right?<br />

CRITERION THEATRE<br />

Piccadilly Circus, (020 7492 0810)<br />

THE PLAY THAT GOES WRONG<br />

A Polytechnic amateur drama group are<br />

putting on a 1920s murder mystery and<br />

everything that can go wrong... does!<br />

DUCHESS THEATRE<br />

Catherine Street, WC2 (0330 333 4810)<br />

KING LEAR<br />

Jonathan Munby’s explosive revival of<br />

Shakespeare’s epic tragedy with a celebrated<br />

cast led by Ian McKellen as the embittered<br />

monarch in a fractured kingdom.<br />

DUKE OF YORK’S THEATRE<br />

St Martin’s Lane, WC2 (020 7492 1552)<br />

THE WOMAN IN BLACK<br />

An innocent outsider, a suspicious rural<br />

community, a gothic house and a misty marsh<br />

are the ingredients of this Victorian ghost story.<br />

FORTUNE THEATRE<br />

Russell Street, WC2 (0844 871 7626)<br />

PINTER ONE<br />

Opening the Pinter at the Pinter season is a<br />

dynamic collection of his most potent and<br />

dangerous political plays.<br />

HAROLD PINTER THEATRE<br />

Panton Street, SW1 (0844 871 7627)<br />

Royal National Theatre<br />

Plays in repertory<br />

OLIVIER THEATRE<br />

EXIT THE KING<br />

<strong>This</strong> great tragi-comedy is brought to life on<br />

stage this summer, the first time Eugène<br />

Ionesco’s work has been performed at the<br />

National Theatre.<br />

ANTONY & CLEOPATRA<br />

Ralph Fiennes and Sophie Okonedo play the<br />

famous fated couple. At the fringes of a wartorn<br />

empire the Egyptian Queen Cleopatra and<br />

Mark Antony have fallen fiercely in love.<br />

LYTTELTON THEATRE<br />

THE LEHMAN TRILOGY<br />

The story of a family and a company that<br />

changed the world, told in three parts on a<br />

single evening. With Simon Russell Beale,<br />

Adam Godley and Ben Miles.<br />

I'M NOT RUNNING<br />

David Hare's 18th play to open at the National<br />

Theatre, bringing his characteristic themes of<br />

British politics and public versus private<br />

relationships to the Lyttelton stage.<br />

DORFMAN THEATRE<br />

THE PRISONER<br />

Peter Brook and his long-time collaborator<br />

Marie-Hélène Estienne return to <strong>London</strong> with<br />

a provocative study of what it means to be free.<br />

STORIES<br />

Following the critically acclaimed Consent,<br />

Nina Raine returns to the National Theatre with<br />

A funny and touching new play about the<br />

fertilisation of an idea.<br />

NATIONAL THEATRE<br />

South Bank, SE1 (020 7452 3000)<br />

THE INHERITANCE: PART ONE<br />

Following a sold-out run at the Young Vic,<br />

Matthew Lopez's major two-part world<br />

premiere questions how much we owe to<br />

those who lived and loved before us. Directed<br />

by Stephen Daldry.<br />

NOEL COWARD THEATRE<br />

St. Martin’s Lane, WC2 (0844 482 5140)<br />

HARRY POTTER AND THE CURSED<br />

CHILD PARTS I & II<br />

Stage play based on the Harry Potter franchise<br />

written by Jack Thorne, based on an original<br />

story by J.K Rowling.<br />

PALACE THEATRE<br />

Shaftesbury Avenue, W1 (0330 333 4813)<br />

THE JUNGLE<br />

Experience the intense, moving and uplifting<br />

encounters between refugees in the Calais<br />

camp from many different countries and the<br />

volunteers who arrived from the UK.<br />

PLAYHOUSE THEATRE<br />

Northumberland Ave, WC2 (0844 871 7631)<br />

FAULTY TOWERS DINING EXPERIENCE<br />

Inspired by one of Britain's greatest ever<br />

comedy series, this 2 hour interactive<br />

production is set in a restaurant where you the<br />

audience are the diners.<br />

RADISSON BLU EDWARDIAN<br />

Bloomsbury Street, (0845 1544 145)<br />

THE MOUSETRAP<br />

Agatha Christie’s whodunnit is the longest<br />

running play of its kind in the history of<br />

British theatre.<br />

ST MARTIN’S THEATRE<br />

West Street, WC2 (0844 499 1515)<br />

THE IMPORTANCE OF BEING EARNEST<br />

Wilde’s much-loved masterpiece throws love,<br />

logic and language into the air to make one of<br />

theatre’s most dazzling firework displays.<br />

VAUDEVILLE THEATRE<br />

Strand, WC2 (020 7400 1257)<br />

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MUSICALS<br />

KINKY BOOTS<br />

Inspired by a true story and based on the<br />

Miramax film, the show tells the story of<br />

Charlie Price who has reluctantly inherited his<br />

father's Northampton shoe factory.<br />

ADELPHI THEATRE<br />

Strand, WC2 (020 3725 7060)<br />

WICKED<br />

Hit Broadway story of how a clever,<br />

misunderstood girl with emerald green skin<br />

and a girl who is beautiful and popular turn<br />

into the Wicked Witch of the West and Glinda<br />

the Good Witch in the Land of Oz.<br />

APOLLO VICTORIA THEATRE<br />

Wilton Road, SW1 (0844 826 8000)<br />

EVERYBODY’S TALKING ABOUT JAMIE<br />

New feel good musical starring John McCrea<br />

transfers to the West End.<br />

APOLLO THEATRE<br />

Shaftesbury Avenue, W1 (020 7851 2711)<br />

MATILDA<br />

Critically acclaimed Royal Shakespeare<br />

Company production of Roald Dahl’s book,<br />

directed by Matthew Warchus.<br />

CAMBRIDGE THEATRE<br />

Earlham Street, WC2 (0844 800 1110)<br />

BAT OUT OF HELL<br />

Following an acclaimed extended season last<br />

summer, Jay Scheib's stage musical, written<br />

by Jim Steinman and featuring Meat Loaf's<br />

greatest hits, returns to the West End.<br />

DOMINION THEATRE<br />

Tottenham Court Road, W1 (0845 200 7982)<br />

COMPANY<br />

Marianne Elliott directs Stephen Sondheim and<br />

George Furth’s musical about life, love and<br />

marriage. <strong>This</strong> iconic musical comedy with the<br />

lead role of ‘Bobby’ is re-imagined for the first<br />

time as a woman.<br />

GIELGUD THEATRE<br />

Shaftesbury Avenue, W1 (0844 482 5130)<br />

THE PHANTOM OF THE OPERA<br />

Long running epic romance by Andrew Lloyd<br />

Webber, set behind the scenes of a Paris<br />

opera house where a deformed phantom<br />

stalks his prey.<br />

HER MAJESTY’S THEATRE<br />

Haymarket, SW1 (0844 412 2707)<br />

THE KING & I<br />

The multi-award winning and critically<br />

acclaimed Lincoln Center Theater’s production<br />

of Rodgers and Hammerstein’s masterpiece.<br />

LONDON PALLADIUM<br />

Argyll Street, W1 (020 7087 7755)<br />

THE LION KING<br />

Disney‘s phenomenally successful animated<br />

film is transformed into a spectacular stage<br />

musical, a superb evening of visual delight.<br />

LYCEUM THEATRE<br />

Wellington Street, WC2 (0844 871 3000)<br />

THRILLER – LIVE<br />

High octane show celebrating the career of the<br />

King of Pop, Michael Jackson. Over two<br />

hours of the non-stop hit songs that marked<br />

his legendary live performances.<br />

LYRIC THEATRE<br />

Shaftesbury Avenue, WC2 (0330 333 4812)<br />

SCHOOL OF ROCK<br />

Andrew Lloyd Webber's new stage musical<br />

with lyrics by Glenn Slater and book by Julian<br />

Fellowes, adapted from the film.<br />

NEW LONDON THEATRE<br />

Drury Lane, WC2 (020 7492 0810)<br />

MAMMA MIA!<br />

Hit musical based on the songs of ABBA, set<br />

around the story of a mother and daughter on<br />

the eve of the daughter’s wedding.<br />

NOVELLO THEATRE<br />

Aldwych, WC2 (0844 482 5170)<br />

CHICAGO<br />

The award-winning tale of nightclub singer<br />

Roxie Hart, her cell-block rival Velma Kelly<br />

and the smooth-talking lawyer Billy Flynn.<br />

PHOENIX THEATRE<br />

Charing Cross Road, WC2 (0844 871 7627)<br />

STRICTLY BALLROOM<br />

New stage musical based on Baz Luhrmann's<br />

1992 film. The story of a championship<br />

ballroom dancer who defies the rules and<br />

follows his heart.<br />

PICCADILLY THEATRE<br />

Denman Street, W1 (0844 871 7630)<br />

ALADDIN<br />

The classic hit film has been brought to thrilling<br />

life on stage by Disney, featuring all the songs<br />

from the Academy Award winning score.<br />

PRINCE EDWARD THEATRE<br />

Old Compton Street, W1 (0844 482 5151)<br />

BOOK OF MORMON<br />

Broadway musical takes shots at everything<br />

from organised religion to consumerism, state<br />

of the economy and the musical theatre genre.<br />

PRINCE OF WALES THEATRE<br />

Coventry Street, W1 (0844 482 5115)<br />

LES MISERABLES<br />

A spectacularly staged version of Victor Hugo’s<br />

epic novel about an escaped convict’s<br />

search for redemption in Revolutionary France.<br />

QUEEN’S THEATRE<br />

Shaftesbury Avenue, WC2 (0844 482 5160)<br />

LITTLE SHOP OF HORRORS<br />

Major revival of the classic Howard Ashman<br />

and Alan Menken musical. Down and out skid<br />

row floral assistant Seymour discovers an<br />

exotic plant with a craving for fresh blood.<br />

REGENT’S PARK OPEN AIR THEATRE<br />

Inner Circle, NW1 (0844 826 4242)<br />

DREAMGIRLS<br />

Set in the USA during the late 1960s and<br />

early 1970s, the story follows a young female<br />

singing trio as they become music superstars.<br />

SAVOY THEATRE<br />

Strand, WC2 (020 7492 0810)<br />

MOTOWN THE MUSICAL<br />

Featuring all the much loved classics from<br />

Diana Ross, Stevie Wonder, and the Jackson 5,<br />

the show tells the story behind the hits.<br />

SHAFTESBURY THEATRE<br />

Shaftesbury Avenue, WC2 (020 7492 0810)<br />

42ND STREET<br />

The song and dance, American dream fable,<br />

where a small town girl, Peggy Sawyer’s rise<br />

from chorus line to Broadway star.<br />

THEATRE ROYAL<br />

Drury Lane, WC2 (020 7492 0810)<br />

HEATHERS<br />

An adaptation of the classic 1980s movie<br />

features sensational brand-new songs, and<br />

stars Carrie Hope Fletcher as Veronica<br />

THEATRE ROYAL HAYMARKET<br />

Haymarket SW1 (020 7930 8800)<br />

HAMILTON<br />

Lin-Manuel Miranda's multi award-winning<br />

musical, based on Ron Chernow's biography<br />

of one of the American Founding Fathers,<br />

Alexander Hamilton.<br />

VICTORIA PALACE THEATRE<br />

Victoria Street, SW1 (0844 248 5000)<br />

Michael Jibson in Hamilton.<br />

Photo: Matthew Murphy.<br />

21<br />

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22<br />

VIET LOUNGE<br />

It’s been a while since I was in Hanoi.<br />

I remember wonderful food, smiley<br />

people, a lot of sizzling pans and the<br />

sort of delicious tropical heat that hits<br />

you like a wall as you step out of an<br />

aeroplane.<br />

In fact Viet Food, at the southern end<br />

of Soho’s Wardour Street, is a lot like<br />

that. Minus the heat. If I spent a lot of<br />

time in W1 (instead of running all over<br />

town trying new places), I would go<br />

there at least once a week, because the<br />

flavours and authenticity of the cooking<br />

are inspiring and it’s not expensive –<br />

despite its ownership by ex-Hakkasan<br />

chef Jeff Tan.<br />

There is just one downside to the<br />

place – everyone likes it. You know you<br />

will have to queue at busy times and the<br />

tables are close together – the<br />

atmosphere is more cosmopolitan<br />

hubbub than tranquil dining, shall we<br />

say. Cheer up though – because now<br />

there is Viet Lounge on the top floor. It’s<br />

a cocktail bar with small plates of food<br />

and (blessed relief!) not too many<br />

people have discovered it yet.<br />

That will change. Still at 19.30 in the<br />

evening, we enjoyed the relative calm<br />

and even engaged in desultory<br />

conversation with the very smiley<br />

Vietnamese barman, who is clearly<br />

thrilled to be dispensing Asian-style<br />

cocktails, so we gathered from his<br />

demeanour and we also gathered that<br />

the bar is partly French influenced as the<br />

term came up several times. Beyond that<br />

we ourselves could be accused of<br />

nodding and smiling somewhat inanely<br />

as on comparing notes we realised that<br />

the poor chap’s English is so heavily<br />

accented we hadn’t understood very<br />

much at all. But so authentic!<br />

His cocktails are impressive. We saw<br />

purple ones with dry ice streaming off<br />

the top, green ones full of mint leaves,<br />

orange ones with tiny flowers.<br />

Blackberries, lychees, ginger,<br />

lemongrass and lime are the sort of<br />

ingredients which presumably add zing<br />

and I say presumably because cocktails<br />

are not my thing – they make you fall off<br />

your chair and given that we were<br />

perched on very high wooden bar stools<br />

(remind me to bring my own cushion<br />

next time) I think that was sensible. The<br />

wines are great though – both the Gavi<br />

and the Viognier (£7.50 and £5.50)<br />

amongst the whites by the glass are very<br />

drinkable both with and without the<br />

spicy food.<br />

The food is fantastic. Why don’t we<br />

cook like this at home? (Answer: way too<br />

much trouble.) I tried to be scornful of<br />

the ‘spices rice crakers [sic]’ which my<br />

friend ordered but even these were tasty<br />

and seemed vaguely wholesome, as<br />

opposed to the empty carbohydrate I<br />

meant to castigate her for. Save<br />

yourselves, though, for dishes such as<br />

the Hanoi beef (£7.20) which is a row of<br />

little slow-cooked cubes dipped in black<br />

pepper crumble sitting on a hollow bone<br />

– sweet and low-key fiery at once. Even<br />

my friend ate this and she alleges to be<br />

vegetarian, but maybe that doesn’t matter<br />

on a Thursday? More her style were the<br />

fish dishes like Pomelo salad with fresh<br />

water prawns and homemade chilli<br />

sauce (£6.80), although I would say the<br />

prawns which are char-grilled with garlic<br />

and served with vinegar lemongrass<br />

dressing (£8.80) are the best. Sweetcorn<br />

crab balls (£6.50) spiked on a stick of<br />

lemongrass are one of those cunning<br />

things that could easily be chicken – a<br />

delightful mouthful of soft spiciness in<br />

your mouth which you would just<br />

continue to eat if there were no limit to<br />

the portion.<br />

In truth, it’s all good and I don’t often<br />

say that. Everything is pretty on the<br />

plate. The bar guests come and go,<br />

making an entertaining parade of human<br />

interest. Try it – it’s a great place to wait<br />

if you feel like eating downstairs, too<br />

and frankly if your derriere is not well<br />

padded you will feel more like lingering<br />

there.<br />

Sue Webster<br />

VIET LOUNGE<br />

34-36 Wardour Street, W1D 6QT<br />

Tel: 020 7494 4555<br />

t h i s i s l o n d o n m a g a z i n e • t h i s i s l o n d o n o n l i n e

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