Tag Archives: Dan Tsantilis

MRS ARMITAGE ON WHEELS

★★★½

Purcell Room

MRS ARMITAGE ON WHEELS

Purcell Room

★★★½

“a visually inventive and musically robust production”

Adapting beloved children’s literature for the stage requires a delicate balance between honouring the source material and expanding its theatrical potential. Samantha Lane’s brand-new musical adaptation of Quentin Blake’s Mrs Armitage on Wheels—bringing the award-winning BBC Box of Treasures animated series to the stage—largely succeeds. It offers a visually rich, highly interactive 50-minute romp.

From the moment the audience enters the space, Ryan Dawson Laight’s beautiful set design establishes a vibrant, welcoming atmosphere. The show opens sharply as Mrs Armitage emerges from her cottage with an infectious, energetic greeting. The physical unfolding of this cottage is a masterstroke of scenic design, eliciting genuine gasps from the auditorium.

The production shines brightest in its clever use of puppetry and object theatre. Maia Kirkman-Richards’ puppetry design breathes incredible life into Breakspear the dog. The nuanced manipulation—making a simple tummy tickle feel profoundly real and touching—grounds the heightened reality of the play. As Mrs Armitage modifies her bicycle (adding horns, snack trays, umbrellas, a dog bed, and a sail), the visual comedy escalates. Breakspear’s hilarious evolution on stage—from jumping on a scooter to becoming a bouncing ball dog, and finally a balloon dog—is a brilliant stroke of physical humor that had children gleefully shouting “bike!” from their seats.

Furthermore, everyday objects are anthropomorphized to great effect. The delightfully absurd speaking mouth of a letter dynamically breaks up the action, revitalizing the room’s energy, while a singing football on the roof turns the mundane into pure, laugh-out-loud comedy.

Jessie Maryon Davies delivers a surprisingly large-scale musical landscape. The score feels genuinely theatrical, featuring complex vocal harmonies that elevate the material beyond standard children’s fare. The finale, “Let’s Celebrate,” is highly engaging, leaving kids enthusiastically debating the flavour of the beautiful prop cake (Chocolate? Peppermint?) long after the curtain falls.

Thematically, the constant upgrades to the bicycle brilliantly raise a classic philosophical question: does relentless progress actually help or hinder our original goals?

However, the production is not without its dramaturgical flaws. The episodic plot structure borders on being overly repetitive. While true to the picture book format, this cyclical repetition somewhat dampens the narrative momentum on stage, causing audience expectations to dip in the middle act.

Additionally, a noticeably long blackout disrupts the show’s otherwise bubbly pacing. If this was an intentional stylistic choice, it bred confusion rather than suspense; if it was merely a scene transition, it desperately needs tightening to maintain the young audience’s immersion.

Mrs Armitage on Wheels is a visually inventive and musically robust production. Despite a slightly repetitive narrative structure and a clunky transition, its heart, humour, and brilliant puppetry make it a delightfully freewheeling ride.



MRS ARMITAGE ON WHEELS

Purcell Room

Reviewed on 19th February 2026

by Portia Yuran Li

Photography by Dan Tsantilis


 

 

 

 

MRS ARMITAGE ON WHEELS

MRS ARMITAGE ON WHEELS

MRS ARMITAGE ON WHEELS

The Good Life

★★

Cambridge Arts Theatre

The Good Life

Cambridge Arts Theatre | UK Tour

Reviewed – 9th November 2021

★★

 

“the sit-com format over two hours disappoints”

 

For anyone not in the know, The Good Life (by John Esmonde and Bob Larbey) was one of BBC TV’s most successful situation comedy programmes airing between 1975 and 1978 which elevated its four main actors to near national treasure status. How then are we to judge this new stage version (adapted and directed by Jeremy Sams), taking the characters as they are without censuring them for not being the faces and voices that we so loved? Well, needs must.

The curtain rises on the morning of Tom Good’s (Rufus Hound) fortieth birthday and his feeling that life is not all it could be. By the end of the day he has quit his job designing cereal box plastic toys and embarked on a mission with wife Barbara (Sally Tatum) to become self-sufficient, turning their suburban house and garden into a freeholding along with chickens, pigs and a marauding goat called Stephanie (a deliberately humorous animatronic puppet). Next door live their friends, haughty and houseproud Margo (Preeya Kalidas) and Tom’s now ex-boss Jerry Leadbetter (Dominic Rowan).

Sams explains in his programme note of the contemporary resonances there are to be heard in this story but the overwhelming feeling is of a period piece. The characters are not much developed beyond what we know already, the biggest laughs come from references to chicken Kiev and black forest gateau, and despite some additional storyline from Sams – including one scene involving the smoking of pot which is unlikely to have made it onto 1970s TV – the key episodes follow events from the TV series.

An ingenious set design (Michael Taylor) incorporates two revolving flats that rotate to reveal either the Good’s kitchen or the Leadbetter’s living room. 1970s furniture – sideboard, hostess trolley, electronic organ, serving hatch – provide the period feel. (A banner in the final scene places us specifically in 1977).

Four loosely-linked scenes ensue of the ups-and-downs of the Good’s new life, and how it affects their relationship with the Leadbetters but the sit-com format over two hours disappoints. When the main joke of one scene is that ‘the Pigman has nobbled the cake’ and the drama reaches its climax with an inebriated tango and a conga around the living room, it all feels just a little lame. An attempt for greater poignancy with a story involving Barbara’s attempts to save the life of a new-born piglet is too long and clumsily staged.

The energy of the ensemble cannot be faulted. There is some excellent quickfire repartee between Tom and Barbara, and Rufus Hound seems most comfortable in his role, but what is missing is any sparkle between the couple. We should see their shared enjoyment when they tease Margo – who does not understand why something is amusing – and the occasional innuendo should seem naughty but falls flat. Next door, Preeya Kalidas does her snooty best as Margo but we only see one side of her character and her propriety always slows the pace. Dominic Rowan does a fine job as Jerry placating his wife and toadying to his boss. Surprisingly, the star turn of the evening comes from Nigel Betts whose four cameo roles with different costumes, hair, and accents are much enjoyed.

There are laughs aplenty to be had in this amiable entertainment which evokes memories of comfy afternoons in front of the telly, a glass of Liebfraumilch in the hand, but, as Tom says right at the start, “is that it?”

 

 

Reviewed by Phillip Money

Photography by Dan Tsantilis

 


The Good Life

Cambridge Arts Theatre until 13th November then UK Tour continues

 

Previously reviewed at this venue:
Copenhagen | ★★★★ | July 2021
Absurd Person Singular | ★★★ | September 2021
Tell me on a Sunday | ★★★ | September 2021
Dial M For Murder | ★★★ | October 2021

 

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