Tag Archives: Alice Croft

WAITRESS

★★★½

UK Tour

WAITRESS

Theatre Royal Brighton

★★★½

“Funny, moving and musically rich”

A small-town diner, a troubled marriage and a gift for baking pies might not sound like the ingredients for a hit musical, but Waitress proves otherwise. Jessie Nelson adapts the 2007 film by Adrienne Shelly for the stage, with music and lyrics by Sara Bareilles. The result blends sharp humour, broad comedy and a richly melodic score into something contemporary and emotionally engaging, even if it occasionally struggles to reconcile its shifting tones.

At its centre is Jenna, played by Carrie Hope Fletcher, a waitress whose talent for pie-making becomes a form of expression, escape and ultimately self-determination. Fletcher delivers a performance of real assurance, her vocals soaring with clarity and control while keeping Jenna grounded and recognisable. There is steel beneath the warmth, giving weight to the character’s choices without losing the show’s lighter touch.

Jenna is trapped in an unhappy marriage to Earl while working at a local diner alongside her friends Becky and Dawn. When she discovers she is pregnant, her sense of being stuck deepens, until the arrival of Dr Pomatter complicates matters further. As their relationship develops, Jenna begins to imagine a different future for herself, one shaped as much by friendship and small acts of courage as by romance.

Around her, the supporting cast adds texture and energy. Sandra Marvin’s Becky is wry, warm and sharply observed, while Evelyn Hoskins brings offbeat charm to Dawn; both shine in their solos, When He Sees Me and I Didn’t Plan It, showcasing vocal range and character depth. Dan O’Brien’s Cal, the diner’s brusque but caring manager, provides a steady comic presence. Dan Partridge’s Dr Pomatter is likeable and easy-going, his scenes with Fletcher carrying a gentle if somewhat idealised chemistry within what is ultimately a more troubling dynamic than the musical fully interrogates. Alongside him, Ellie Ruiz Rodriguez steals scenes as Nurse Norma, leaning fully into the role’s comic potential. Mark Anderson impresses as Ogie, Dawn’s boyfriend, his Never Getting Rid of Me bursting with invention even if its premise – his refusal to take no for an answer – feels slightly uneasy. Les Dennis brings quiet poignancy to Old Joe, his solo Take It From an Old Man delivered with warmth and lived-in humanity, while Mark Wilshire ensures Earl feels uncomfortably real rather than simply villainous.

It is this darker undercurrent that gives the show its bite, though it occasionally feels uneven. Beneath the sugary surface lie serious themes – domestic abuse, coercive control, dementia, infidelity, financial insecurity, generational trauma, stalking and sexual misconduct. Some are central to Jenna’s journey, while others are lightly brushed aside or played for humour, creating an imbalance that prevents the piece from fully landing.

Bareilles’ score is the beating heart of the show, effortlessly moving between ensemble numbers and introspective solos. The songs feel fully integrated into the storytelling. Choreography by Lorin Latarro complements the storytelling with organic, character-driven movement, and the on-stage band under musical direction Stephen Hill adds immediacy and warmth.

Direction by Diane Paulus keeps the production fluid and engaging, allowing humour and pathos to sit side by side, even if the tonal balance occasionally wobbles. Design by Scott Pask captures the lived-in familiarity of the diner, with a flexible set that shifts smoothly between locations. Lighting by Ken Billington subtly shapes mood and focus, while costumes by Suttirat Anne Larlarb ground the characters in a recognisable world. Waitress is a feel-good musical at its heart, following Jenna’s journey with warmth and humour, yet it carries enough complexity to give the story depth. Funny, moving and musically rich, it balances sweetness with just enough bite, even if it does not always explore its darker themes fully.



WAITRESS

Theatre Royal Brighton then UK Tour continues

Reviewed on 7th April 2026

by Ellen Cheshire

Photography by Johan Persson

 


 

 

 

 

WAITRESS

WAITRESS

WAITRESS

BRONCO BILLY – THE MUSICAL

★★★

Charing Cross Theatre

BRONCO BILLY – THE MUSICAL at Charing Cross Theatre

★★★

“it has the thrill of a fairground ride that plants an irresistible smile on our faces as we bravely hang on”

Welcome to the Wild West. It’s not a place on the map, but a place in your heart – or rather Bronco Billy’s heart. A world that tells you that you don’t belong, you ‘gotta’ be strong, and never give up on your dreams. You can be anything you want. Or so it seems. But just in case you missed the greeting card message, it is repeated in verse, prose, rhythm and rhyme many a time over the next couple of hours.

Billy (Tarinn Callender) is a Brooklyn born go-getter, reinvented as a gun-slinging, gun-toting, gun-firing cowboy. A damaged Vietnam veteran he conceals his purple heart, but wears his real one on his sleeve. And it turns out his heart is as big as his personality. Callender is immensely likeable and engaging as the leader of his rag-taggle travelling troupe, performing their Wild West show across America. Part vaudeville, part circus, and wholly chaotic, these cowboys are as ramshackle as the tour bus that is their home.

It is difficult to place them in time. We could be on the frontier in the seventeenth century, or in the depression era of the 1920s, but a casual reference to Margaret Thatcher’s rise to power across the pond places us firmly in 1979. Likewise, Chip Rosenbloom and John Torres’ score wanders the wheat fields and Hillbilly highways in search of a hook; visiting the Grand Ole Opry before rocking up in the disco hostels of the Village People. And we’re back in the seventies. It’s a bumpy ride for sure; coherence hanging by a thread and plausibility in tatters. Yet it has the thrill of a fairground ride that plants an irresistible smile on our faces as we bravely hang on.

Based on the 1980 Clint Eastwood comedy-drama, original scriptwriter Dennis Hackman has adapted and updated the story for the stage, enlisting Rosenbloom and Torres, with additional lyrics courtesy of Michele Brourman. Billy and his company are en route to Hollywood chasing their dream opportunity. But back in New York chocolate heiress Antoinette Lily (Emily Benjamin) is running for her life from her family who have thirty days to make sure she is dead and buried so they can commandeer her inheritance. The two meet by chance at a gas station. Antoinette changes her name to Lily Rose and joins the travelling show and they embark on a will-they-won’t-they romance. The pantomime villains are in hot pursuit led by the wicked stepmother Constance (Victoria Hamilton-Barritt) and hired hitman Sinclair St Clair (Alexander McMorran).

“What draws the most attention are the vocal performances, which is where the principals shine”

Hunter Bird’s upbeat production is as pacey as they get, but somehow feels laboured, not quite sure in which direction it is heading. Stumbling on slapstick and tripping up on clichés that roll like tumbleweed across the dusty terrain towards its predictable finale. Overacting is the keyword, with Hamilton-Barritt, surprisingly, the main culprit. The sideshow players are more nuanced, most notably Karen Mavundukure’s powerhouse ringmaster Doc Blue, and triple threat Helen K Wint as Lorraine who keeps one step ahead of the rest.

What draws the most attention are the vocal performances, which is where the principals shine. Benjamin and Callender – both in fine voice throughout – have the range and refinement to carry the show, culminating in some magical duetting. Hamilton-Barritt delights with some villainous crooning. It is clear that the performers are all having a ball and eventually the audience are infected with the tongue-in-cheek glee that springs from the stage. The second act cranks up the gears, aided throughout by Amy Jane Cook’s revolve set design, centring on the tour bus: a life size box of tricks, ever changing and opening up to reveal the many locations; from the fields of Kansas to the plush New York interiors to the Hollywood film lots.

As ramshackle as Bronco Billy’s Wild West Show, the musical shares Billy’s dreams and ambitions. Like the journey he leads us on, it is a bit of a tough ride, but let’s hope the show doesn’t give up on those dreams. It will get there eventually.


BRONCO BILLY – THE MUSICAL at Charing Cross Theatre

Reviewed on 31st January 2024

by Jonathan Evans

Photography by The Other Richard

 

 

 

Previously reviewed at this venue:

SLEEPING BEAUTY TAKES A PRICK! | ★★★★ | November 2023
REBECCA | ★★★★ | September 2023
GEORGE TAKEI’S ALLEGIANCE | ★★★★ | January 2023
FROM HERE TO ETERNITY | ★★★★ | November 2022
THE MILK TRAIN DOESN’T STOP HERE ANYMORE | ★★★ | October 2022
RIDE | ★★★★★ | August 2022
VANYA AND SONIA AND MASHA AND SPIKE | ★★★ | November 2021
PIPPIN | ★★★★ | July 2021

BRONCO BILLY

BRONCO BILLY

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