REVIEW: SplitLip presents Operation Mincemeat: A New Musical, Grand Opera House, York, till Saturday (performance ****, songs **1/2)

Charlotte Hanna-Williams’s Jean Leslie, Jamie-Rose Monks’ Jonny Bevan, Sean Carey’s Charles Cholmondeley, Holly Sumpton’s Ewen Montagu and Christian Andrews’ Hester Leggatt in Operation Mincemeat: A New Musical. Picture: Matt Crockett

LIKE Six The Musical, Operation Mincemeat’s reputation precedes its York arrival.

Six began as a Cambridge University Musical Theatre Society student show at the 2017 Edinburgh Fringe; Operation Mincemeat was a Hail Mary of a change of tack by Edinburgh Fringe purveyors of “weird comedy” SplitLip, premiered at the New Diaroma Theatre, London, in May 2019. Edinburgh that summer, the West End in May 2023 and Broadway in February 2025 ensued, and now comes its first-ever tour.

The technical demands of SplitLip’s bravura show necessitated a two-day “get-in”, leading to the decision six weeks ago to switch the first night from Monday to Tuesday.

Unusually too, that led to the reviewers being posted in Rows D and E in the Stalls, rather than the familiar Row B and C in the Dress Circle, a regular position that affords a more panoramic view and less attrition for the ears. So near the stage, you can see the whites of the eyes, but music can take on the aural impact of white noise, particularly when those songs are often so hyper-energetic and intense.

On the tour poster by the Clifford Street entrance, the  wording ‘77 five-star reviews’ had been struck through to say ‘88’, as if a dare to reviewers to keep that count rising  for “the best reviewed show in West End history”.

Six The Musical swanned in with much the same anticipation, or hype, if you prefer, and reviewers couldn’t resist giving six out of five verdicts for a novelty girl-power musical that put the herstory into history, turning Henry VIII’s wives into a competitive sextet vying to be lead singer in a girl band, as much a concert as an historical drama.

Operation Mincemeat is rooted in history too: the improbable but true story of perhaps the Second World War’s “most audacious intelligence coup”, the one where MI5 operatives deceived Nazi Germany over the intended invasion target of Sicily in 1943 by floating a dead body with the fake, misleading documents of a Royal Marines officer on to the Spanish coast.

That bizarre plot could make a play, and twice it has been transformed into a film, drawing on Ewen Montagu’s book for 1956’s The Man Who Never Was and 2021’s Operation Mincemeat, the Colin Firth one directed by John Madden.

SplitLip’s David Cumming, Natasha Hodgson, Felix Hagan and Zoe Roberts bring a comedy troupe’s sense of satire, experimentation, sketch structure, restless energy and order from chaos, beloved of Monty Python, The Fast Show and Patrick Barlow’s National Theatre of Brent shows and The 39 Steps revamp.

Consequently, the character-driven storytelling is Operation Mincemeat’s strongest suit, the humour delightfully British, knockabout, full of mischief, fizz, sometimes fury, and send-ups of British intelligence stereotypes, with room aplenty for pathos too to complement all the quips and stings so quick off the lips.

However, the songs are so prominent that Operation Mincemeat feels rather too close to a sung-through musical, and too often they go on too long and could do with more melody, rather than the propulsion and force typified by the lurid Nazi rap of Das Ubermensch that opens Act Two. Christian Andrews’ rendition of Hester Leggatt’s paean Dear Bill is a rare sobering intervention.

One review elsewhere in the country had suggested the “big question on our lips was: how on earth do you make a successful comedy musical about a wartime story?” Mel Brooks might wish to point you in the direction of 1967’s film The Producers and subsequent 2001 Broadway musical, featuring Springtime For Hitler et al.

Brooks had a better balance of dialogue and music, but if Operation Mincemeat’s songs overplay their hand, former Sheffield Theatres artistic director Robert Hastie and tour director Georgie Straight nevertheless deliver a sophisticated, sassy, technically slick, fast-moving comic romp with stylish set and costume design by Ben Stones, full of elegant lines, intelligence-office minutiae, German cabaret club chic and classic English suits, jackets, braces and ties, as crisp as Jenny Arnold’s choreography.

Above all, Operation Mincemeat has superb performances by a cast of five, each kept busy with playing “Others” as well as the five principals, Holly Sumpton’s pin-sharp, pin-striped Ewen Montagu; Sean Carey’s awkward Charles Cholmondeley; Montagu’s co-devisor of Operation Mincemeat; Christian Andrews’ fastidious senior secretary Hester Leggatt; Jamie-Rose Monk’s Colonel Johnny Bevan, the intemperate boss, and Charlotte Hanna-Williams’ eager-to-learn 19-year-old clerk, Jean Leslie.

Part of the comedic impact lies in the multitude of gender swaps in the role-playing, designed to counter the Boys Club strictures that prevailed at the time. Company new recruit Monk has particular fun as ‘Our Man in Huelva’; Carey’s Cholmondeley delivers a series of amusingly baffling one-liners; Andrews maximises his series of outré Others, especially his glitter-spattered coroner; Hanna-Williams has the peachiest singing voice; Sumpton, immaculate in dress code, sometimes inscrutable in manner, is both the ace and the joker in the pack.

A bells-and-whistles finale looks ahead to what the protagonists did next, but crucially too the show pays tribute to Glyndwr Michael, the homeless Welshman, who had died of rat poisoning in London, his body subsequently being given the invented persona of William Martin for Operation Mincemeat’s act of deception.

SplitLip’s Operation Mincemeat: A New Musical runs at Grand Opera House, York, until Saturday, 7.30pm plus 2.30pm Thursday and Saturday matinees. Box office: atgtickets.com/york.

Who’s on the bill as The Old Paint Shop cabaret club returns to York Theatre Royal Studio from tomorrow for 12 shows?

Wright & Grainger: Stories, poems, songs and gentle chaos in Say It & Play It at The Old Paint Shop on June 11. Picture: Afternoon Film

YORK Theatre Royal Studio is being transformed once again into The Old Paint Shop cabaret club for a month-long season of shows.

The June 4 to 26 programme opens with Queer Spaces, a joyful celebration of Pride in Thursday’s 7pm showcase of work by queer artists in the aftermath of May 30’s York Pride fiesta on Knavesmire.

This sparkling one-off night of new LGBTQ+ performances by actors, poets and writers includes award-winning artists trying out new material for the first time. Produced by Yorkshire queer touring theatre company Roots (Fringe First winners with Happy Meal), the  show’s proceeds will support new local artists.

The season continues with a mix of Old Paint Shop favourites and exciting new acts, performing a mix of comedy, live music, burlesque and more.

Seating will be cabaret club-style and unreserved, offering an intimate theatrical experience, where audience members are encouraged to grab a drink at the bar, sit back, relax and enjoy the show. 

June 5, 5 The Penny Magpie Theatre Company presents 5 Lesbians Eating A Quiche, 8pm, SOLD OUT.

WELCOME to 1956 whenthe Susan B. Anthony Society for the Sisters of Gertrude Stein is holding its annual quiche breakfast. As the assembled ‘widows’ await the announcement of the society’s prize-winning quiche, the atomic bomb sirens sound. Has the Communist threat come to pass? How will the ‘widows’ respond as their idyllic town and lifestyle faces attacks?

Winner of a national Best Amateur Production award after a sell-out run at Theatre@41, Monkgate, in 2024, 5 Lesbians Eating A Quiche is a tasty recipe of humour, sexual innuendos, unsuccessful repressions and delicious discoveries, written by Evan Linder and Andrew Hopgood.

June 6, Story Time with Mama G, 1pm and 3pm

MAMA G will be sharing original stories, songs and some of the best picture books on the market in an uplifting story time for the whole family. Expect dancing and giggles galore as pantomime dame Mama G shares the power of being who you want and loving who you are!

She has been telling stories since 2018. In that time, she has been a semi-finalist on Britain’s Got Talent, performed her show off-Broadway, performed at libraries, festivals, prides, museums and theatres all over the UK and penned the book Oh Yes I Am!, published in 2024.Suitable for age three upwards.

June 6, Haus of Games: Pride Month Party, 8pm

FASTEN your seatbelts and prepare for turbulence, darling, aboard Spread Eagle Airlines. The Isolation Creations are back, ready to take you sky-high with their old-school drag spectacular, Haus of Games.

This time, these Trolley Dollies take you on a first-class flight full of bingo, party games, music, and mayhem, all served with their signature blend of Carry On-style comedy, retro glamour and outrageous charm.

Celebrating Pride Month with laughter, glitter and a generous serving of nonsense at 30,000 feet, this camp fest of fun promises fabulous prizes and more double-entendres than an in-flight safety demo. Think Lily Savage meets Dame Edna, with more than a splash of Les Dawson. Dress code: Seaside Summer Holiday or Mile High Club chic; prizes for the best-dressed passengers!

June 10, Amber Topaz in Red, 8pm

INTERNATIONAL cabaret siren Amber Topaz presents a new, classy, sassy, fabulous musical revue, celebrating redheaded musical theatre stars of stage and screen.

This delicious cocktail of Old Hollywood glamour and West End and Broadway classics is brimful of iconic show-stopping numbers, honouring the formidable flame-haired trailblazers that have shaped musical theatre herstory.

From the golden era of Hollywood to the bright lights of Las Vegas, Red embodies legendary artists such as Rita Hayworth, Bette Midler, Bernadette Peters, Shirley MacLaine, Gwen Verdon and many more. The show is choreographed and directed by Nikki Woollaston, resident director of the Les Misérables worldwide tour.

June 11, Wright & Grainger Say It & Play it, 8pm

FRIENDS and working partners since Easingwold schooldays, Wright & Grainger serve a carefully curated evening of stories, poems, songs and gentle chaos.

Known for their internationally acclaimed, multi-award-winning adaptations of Ancient Greek myths, sometimes Alexander Flanagan Wright & Phil Grainger do something a tad different.

Say It And Play It will be a set full of their shorter stuff, the collaborative stuff, the poems that stand on their own, the beautiful tracks they have been writing.”It’s a gorgeous weave of our home-grown stuff, grown and told on home turf,” they say.

June 12, Tracey Collins, An Evening With Elvis Lesley, 8pm

COMEDIAN Tracey Collins (Shell Suit Cher, Audrey Heartburn) brings her one-woman musical comedy show to the York stage in the guise of Elvis Lesley, who is preparing to leave their day job in the UK and gyrate their way back to the bright lights of Las Vegas!

Brilliantly reworked songs, surreal stories, heart-stopping hip gyrations and a whole lotta chaos are in store but will Elvis Lesley nail the famous lip curl, sensuous croon and jiggly legs? Find out when witnessing Elvis as you have never seen them before!

June 13, The Jazzville Quartet with Kirsty Hughes, 8pm

YORK jazz combo The Jazzville Quartet present an evening led by London-based fabulous Kirsty Hughes, who sings in a variety of styles and settings, including West End shows and cabaret.

Royal Academy of Music graduate Kirsty will be showcasing her love of Judy Garland and the great jazz singers in an intimate cabaret-style performance, joined by piano maestro, arranger and composer Alec Robinson,  saxophonist Alex Fisher, double bassist Tim Murgatroyd and drummer Steve Hanley.

The Jazzville Quartet will explore the Great American Songbook in a joyful celebration of swing and Latin classics and haunting jazz ballads. A few surprises are in the pipeline too.

June 17, Neil Haigh’s Comedy Masterclass Ruined by Stewart Wright, 8pm

NEIL Haigh’s Comedy Masterclass Ruined By Stewart Wright combines clowning, improvisation and theatrical storytelling as a beleaguered acting lecturer channels 20 years of disappointment into a one-off masterclass amid a backdrop of professional pressure and personal crisis. Will a surprise guest be his ruin or saviour?

Haigh’s experience with groundbreaking theatre company Cartoon de Salvo and Wright’s 30 years as a comic character actor (Smack The Pony, Bridget Jones’s Diary) combine exquisitely in their stage duo, shaped with BAFTA-nominated Justin Sbresni as their comedy consultant.

York audiences may recall Wright from his role as Welsh welfare officer Sergeant Dave in the Theatre Royal premiere of Debbie Isitt’s Military Wives – The Musical last September.

June 18, Rock Paper Goose, 8pm

YORK indie pop band Rock Paper Goose comprises multi-instrumentalists Nathan Greaves (vocals, guitar, synth) and Olly Whitehouse (vocals, synth, bass). They write catchy melodies over the top of infectious, colourful music that takes equal inspiration from rock, pop and EDM to create life-affirming shows full of playful energy and joy. Songs from September 2025’s debut album, Okay!, will be complemented by new, unreleased material.

June 19, Velvet Jazz Night with Luka Watabe, 8pm

LUKA Watabe brings rich, smooth vocal styling and Old Hollywood glamour to her sophisticated repertoire of classic jazz standards and modern songs, delivered with a sleek jazz twist by her professional musicians.

June 20,  Freida Nipples presents…The Exhibitionists, 8pm, sold out

YORK’S  international burlesque artist Freida Nipples returns to the Old Paint Shop with some of her favourite and most fabulous performance artists from across the UK and further afield.

From burlesque to drag and beyond, the unexpected will be in store. “Get ready to be dazzled, shocked and in awe by these performers,” says Freida. “Only a few things are guaranteed, glamour, gags and giggles. Get ready to explore the world of The Exhibitionists.”

Freida’s past Theatre Royal shows have paraded drag queens, acrobats, whipcrackers, circus artists, sideshow performers and stripteasers of many different flavours, from comedy caricatures to sensual fan dancers.

June 26, Karl Mullen, 8pm

YORK pianist Karl Mullen, upright-piano busker, The Phoenix fixture  and Leeds Piano Competition Pub Piano Champion, closes the season by serving up his high-energy mix of everything from Chopin to Oasis, via Led Zeppelin and Les Dawson, packed with outrageous and heartfelt stories from decades of gigging and street playing.

Tickets can be booked on 01904 623568 or at yorktheatreroyal.co.uk.

PREVIEW REVIEW: Graham Spink’s verdict on Pickering Musical Society, Let’s Do It!, The Cole Porter Songbook, Kirk Theatre, Pickering, June 9 to 13

Rachel Anderson in Pickering Musical Society’s Let’s Do It!, The Cole Porter Songbook

GRAHAM Spink was invited to attend Monday’s dress rehearsal of Pickering Musical Society’s upcoming concert Let’s Do It!, The Cole Porter Songbook.

HAVING been involved in amateur theatre for most of my life, I was amazed at just how polished and professional the production already looked with more than a week still to go before opening night.

The first thing that catches the eye is the magnificent full-size grand piano taking pride of place centre stage. Director Courtney Brown and Luke Arnold have certainly pushed the boat out with this production, and it is refreshing to see a different style of staging, with a compact jazz band positioned on stage alongside the performers, rather than hidden away in the orchestra pit.

I wasn’t entirely sure what to expect from an evening dedicated to one of the legends of the Great American Songbook, but the programme has been cleverly structured.

The first half focuses on music from Cole Porter’s hit musicals, including Kiss Me, Kate and Anything Goes, while the second half takes on a more intimate cabaret atmosphere.

Here, the on-stage musicians and grand piano really come into their own, acting as both backdrop and accompaniment for a selection of Porter’s best-known songs, ranging from upbeat jazz numbers to moody, sensual ballads.

The production features a relatively small principal cast, wonderfully supported by the talented students of the Sarah Louise Ashworth School of Dance. Even at this stage, the standard of performance was exceptional.

Personal highlights for me included Anything Goes from the musical of the same name, Too Darn Hot from Kiss Me, Kate and the charming Who Wants To Be A Millionaire? from High Society.

To conclude, I would like to thank Luke and Courtney for inviting me to enjoy this early preview of what promises to be a thoroughly entertaining and stylish production.

I would highly recommend the show and encourage everyone to book tickets before they sell out — I have already been online this morning and booked ours!

Pickering Musical Society presents Let’s Do It!, Kirk Theatre, Pickering, June 9 to 13, 7.30pm plus 2.30pm Saturday matinee. Box office: 01751 474833 or www.kirktheatre.co.uk.

Preview review by Graham Spink

Olivia Turner and Alexandra Mather to share Rosalinda’s role in York Opera’s Die Fledermaus at York Theatre Royal

Rosalinda at the double: Alexandra Mather, left, and Olivia Turner, in rehearsal for their shared role – two performances each -in York Opera’s Die Fledermaus. Picture: David Kessel

YORK Opera is marking not one but two milestones with John Soper and Elizabeth Watson’s production of Die Fledermaus from tomorrow to Saturday.

This year is the company’s 60th anniversary and the 40th anniversary of its first appearance at York Theatre Royal: hence the summer production choice of Johann Strauss II’s party opera, wherein lavish host Prince Orlofsky seeks fresh amusement at his New Year’s Eve party. What better place for disguises, deception and revenge served with chilled champagne?

On an earlier occasion, Doctor Falke had been humiliated by his old friend Herr Eisenstein, who persuaded him to dress for a party as a bat [Die Fledermaus]. After much amusement and ridicule, eventually he was abandoned to wander the streets of Vienna. Falke plots his revenge with a cocktail of hidden secrets, mistaken identities and a splash or two of champagne that leads to a comedy of errors that soon takes flight. Will the bat be revenged?

Olivia Turner and Alexandra Mather will share the role of Rosalinda; likewise, Stephanie Wong and LaLa Marais both will play Adele, after the decision to double cast the principal roles was made in response to the high calibre of talent displayed at the auditions.

Olivia Turner: Making her York Opera debut as Rosalinda in Die Fledermaus. Picture: David Kessel

Here Olivia and Alexandra a series of questions on being the two faces of Rosalinda in York Opera’s Die Fledermaus.

How would you describe Rosalinda’s character?

Olivia: “She is a glamorous and spirited character who enjoys flirting with her many admirers. She is intelligent and likes to think she can outwit her unfaithful husband.”

Alexandra: “She’s sassy, spirited and more than a little mischievous. She’s intelligent and enjoys staying one step ahead of everyone around her. While she’s quick to challenge her husband’s infidelities, she’s not entirely innocent herself, which gives the character a wonderfully cheeky hypocrisy. She’s fun-loving, free-spirited, flirtatious and full of personality.”

Do you play a different role on the nights when you’re not playing Rosalinda?

Olivia: No, I will only be performing the role of Rosalinda tonight and on Friday.”

Alexandra: “No. Rosalinda is quite a substantial role, so we’re making the most of our nights off when we’re not performing! That said, I’ll certainly be there watching and cheering Liv on. I’ll be performing the role of Rosalinda tomorrow and on Saturday.”

Alexandra Mather rehearsing a scene from Die Fledermaus with Karl Reiff. Picture: David Kessel

Have you performed in Die Fledermaus previously?

Olivia: “No, this is my first time performing in Die Fledermaus, but I watched a production at the Royal College of Music, which I really enjoyed.”

Alexandra: “No, this is my first time, although it’s a piece I’ve wanted to do for a very long time. I’ve been familiar with and loved the music for years, so it’s a real pleasure finally to be performing it.”

What’s your big number in the show?

Olivia: “Csárdás, where I am disguised as a Hungarian Countess and am trying to convince the party I am Hungarian through the music of my homeland.”

Alexandra: “Like Liv, my showcase number is the Csárdás. However, my personal favourite piece to perform is probably the Watch Duet. I remember seeing a performance featuring Joan Sutherland when I was about 14 and becoming completely obsessed with it. It’s one of the pieces that first sparked my interest in opera, so performing it now feels particularly special.”

Have you worked separately or together in rehearsal?

Olivia: “During rehearsals we would generally run the scenes separately to allow each of us to explore our own ideas and styles, but we have been supporting each other throughout the process, which has been helpful.”

“Rosalinda is a glamorous and spirited character who enjoys flirting with her many admirers,” says Olivia Turner. Picture: John Saunders

Alexandra: “A bit of both. We’ve rehearsed scenes separately so that we could each develop our own interpretation of Rosalinda, but we’ve also spent a lot of time watching and learning from each other. It’s been a very supportive process, and it’s always useful to have someone nearby who knows your lines when you suddenly forget them!”

What is your history of performing with York Opera?

Olivia: “This is my first time. Everyone has been so welcoming and it has been a pleasure to be involved in this 60th anniversary production.”

Alexandra: “I’ve been performing with York Opera for nearly ten years, and I feel incredibly privileged to be part of the company. They are one of the most welcoming and supportive groups I’ve ever worked with. It may sound clichéd, but they really do feel like a family. York Opera provides opportunities for performers to sing and act at a very high level alongside a full orchestra and exceptional musicians, and I’ve always felt both challenged and supported here.”

What is the principal joy of singing on the York Theatre Royal stage?

Olivia: “I am very excited as this will be my first time singing on the Theatre Royal stage.”

Alexandra: “York Theatre Royal is a fantastic venue. It’s large enough to feel exciting and impressive, but intimate enough that you never lose the connection with the audience. Smaller comic moments still land beautifully, and you can really feel the audience responding to what’s happening on stage. It’s also wonderful to bring local audiences into a thriving local theatre and support a venue that plays such an important role in York’s cultural life.”

York Opera in Die Fledermaus, York Theatre Royal, tomorrow (3/6/2026), Thursday and Friday, 7.30pm, Saturday, 4pm. Box office: 01904 623568 or yorktheatreroyal.co.uk.

Alexandra Mather in the role of Rosalinda in York Opera’s photoshoot at Little Wold Vinery, South Cave, Brough. Picture: David Kessel

Four more questions for Alexandra:

What does sharing the role with Olivia bring to the production?

“It’s a really interesting opportunity to see another person’s interpretation of the role and to learn from their approach. Every performer brings something different to a character, so it’s fascinating to watch how Liv has developed her Rosalinda. It’s also been lovely getting to know her throughout the rehearsal process, and we’ve been able to support each other along the way.”

What are the primary delights of Die Fledermaus as a “party opera”?

“The joy of Die Fledermaus is that it’s light, frothy and enormous fun. It’s wonderfully easy to watch and enjoy. The waltzes and Strauss melodies sweep you along and create an atmosphere of pure celebration.

“At the same time, it has moments of genuine beauty, such as the Act II ensemble Brother Mine, where the pace briefly slows and you’re treated to some glorious, warm-hearted music. It’s a show that balances comedy, elegance and charm perfectly.”

Alexandra Mather in discussion with Die Fledermaus co-director Elizabeth Watson. Picture: David Kessel

How does the directing partnership of John Soper and Elizabeth Watson work?

“They work together extremely well because they bring different strengths to the production. John is a fantastic designer who creates and builds all of our sets himself, so he approaches the show with a very strong visual perspective. Liz is particularly skilled at character work, relationships and emotional storytelling.

“John also has an excellent comic instinct and a brilliant sense of timing, while Liz excels at shaping the more romantic and emotional moments. Together they create a really effective balance.”

What is coming up next for you in 2026?

“Next, I’ll be appearing in Michael Frayn’s classic farce Noises Off with Pick Me Up Theatre at the Joseph Rowntree Theatre in October. I’m very much looking forward to swapping one kind of comic chaos for another and trading operatic farce for one of the greatest stage comedies ever!”

Alexandra Mather‘s Rosalinda, left, and Stephanie Wong’s Adele, enjoying York Opera’s photoshoot at Little Wold Vinery ahead of this week’s production of Die Fledermaus. Picture: David Kessel

Thriller of the week: John Le Carré’s The Spy Who Came In From The Cold, Grand Opera House, York, June 9 to 13

Ralf Little’s British intelligence officer Alec Leamas in The Spy Who Came In From The Cold. Picture: Johan Persson

FOR the first time, a novel by John le Carré, master of the modern spy genre, is being brought to life on stage in a thrilling adaptation of The Spy Who Came In From The Cold.

Ralf Little, best known for playing Detective Inspector Neville Parker in Death In Paradise, Antony Royle in The Royle Family and Jonny Keogh in Two Pints Of Lager And A Packet Of Crisps, will lead the cast as Alec Leamas in  Second Half Productions and The Ink Factory’s tour of the Chichester Festival Theatre production.

“It is a huge privilege to be stepping into the shoes of one of John le Carré’s great literary creations, Alec Leamas, as we bring the murky world of his Cold War masterpiece to life on stage,” says Oldham-born actor, writer, presenter, narrator and former semi-professional footballer Little, 46. “I first read The Spy Who Came In From the Cold when I was 16 and it has stayed with me ever since.

Ralf Little: Touring 21 venues in the role of Alec Leamas in The Spy Who Came In From The Cold. Picture: Michael Wharley

“Reading David Eldridge’s brilliant script, I once again found myself drawn into the story’s unexpected twists and turns, its high-stakes game of cat-and-mouse between East and West, which David has captured so thrillingly in the play. Despite being written in the Sixties, it feels startlingly relevant to the times we are living in now. I can’t wait to share this story with audiences old and new as we take it to cities right across the UK.”

Named in TIME Magazine’s All-Time Greatest 100 Novels and still a best seller after more than six decades, The Spy Who Came In From The Cold takes a journey through the fog-shrouded terrain of Cold War espionage, deception and moral compromise, adapted by Eldridge (Beginning; Middle; End, all National Theatre) from the work of Le Carré, creator of Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy and The Night Manager.

Disillusioned, weary and hardened, British intelligence officer Alec Leamas is ready to come in from the cold, until veteran agent George Smiley persuades him to take one final mission —dangerous, deceptive and deeply personal — against the East German Secret Service. Despatched into enemy territory, deep undercover, he finds his convictions tested and his defences breached by Liz Gold, a quietly defiant librarian, whose compassion threatens to thaw his frostbitten heart.

Ralf Little’s Alec Leamas, left, in a scene from The Spy Who came In From The Cold. Picture: Johan Persson

After a sold-out run at Chichester Festival Theatre and a West End premiere at @sohoplace in a14-week run from November 2025 to February 2026, the play is on a 21-venue tour from March 21 to August 22, under the direction of Jeremy Herrin (Grace Pervades; A Mirror; People, Places & Things; Long Day’s Journey Into Night).

Little’s Alec Leamas is joined by Grainne Dromgoole as Liz Gold, Tony Turner as George Smiley, Nicholas Murchie as Control and Peter Losasso as Hans-Dieter Mundt. Completing the cast are Eddie Toll as Fielder, Melody Chikakane Brown as Miss Crail/President of the Tribunal, Jeff D’Sangalang as Ashe, Jonny Burman as Riemeck/Kiever and Jo Servi as Pitt/Ford, with Clara Wessely and James Burman in the ensemble.

The creative team includes designer Max Jones, lighting designer Azusa Ono, sound designer Elizabeth Purnell, composer Paul Englishby,  movement director Lucy Cullingford and tour director Joe Lichtenstein.

Second Half Productions and The Ink Factory presents Chichester Festival Theatre in John le Carré’s The Spy Who Comes in From The Cold, Grand Opera House, York, June 9 to 13, 7.30pm plus 2.30pm Wednesday, Thursday and Saturday matinees. Box office: atgtickets.com/york.

The poster for Ralf Little’s appearance in John le Carré’s The Spy Who Came In From The Cold

Premiere of the week: Black Sheep Theatre Productions in Love At First Bite, Theatre@41, Monkgate, York, June 4 to 6, 7.30pm plus 2.30pm Saturday matinee

 Who’s the sucker in this vampire rom.com relationship? Writer-performers Dan Poppitt and Molly Whitehouse rehearsing Black Sheep Theatre Productions’ premiere of the mutable Love At First Bite

“HAVE you ever wondered what it would be like to finally meet someone you truly connect with – only to discover they might be a blood-sucking vampire?” ponders Josh Woodgate, director of Black Sheep Theatre Productions’ premiere of Love At First Bite.

“This play explores exactly that, blending the warmth and charm of a romantic comedy with the darkly playful twist of vampire lore. Audiences can expect laughter, surprises, awkward dates, emotional turns and a story that constantly keeps you guessing.”

Written and performed by Dan Poppitt and Molly Whitehouse, who will be joined by the multi-rolling Charlie Clarke, Love At First Bite will shape-shift every performance from Thursday to Saturday at Theatre@41, Monkgate, where the York company staged The Tempest and The Inner Selves last year.

“With a unique theatrical style, sharp comedy and an ever-changing mystery at its centre, the show invites you to fully immerse yourself in a love story with a very unexpected bite,” says Josh.

In a nutshell, Poppitt and Whitehouse’s seductive new work imagines a world where dating already can be hell, but what if one of them were a creature of the night? When Alan and Minnie meet at a speed-dating night, a spark flickers, dates follow, laughter lingers, yet “beneath the rhythms of a familiar rom-com, something waits in the dark,” say Dan and Molly, who play the lovers.

Director Josh Woodgate in rehearsal with Molly Whitehouse for Love At First Bite

“One of them is a vampire, but the secret shifts. Each night, the actors trade fangs and the audience is left to wonder who is hunter, who is prey.”

Blending sharp-fanged wit with a brush of gothic shadow, Love At First Bite toys with romance, rewrites folklore and invites audiences to consider what it means to love…and to hunger!

“What excites me most about the play is its unpredictability,” says Josh. “The audience is constantly invited to question and reassess what they think they know, and the anticipation of not knowing who the vampire is each night creates a really thrilling theatrical experience. That sense of uncertainty keeps the story alive and ever changing.”

He has found the process of adapting the story from page to stage “very natural”. “By using a minimal set alongside ambience and music, we’ve been able to transition with fluidity between scenes through sound and atmosphere, rather than relying on large set changes,” says Josh. “This allows the audience to imaginatively immerse themselves in each location and moment.

“Dan and Molly’s writing already contains all the warmth, humour and nuance of a classic romance, so my role has largely been about bringing that to life physically in focusing on movements, rhythm and comedic timing to ensure the humour lands naturally and the story speaks for itself.”

“As they also wrote the piece, they bring such a deep understanding of the world, the relationships  and the tone of the show, which has been invaluable in the rehearsal room,” says Josh Woodgate of working with Dan Poppitt and Molly Whitehouse

Josh’s approach to utilising Theatre@41’s black-box design has involved “reimagining the layout by rotating the playing area by 90 degrees, creating a wider and more dynamic performance space for the actors”. “Most of the action takes place centrally, allowing the relationships and interactions to remain the focus, while either side of the stage houses two apartments spaces representing the separate homes of the human and the vampire,” he says.

The rehearsal process with Poppitt, Whitehouse and Clarke has been “incredibly creative and rewarding,” says Josh. “As two of them also wrote the piece, they bring such a deep understanding of the world, the relationships  and the tone of the show, which has been invaluable in the rehearsal room.

“They’ve embraced every challenge and idea I’ve thrown at them with openness and creativity, pushing the comedy when needed, while also allowing the quieter, more emotional moments the space to breathe and resonate.”

Love At First Bite is Molly’s first piece of writing for the stage in a “very long time”. “It’s been amazing to focus in again on how to put across the ideas and emotions that had been bouncing around in my brain,” she says. “Passion for the source inspiration has helped massively, and getting to dig even deeper into what I thought I was an expert on has been great fun. I hope the audience can join us in celebrating that nerdiness.”

Love  At First Bite grew from Dan’s initial idea for a vampire rom.com. “It was all we talked about all evening,” recalls Molly. “The ideas just kept flying and I knew we were on the same page. Working alongside someone who sees how the cogs turn and is on your wavelength, with the same dark humour and love of the game has been a pleasure.” Molly duly took the lead on Act One; Dan did the lion’s share on Act Two.

Black Sheep Theatre Productions’ retro-style move poster pastiche for Love At First Bite

Molly describes herself as a huge horror fan, but is even more fascinated by “vampire lore and its complexity”. “I remember my Mum showing me Interview With The Vampire when I was way too young – and I was hooked,” she says. “As I got older and learned more about vampire lore from other movies, books and folklore, it became an absolute fascination with how cultures used mythology to explain phenomena they couldn’t understand.

“I’ve always looked for ways to use that in my own work, taking an idea and using it as a metaphor to comment on something else; a way to get a bigger idea across in a way that makes my perspective make sense to an audience.

“Vampires are a perfect way to do that: they can live through massive chunks of history; they live in the shadows, keep their powers a secret, and the somewhat parasitic nature of drinking blood leans into exploring power and relationship dynamics in a twisty way that gives you massive scope for creativity.”

Summing up what audiences can expect from Love At First Bite, Molly says: “If you’re a fan of Notting Hill or The Lost Boys, there’s something in here for you. It’s a rom.com at heart, so audiences can expect something funny, fast paced and really relatable with a cheeky supernatural twist.

“It follows a new couple navigating all the usual excitement and awkwardness of a fresh relationship but with the minor complication that one of them is a vampire. What makes it really fun is the vampire switches between the two characters, depending on the performance.  So you’re not just watching one version of the story – there are two completely different dynamics at play and it genuinely changes how you see the relationship unfold.

“It’s got a lot of laughs, a bit of bite, and that all-tto-recognisable feeling of ‘Do I  really know this person?’.”

Box office: tickets.41monkgate.co.uk.

More Things To Do in York and beyond when festivals flow and love bites. Here’s Hutch’s List No. 21, from The York Press

Who’s who and what’s what at York Pride 2026 at Knavesmire

FESTIVALS full of Pride, ideas and comedy are the headline acts in Charles Hutchinson’s selection of culture in colourful bloom as May turns to June.

Putting the unity into community, love and equality: York Pride 2026, Knavesmire York, today, 11am to 7.30pm

THE 90-munite York Pride parade sets off from Parliament Street to Knavesmire at 12 noon for a full day of Pride, protest, visibility, music, cabaret, family entertainment and community celebration.

The main stage line-up features Nadine Coyle, Joe McElderry, Urban Cookie Collective, Nicki French, Michael Marouli, Roxanne Cooper, Sweet Like Sabrina, Heavenly Bodies, Jordan Smart, DJ Rory Hoy and York Stage’s cast of Everybody’s Talking About Jamie. For full festival details, go to: yorkpride.org.uk. Entry is free.

Alexander McCall Smith: Discussing his books at York Festival of Ideas on June 7 at 6.30pm in Room PZA/103 in the Piazza Building, Campus East, University of York. Picture: Alexander McCall Smith Portraits

Festival of the fortnight: York Festival of Ideas, Place & Space, today until June 12

YORK Festival of Ideas 2026 explores Place and Space in more than 200 mostly free in-person and online events designed to educate, entertain and inspire. 

Led by the University of York, the event features world-class speakers (such as Nicola Sturgeon, Clive Myrie, Dame Kelly Holmes, Alexander McCall Smith, Sally Wainwright and Sian Williams), performances, exhibitions, tours, family-friendly activities, a Michael Morpurgo celebration day and much more, with topics ranging from archaeology to art, history to health, politics to psychology, football to Manchester’s Music Soul. For the full programme, go to:  yorkfestivalofideas.com.

Kiri Pritchard-McLean: Hosting the finale to Pocklington Arts Centre one-day Comedy Festival today

Comedy event of the week: Pocklington Comedy Festival, today, from 1pm

POCKLINGTON Arts Centre’s Comedy Festival opens with Seeta Wrightson’s work-in-progress (WIP) Fringe Preview of Middling at 1pm, followed by Out Of The Box at 2pm and Brennan Reece’s WIP Fringe Preview of New Jokes at 2.45pm.

Marcel Lucont presents Les Enfants Terribles – A Game Show For Awful Children at 4pm. Then come Tom Neenan’s WIP Fringe Preview at 4.30pm; Sarah Roberts’ WIP Fringe Preview at 6.15pm and the Mixed Bill finale at 8pm, bringing together Lou Wall, Marcel Lucont, Tal Davies, Pravanya Pillay and Raj Poojara, hosted by Kiri Pritchard-McLean. Box office: 01759 301547 or pocklingtonartscentre.co.uk.

“You sit here,” says Pierre Novellie, who will be standing over there at Theatre@41, Monkgate

Novellie idea of the week: Pierre Novellie, You Sit Here, I’ll Stand There, Theatre@41, Monkgate, York, today, 5pm, tickets available, and 8pm, sold out

IT’S  time for Pierre Novellie to do stand-up! It’s time for you to watch! “Why not just embrace that, for God’s sake?” he ask on his return to Theatre@41, Monkgate. “All earthly glories fade!

Novellie is co-host of the Frank Skinner, Budpod and Button Boys podcasts and has been seen and heard on World’s Most Dangerous Roads (Dave), The Mash Report (BBC2), Stand Up Central (Comedy Central), The Now Show and The News Quiz (BBC Radio 4). Box office: tickets.41monkgate.co.uk.

The ELO Experience: Celebrating 50 years of Jeff Lynne songs at York Barbican

Tribute gig of the week: The ELO Experience, York Barbican, tonight, 7.30pm

IN 2025 Jeff Lynne’s ELO performed their last live shows on the Over & Out Tour. Now tribute act The ELO Experience are mounting their own 20th anniversary tour with a set of greatest hits and album gems spanning more than 50 years of Lynne’s music.

Between 1972 and 1986, ELO achieved more combined UK and US Top 40 hits than any other band, including 10538 Overture, Evil Woman, Living Thing, The Diary Of Horace Wimp, Don’t Bring Me Down and Mr Blue Sky. Box office: yorkbarbican.co.uk.

Molly Whitehouse and Dan Poppitt in rehearsal for Black Sheep Theatre Productions’ premiere of Love At First Bite

Premiere of the week: Black Sheep Theatre Productions in Love At First Bite, Theatre@41, Monkgate, York, June 4 to 6, 7.30pm plus 2.30pm Saturday matinee

JOSH Woodgate directs Dan Poppitt and Molly Whitehouse’s seductive new work Love At First Bite, wherein dating can be hell, but what if one of them were a creature of the night?” What happens when Alan and Minnie meet at a speed-dating night? A spark flickers. Dates follow. Laughter lingers.

“Yet beneath the rhythms of a familiar rom-com, something waits in the dark,” say Poppitt and Whitehouse, who play the lovers in York company Black Sheep’s premiere. “One of them is a vampire – but the secret shifts. Each night, the actors trade fangs and the audience is left to wonder who is hunter, who is prey.” Blending sharp-fanged wit with a brush of gothic shadow, their play toys with romance, rewrites folklore and invites audiences to consider what it means to love…and to hunger! Box office: tickets.41monkgate.co.uk.

Charlotte Hanna-Williams, left, Jamie-Rose Monk, Seán Carey, Holly Sumpton and Christian Andrews in SplitLip’s Operation Mincemeat: A New Musical. Picture: Matt Crockett

Musical of the week: SplitLip in Operation Mincemeat: A New Musical, Grand Opera House, York, June 2 to 6, 7.30pm plus 2.30pm Wednesday, Thursday and Saturday matinees

THE year is 1943 and we are losing the war but, luckily, we can gamble all our futures on a stolen corpse. Singin’ In The Rain meets Strangers On A Train in SplitLip’s Operation Mincemeat, the Olivier and Tony award-winning musical take on the unbelievable true story of the twisted secret mission that won us the Second World War.

Bursting at the seams with chaos beyond invention, the question is: how did a dead body, a fake love letter and MI5 operative Ian Fleming come together to wrong-foot Hitler? Let  Christian Andrews, Holly Sumpton, Seán Carey, Charlotte Hanna-Williams and latest recruit Jamie-Rose Monk tell the tale. Box office: atgtickets.com/york.

Sofia Romano in Silver Stage’s murder mystery Club Mistero, on tour at Helmsley Arts Centre

Immersive murder mystery of the week: Silver Stage & Solent University presents Club Mistero, Helmsley Arts Centre, June 5, 7.30pm

LOSE yourself inside the dazzling but dangerous Club Mistero in 1920s’ New York City, where a flighty barman, outspoken diva, secretive showgirl, neglected wife and an owner with eyes on every corner all become suspects when someone is, seemingly, nowhere to be found. Clutch your pearls, ol’ sport, murder is afoot.

In the heart of a speakeasy, surrounded by deception and secrets, a web of betrayal, revenge and power is spun, whereupon tensions rise as the line between friend and foe is blurred, but who will survive the night? Silver Stage’s Evelyn Foy, George Mclean, Niamh Boyle, Sofia Romano and Borna Vitlov will keep you guessing to the very end. Box office: 01439 771700 or helmsleyarts.co.uk.

Navigators Art’s poster for On Location, on show at City Screen Picturehouse from June 7

Exhibition launch of the week: Navigators Art presents On Location, York Festival of Ideas, City Screen Picturehouse, York, June 7 to July 3, from 10.30am each day

ON Location, a free art exhibition of some of York’s finest visual artists, explores ideas of place and space, venturing widely beyond conventional landscapes. Open every day in the cafe and upstairs gallery from 10.30am, the show will be launched officially on June 8 from 6pm to 8.30pm in the gallery (free admission, no booking required, all welcome). 

The Gold brick road leads to York Barbican for Shalamar on their 50th anniversary tour

Gig announcement of the week: Shalamar, The Gold Tour, Celebrating 50 Years, York Barbican, July 2, 7.30pm

FORMED in Los Angeles in 1976, Shalamar became a defining force in late-1970s and 1980s’ R&B, funk and dance music with 18 UK Top 75 hits, 11 Top 40 singles, four Top Ten hits and more than 25 million records sold worldwide.

Body-popping Jeffrey Daniel and Howard Hewett, from the classic 1982 line-up, are joined by Carolyn Griffey, the female lead vocalist since 2001, to perform  A Night To Remember, Take That To The Bank, The Second Time Around, Make That Move, Dead Giveaway, There It Is,  Friends and Dancin’ In The Sheets et al. Special guest will be Gwen Dickey, The Voice of Rose Royce. Box office: yorkbarbican.co.uk.

York Opera cast members for Die Fledermaus: back row, David Hartley, Olivia Turner and Stephanie Wong; front row, John Soper and Alexandra Mather. Picture: John Saunders

In Focus: York Opera in Die Fledermaus, York Theatre Royal, June 3 to 6, 7.30pm Wednesday to Friday; 4pm, Saturday

YORK Opera is marking not one but two milestones with John Soper and  Elizabeth Watson’s production of Die Fledermaus next week.

This year is the company’s 60th anniversary and the 40th anniversary of its first appearance at York Theatre Royal: hence the summer production choice of Johann Strauss II’s party opera, wherein lavish host Prince Orlofsky seeks fresh amusement at his New Year’s Eve party. What better place for disguises, deception and revenge served with chilled champagne?

On an earlier occasion, Doctor Falke had been humiliated by his old friend Herr Eisenstein, who persuaded him to dress for a party as a bat [Die Fledermaus]. After much amusement and ridicule, eventually he was abandoned to wander the streets of Vienna.

Falke plots his revenge with a cocktail of hidden secrets, mistaken identities and a splash or two of champagne that leads to a comedy of errors that soon takes flight. Will the bat be revenged?

For an opera deemed the ideal introduction for those new to the genre, the cast includes an exciting mix of singers new to the group and familiar faces, singing an opera full of memorable tunes and comic moments in English. 

Alexandra Mather and Olivia Turner will share the role of Rosalinda; likewise, Stephanie Wong and LaLa Marais both will play Adele, after the decision to double cast the lead roles was made in response to the high calibre of talent displayed at the auditions.

The cast also features Molly Raine (Orlofsky); India Ashberry (Ida); Hamish Brown (Eisenstein); Karl Reiff (Alfredo); Ian Thomson-Smith (Falke); Mark Simmonds (Frank); Alex Holland (Dr Blind);Helen Tomlinson (Melanie); Katie Cole (Faustine) and Lilah Payton (Felicity).

Directors Soper and Watson say: “Prince Orlofsky states ‘when you have seen one opera, you have seen them all’. This is definitely not the case with a York Opera production. Our Die Fledermaus bubbles with lively choruses, memorable music and revenge – served chilled – just like flowing champagne.”

They are joined in the production team by conductor Edward Venn. Box office: 01904 623568 or yorktheatreroyal.co.uk.

REVIEW: Emma Rice Company in Enid Blyton’s Malory Towers, Leeds Playhouse, school term ends tomorrow *****

Molly Cheesley’s Alicia Johns, left, Eden Barrie’s Mary-Lou Atkinson, Robyn Sinclair’s Darrell Rivers, Bethany Wooding’s Sally Hope and Rebecca Collingwood’s Gwendoline Lacey in Emma Rice Company’s Malory Towers. Picture: Steve Tanner

ENID Blyton’s Malory Towers, the original post-war “Girl Power” story, was staged for the first time in a co-production by Emma Rice’s Wise Children company and York Theatre Royal in 2019, playing York in all-too-short stay that September.

Roll forward to 2026, when Rice now trades as the Emma Rice Company, for the school half-term visit to Leeds Playhouse of her revival of her “happy Lord Of The Flies”, as she calls her adaptation of the “naughty, nostalgic and perfect for now Malory Towers”, now touring in tandem with London’s Alexandra Palace Theatre, Coventry’s Belgrade Theatre, Manchester HOME and Liverpool Everyman & Playhouse.  It is indeed perfect for half-term, judging by Thursday’s matinee, packed with children and their mums.

Writer-director Rice read Blyton stories, Famous Five and Secret Seven capers but not Malory Towers, in her contrasting, inner-city Nottingham comprehensive schooldays in the 1970s, but found herself drawn back to the Cornish cliff tops she knew so well in her groundbreaking Kneehigh theatre days.

This Cornwall is Blyton’s Cornwall of the Blighty 1950s: school days of midnight feasts, pillow fights and an outdoor swimming pool, when “lucky girls have the chance… to be returned back to the world sensible, sound and strong… women that the world can lean on”.

Stephanie Hockley’s Irene Dupont, at the piano, with violinist Emily Panes and Molly Cheesley’s Alicia Jones. Picture: Steve Tanner

To emphasise why the stories are “perfect for now” in their school report on growth and growing up, Rice opens with a modern-day school setting, with doors not only to the headmaster’s office, but also to that symbol of changed times, the welfare officer’s office, beneath those imposing towers.

The children are displaying the same characteristics as they will once they morph into their Malory Towers selves, transformed as if in a dream once Eden Barrie, gawky and gauche in a fairy outfit, has been walloped on the head with a copy of Malory Towers.

Later this will be mirrored by the Malory Towers pupils enacting a fairy world scene from Shakespeare’s A Midsummer Night’s Dream, again with the girls’ own tropes influencing the choice of roles.

An electric charge of excitement spreads through the audience for an Emma Rice show like no other, and as ever you are smiling, beaming, from the effervescent, jollier-than-hockey sticks start when Benny Goodman’s Sing Sing Sing sets the ball rolling for a series of delightful, dazzling songs, some originals by Ian Ross (music) and Rice (lyrics), others takes on Edith Piaf’s Mon Menage A Moi, Sammy Fain’s I Can Dream Can’t I? and Pat Ballard’s Mr Sandman.

Cut up: Rebecca Collingwood’s spiteful Gwendoline Lacey, craving a switch to a Swiss finishing school in Malory Towers. Picture: Steve Tanner

One by one, Rice lets the new Malory Towers intake introduce themselves as the “deliciously naughty”, corny joke-loving West Country second-year pupil Alicia Johns (Molly Cheesley) welcomes the girls and their suitcase onto the Paddington train bound for the Cornish coast.

We meet Barrie’s bag-of-nerves, constantly apologetic Scottish pupil Mary-Lou Atkinson; returnee Rebecca Collingwood’s even-beastlier-than-in-2019 Gwendoline Lacey; Bethany Wooding’s ever-so-proper, prim and pucker Sally Hope and Robyn Sinclair’s furnace-hot-tempered, fierce-hearted Darrell Rivers, this production’s stand-out.

LIPA-trained Stephanie Hockley’s French student Irene Dupont, so free of spirit and musical to the tips of her piano-playing fingers, has a lead singer’s sense of melody and is humorous too in her head-strong character’s exasperation. To her side is violinist Emily Panes, so key to the beautiful arrangements. Along for the ride too comes Zoe West’s horse-loving Wilhemina “Call me Bill” Robinson, whose late arrival adds an air of mystery.

All is orchestrated by director Rice at a cracking pace, her ingenuity, inventive flair and sense of mischief complemented by Lez Brotherston’s typically witty, playful set and costume designs. The beds are employed so imaginatively in Alistair David’s choreography, while Simon Baker’s sound and video design and Beth Carter and Stuart Mitchell’s dream sequence animation are filled with the visual and verbal humour synonymous with the snap, crackle and pop of Rice’s crisply delivered shows.

Zoe West’s Bill Robinson in Malory Towers. Picture: Steve Tanner

From the rail route graphics from London to Cornwall to the furiously fast stride pattern of Bill’s animated heroic horse; from a swimming pool scene with Busby Berkeley swimsuit panache and puppet divers to a “Cliffhanger” punchline to end the first act; from a chalkboard to the shadow-puppet figure of headmistress Miss Grayling (voiced by Dame Sheila Hancock, no less), Malory Towers keeps delighting and amusing with its imagery.

Amid Blyton’s high jinks, high drama and high spirits, the performances from Rice’s typically diverse cast are ripe with personality and individuality beneath the uniformity of the school dress code.

Rice adds her own touches to the script, be it a Jackson Pollock drip-painting reference or, more gravely, the damaging, life-altering effect of the war on a father, to the cost of his troubled daughter. Part Blyton, wholly Rice, this Malory Towers is fun, feminist, joyful, old-fashioned yet fresh, championing compassion, inclusivity and freedom of expression with flair, fire and faith in the transformative power of education and theatre alike.

Emma Rice Company in Enid Blyton’s Malory Towers, Leeds Playhouse, tonight, 7.30pm; tomorrow, 2pm and 7.30pm. Box office: 0113 213 7700 or leedsplayhouse.org.uk.

Emma Rice

Q & A with Emma Rice, director of Malory Towers

What inspired you to adapt Malory Towers for the stage, Emma?

“These books make me joyfully tumble back through history. I tumble through memories of my own scary comprehensive, to stories of my Mum’s Dorset grammar school and then to my Gran, who was an untrained teacher in the war. All of these stories have one thing in common – growing up. And Malory Towers, in my opinion, is the best of all growing-up stories! Funny, sharply well observed and fantastically moreish, these books are a pure delight.

“However, beyond the adventures and cliff-top thrills, I wanted to capture that time, just after the Second World War. A time where people were bruised and damaged but resolute about creating a better future. A future without cruelty, violence and hatred.

“Within these deceptively simple books, all these themes are gently explored. The challenge that Enid Blyton sets for us in these gorgeous books, stands the test of time as she asks us to be ‘women that the world can lean on’. If you haven’t already gathered, I love them.”

You initially took Malory Towers on tour in 2019. How does it feel to be returning to the play and why did you decide to bring it back now?

“Oh, I am thrilled to be returning to Malory Towers! There is something exciting about a new class and a new term. We have done some fantastic new work on the design, so it will feel like a box fresh new uniform. Why now? I think we are all ready for some hope and some fun and this will feel like spring has finally come.

“In these difficult and uncertain political times, this is exactly what we all need. A good time underpinned by kind and inclusive values.”

Did it feel daunting to take on such a beloved piece of work?

“How could I be daunted by something I feel such an affinity to? I feel I know these girls and have relished bringing them to theatrical life. Girls are much the same now as they were in 1945. I don’t think being scared helps anybody do anything, so I try hard in my working life to work instinctively, respectfully and joyfully.”

How will you integrate sound and music into Malory Towers?

“This production has the most virtuosic score and soundtrack. My cast are all exceptional singers and the close harmony songs will knock your socks off! We have gorgeous tunes from the time, mixed with newly composed songs by Ian Ross, my long-term collaborator. The result is soaring, impressive and moving.

“All this as well as specially created animation and soundscape by Simon Baker and artist Beth Carter. I wanted this show to feel astonishing, just like young women are to me – and it really is!”

How do you balance putting your own stamp onto Blyton’s work? Is it tricky to deviate from the source material?

“I haven’t deviated too much from the books. The characters are all very true to Enid Blyton, as is the setting and message. Yes, I wove together the best bits from all the books and swapped the pantomime for A Midsummer Night’s Dream, but this is absolutely the Malory Towers you all know and love.”

Is this show one for all the family to enjoy?

“Absolutely. This is a world that all the family can and should enjoy. The themes of friendship, compassion and hope resonate across gender, time, class and culture. It’s a cracking yarn, yes, but this deceptively simple subject matter really does give us all a chance to reflect. It allows us a moment to think about growing up, about war, empathy and about our own part in history.

“In a time when lots of us can feel hopeless and powerless (especially the young), this magic show gives us back a sense of community, agency and shared responsibility.”

What is the importance to you of creating new work outside London?

“For me, I have always made my best work out of London. There seems to be more time and space to focus and the work in turn becomes deeper and more rooted. Things can sometimes get lost in London but opening in Bath, our home venue, we can shine and shout as bright and as loud as we please. Like the wonderful girls at Malory Towers!”

Finally, why should theatre-goers see Malory Towers?

“Because it is pure entertainment and pure joy. It has everything; music, puppetry, film… and a cliff-top rescue! It really is for everybody and gives us all the lift we need in these dark times. Shake off the winter and dive into this cool and sparkling production.”

Community event of the week: York Pride 2026, Knavesmire, York, May 30, 11am to 7.30pm. Who will be performing?

York Pride: Day of Pride, protest, visibility, music, cabaret and family entertainment at Knavesmire tomorrow. Picture: Milner Creative

YORK Pride 2026 celebrates love, equality and community as thousands head to Knavesmire for a day suffused with with music, colour and unity as the LGBT+ rainbow flies proudly across York tomorrow from 11am to 7.30pm.

Free to attend, the festival promises a full day of Pride, protest, visibility, music, cabaret and family entertainment, opening  with the 90-minute Pride parade from Parliament Street at 12 noon. Bring rainbow attire, water, comfortable shoes and sun cream or umbrellas (depending on the Yorkshire weekend weather).

The Main Stage line-up features Girls Aloud’s Nadine Coyle, musical star and pop singer Joe McElderry, Urban Cookie Collective, Nicki French, RuPaul’s Drag Race UK’s Michael Marouli, Roxanne Cooper, Sweet Like Sabrina, Heavenly Bodies, Jordan Smart, DJ Rory Hoy and York Stage’s cast for Everybody’s Talking About Jamie, performing the show’s biggest numbers ahead of the Grand Opera House run from October 16 to 24.

The Main Stage will be hosted by Ash Palmisciano, Mamma Bear and St Sordid Secret, bringing Pride energy, Yorkshire warmth, crowd moments and celebration throughout the day.

The Cabaret Stage returns with a packed line-up of drag, cabaret and queer performance, hosted by Miss Kitty Lee and Crudi Dench. On the bill will be RuPaul’s Drag Race UK’s Victoria Scone, JTG featuring Janice D, Tanya Hyde and Gloria Hole, Luna Hex, Queen Queef, Polly Glamourous, Elle Vosque, Sasha Glam, King Butch, Marigold Addams as Jane McDonald, Pembo, Robynne Ryske, Reese Wetherspoon, Ferne Ando and Mark Anthony.

Crudi Dench: Hosting Cabaret Stage at York Pride tomorrow and presenting Someone Help Her! in The Basement tonight

Crudi Dench, by the way, also will be presenting her “almost finished” debut solo show, Someone Help Her!, in her “ancestral homeland” of York in The Basement at City Screen Picturehouse tonight (29/5/2026) at 8pm.

Ring, ring, who is it? Drag comedian, West End writer, delusional icon and “all-round cheeky Northern piglet” Crudi Dench, of course, who will be taping the pilot episode for her new TV show, Someone Help Her! and needs the assistance of surprise celebrity guests in the audience (you) to help those phoning in.

Chaos ensues in this long-awaited, chaotic debut hour from the star and writer of award-winning, sell-out Edinburgh Fringe shows Drag Queens vs Zombies and Drag Queens vs Vampires. Expect stand-up comedy, audience interaction and a fabulous telephone that Crudi will pick up bravely without receiving a text beforehand. Box office: https://www.outsavvy.com/event/34931/crudi-dench-someone-help-her-york.

Across the festival site, York Pride 2026 will feature three stages, a dedicated dance tent, two bars, 100 stalls and food & drink traders, charities, community groups, sponsor spaces, an expanded Family Area and the UK’s largest one-day funfair, plus the proud hosting of York Trans Pride.

Who’s who and what’s what at York Pride 2026

The Family Area will bring family-friendly entertainment, activities, performances and creative spaces for children, young people and families, making York Pride a celebration for all ages.

York Pride is free to attend, a policy only made possible by donations, sponsorship, fundraising, traders, volunteers and community support. Every donation and every purchase from the festival’s official shop helps keep Pride free and protects the future of the event.

Explore the website at https://www.yorkpride.org.uk/to find out more about the Pride Parade, accessibility, volunteering, trading, sponsorship, donating, shopping, travel information, performers and everything planned for York Pride 2026.

Follow @yorkpride for the latest announcements and updates.

DRAGGING It Out, York Pride’s Official Closing Party, will be held at Impossible York’s Wonderbar on Sunday from 5pm to 10pm, starring Janice D and Tanya Hyde and featuring fabulous entertainment, delicious food, games and giveaways. Tickets cost £20 at https://www.yorkpride.org.uk/product/dragging-it-out-york-pride-official-closing-party/.

Folk gig of the week: John McCusker Trio, York Festival of Ideas, National Centre for Early Music, York, May 29, 7.30pm

John McCusker: Fiddler, composer, producer, trio regular, podcaster and masterclass teacher

SCOTTISH fiddler John McCusker is joined by virtuoso multi-instrumentalist and singer Sam Kelly and flute, whistle and guitar player Toby Shaer in his folk trio to perform a thrilling combination of instrumental dexterity, heartfelt songs and live energy on the eve of the York Festival of Ideas 2026.

“It was a really lovely surprise to learn it’ll be part of the festival,” says musician, composer and producer John. “I think it will influence what we’ll put in the set-list. It makes you look at the gig through a different lens, thinking about it being part of a festival of ideas.

“I always love coming to York. It feels like I’ve played everywhere there! It’s 36 years of touring now, where one of the lovely things is how places feel very familiar, like the NCEM in York, where we’ve made many friends and the stage feels very comfortable.”

Born in Belshill, fiddle, tin whistle, cittern and guitar player John began touring with the Battlefield Band at the age of 17. Now 53, he says: “One of the things I’ve always strived to do over those 36 years is to keep myself creatively stimulated, after working with many musicians that have inspired me.

“I feel lucky in having done things like bumping into Eddi Reader, who said she’d fallen in love with the songs of Robert Burns and then doing that record with her, or making a record with Kris Drever and Roddy Woomble [2008’s Before The Ruin].

“I’ve never had a plan. I’ve just bumped into people and ended up working with them, touring or making records, and hopefully they’re drawn to me by the magic that happens between us.”

John continues: “Like working with Michael McGoldrick and John Doyle [in an acoustic folk trio rooted in contemporary Celtic and roots music], when we didn’t want the magic to stop after doing Celtic Connections together.

“We’ve just done 40 gigs this year where what we play is barely discussed. We just go on stage and the creativity happens, the chemistry clicks.”

Now John’s attention turns to the John McCusker Trio with Sam Kelly and Toby Shaer, where their fusion of original compositions, traditional melodies and contemporary folk bursts with innovation, joy and soul.

“We’ve just made an EP that’ll be available at the gig – it was being pressed last week,” he says. “With Sam and Toby, it feels like we’re not just copying the other trios. This trio has its own qualities, developed by touring together several times.

“What we’ve discovered is that if I were to play what I play with McGoldrick and Doyle, it doesn’t sound right with Sam and Toby, so instead we try to play to our strengths, not doing something the other trios would, but thinking about what tunes would suit Sam and Toby. I’m loving the discovery of that, albeit I’m trying to do less travelling now.”

“After 36 years, I feel I still have so much to learn,” says John McCusker. Picture: Elly Lucas

John, who now lives in Perth & Kinross, has turned his hand to hosting a podcast, The Fiddle Line, interviewing the likes of fellow Scottish fiddlers Ali Bain and Duncan Chisholm. “The premise is that, as musicians, we meet at festivals, in recording studios or at concerts halls, where we’ll give each other a hug, play tunes together, but I didn’t know what Duncan’s back story was until I interviewed him for the podcast. I’m really enjoying doing the shows.”

John is also hosting fiddle weekends, “having shied away from teaching until I went to the Belfast Trad Festival”. “I did five days solid, teaching five hours a day, as well as concerts, where beforehand I was thinking ‘why am I doing this? I don’t like teaching’, when usually I’ll just do a two-hour masterclass at the Cambridge Folk Festival, but I so enjoyed it that I started teaching last year in the local village hall, in Crook of  Devon, just outside Kinross,” he says.

“One of the teaching sessions was with Duncan [Chisholm], where he gave a masterclass and we recorded the podcast live.”

From differing trios to podcasts and fiddle-teaching weekends, John is keeping himself “creatively happy”. “It’s this love of still learning, learning how to get better at teaching and podcasting,” he says. “After 36 years, I feel I still have so much to learn.

“I remember when I used to play in folk clubs at the age of 12, then joining the Battlefield Band at 17, then touring the world with Mark knopfler, playing arenas where the crowds got bigger and bigger, feeling out of my depth working with these genius musicians from all over, thinking how did I get here?

“But you learn so much by soaking it all up – and there are so many sides to it. I remember a chat with John Doyle and Michael McGoldrick, when we were playing at 100 miles an hour and feeling we were not getting anything back from the audience.

“We had to learn about the pacing of our gigs, when we were getting faster and faster. Or learning by talking to Ali Bain about what it was like in the early days.

“Or feeling that when I started playing with the Battlefield Band, I remember being young and touring with older musicians and observing the way they talked to the audience and set up a set of tunes or a song. That had a huge impact on me; how, after telling a joke, you can play anything because you have the audience right there.”

John returns to his statement of “sometimes wanting to travel less”, then qualifies what he means. “One thing I’ve never got tired of is how, when someone plants a creative seed, it blossoms into a record or into touring,” he says.

This applies to working with Sam and Toby. “We’re thinking, ‘what can we do with all these sounds?’; ‘how can we bring in as many influences as possible to the sound?’. I’m really buzzing off working with them, having been a fan of Sam for years, when I had no idea of his love of old songs.”

Tomorrow’s gig has sold out. Box office for returns only: 01904 658338 or ncem.co.uk.