Tag Archives: ALLEGRA

ALLEGRA

★★½

Harold Pinter Theatre

ALLEGRA

Harold Pinter Theatre

★★½

“delivers bounce and brightness, and Dame Lipman sparkles”

Olivier nominated Peter Quilter’s new comedy ‘Allegra’ closes its UK tour in the West End. Charming in spirit and championing the off beat, it’s a little too thin to make me shout “encore”.

Allegra’s always been different – her head’s so full of music it overflows without warning. The village finds her a nuisance and suddenly her gift could be trouble. Will the world be the same if she’s silenced?

Quilter’s latest work is sweet but rather safe. It aims to challenge social norms but could do with more bite – bursting into song never feels as scandalous as the play insists. There are glimmers of nuance but Act 2’s social commentary feels a little heavy handed. Allegra is richly drawn, but the other characters feel thin by comparison, especially Anna as the only other female character. Still, the refreshingly dry humour lands, even if the erection gag doesn’t, and Allegra herself is undeniably charming.

Stephen Mear’s direction and choreography brings plenty of colour but not necessarily cohesion. Allegra shines brightest, her world feeling full and warm, while the supporting characters feel less well fleshed out. The Vaudeville style musical interludes sometimes interrupt the flow, and the surreal, fourth wall breaking singalongs tip into fever dream territory. The scene movement flows, but the dance numbers are so simple they flirt with cheesy.

Allegra’s soundtrack is fittingly eclectic, ranging from classical to various decades of pop. It suits her quirky, music loving character, but as an audience member it can feel disjointed, especially when a single word triggers a full song. Paul Schofield keeps the orchestrations light, with a broad palette of musical colours.

Justin Williams’ set channels charming octogenarian maximalism, with clever little hideaways that feel wonderfully lived in. The hidden tulips are a joyfully eccentric touch. Russell Ditchfield’s sound is playfully eclectic, backed by tracks of varying complexity, though a few mic cues miss their moment. Sam Biondolillo’s lighting shifts from simple washes to bursts of colour when Allegra hits full flow, giving the stage a gently hallucinogenic glow. Ben Bull for Big Tele’s videos add playful extra layers, transforming set details like a row of plates and making the judge loom over us with unmistakable authority. Williams dresses Allegra in joyful colour, in contrast with her more muted companions. JJ Wigs gives Allegra a gloriously wild perm and pink rinse – a riot of colour and chaos against everyone else’s far more conventional hair.

National treasure Dame Maureen Lipman brings the idiosyncratic flair without losing an ounce of humanity. Her cuttingly dry humour and dazzling comedy timing anchors her fizzing energy with genuine weight. Her shimmering soprano head voice is gorgeous. John Middleton as Ronen, Elizabeth Bower as Anna and Bailey Patrick as Officer Rogers are an endearing trio to bounce off – but let’s be honest, it’s Lipman’s show.

‘Allegra’ delivers bounce and brightness, and Dame Lipman sparkles. Though if you’re looking for a show with more bite, you might be better off elsewhere.



ALLEGRA

Harold Pinter Theatre

Reviewed on 9th July 2026

by Hannah Bothelton

Photography by Marc Brenner


 

 

 

 

Allegra

Allegra

Allegra

ALLEGRA

★★★★

UK Tour

ALLEGRA

Richmond Theatre

★★★★

“The chemistry between them is comedy-duo gold dust”

‘Unhappiness is the new normal’ quips Ronen midway through Peter Quilter’s bittersweet comedy. ‘Then why am I the one taking the pills?’ replies Allegra, the title character. A simple retort, almost childlike in its innocence, but it encapsulates the deeper questions that are lurking just below the surface of this uplifting and fiercely funny new play. ‘Allegra’ – a melodic name – derives from the Italian musical term, ‘Allegro’, which means joyful, happy and lively. Dame Maureen Lipman certainly lives up to the description with a tour-de-force performance that brings to life eccentricity and vulnerability in all their various shades.

Allegra lives alone in an unnamed English village, filling the empty spaces with her joie-de-vivre and with her endless and irresistible urge to burst into song. Not just at home, but in the streets, at the bakery, the local service station, in the cafes and even the care home at the end of the lane. She can’t always tell, however, whether she is singing out loud or whether it is just in her head. More often than not, it is the former, which apparently causes problems. A challenge that her brother Ronen has to address. Enlisting the help of Czech carer Anna, he vainly tries to keep the long arm of the law at bay, which inevitably comes knocking in the shape of local bobby, Officer Rogers.

The action takes place on Justin Williams’ interior set; a fittingly grand and multi-coloured mash-up of styles, oddities and accessories reflecting the quirkiness of its inhabitant. Lipman has the lion’s share of Quilter’s sharp dialogue and one-liners, which trip off her tongue as though straight from her own fertile mind. John Middleton plays her restrained but neurotic brother Ronen, delicately balancing the desire to kerb his sister’s behaviour without diminishing her happiness. The chemistry between them is comedy-duo gold dust. Polar opposites, they don’t realise how much they have in common. Through Anna’s eyes, Ronen is just as odd. Elizabeth Bower gives a nuanced performance as Anna, injecting playfulness and empathy into the character’s ironic, quasi-European overbearance. Into the mix stumbles Officer Rogers; a figure of bumbling authority that Bailey Patrick sends up to the hilt.

Stephen Mear’s assured direction accentuates the comedic talents of the four cast members. The hour long first act sits very comfortably in the realm of television sitcom: we could very easily see the play developing into an ongoing series on the small screen. Act two wanders a little off-script, treading into darker territory with touches of Kafkaesque surrealism. Mixed with hints of farce it sits a bit unsteadily with the crux of the piece. Some transitions into song are a bit clumsy, but the ensemble routines, once we have crossed over into make-believe, are a joy to watch. The more realistic moments, however, fare better, when Lipman naturally drifts into a Capella singing as a natural extension of her joyous personality.

There are allegorical references to the subject of mental health, examining society’s response to – and treatment – of it. But even in the blacker moments we still laugh out loud. Happiness (or rather the expression of it) is viewed as a problem – an addiction even. “Some people do cocaine – I do cabaret. The funny thing is that it’s the cabaret that gets up people’s noses”. Both writer and director never lose sight of the comedy and, suffice to say, we are soon crashing head on into an uplifting and happy ending. And enjoying every moment of the ride, of which Maureen Lipman is the driving force. We may not particularly go along with her choice of song, but we certainly leave the theatre with a song in our hearts. Rightly so, the show is already heading to the West End. Let’s hope that there are some TV executives in the audience.

 



ALLEGRA

Richmond Theatre then UK Tour continues

Reviewed on 8th June 2026

by Jonathan Evans

Photography by Marc Brenner


 

 

 

 

ALLEGRA

ALLEGRA

ALLEGRA