Tag Archives: ELIZABETH BOTSFORD

THE CHRISTMAS THING

★★★★★

Seven Dials Playhouse

THE CHRISTMAS THING

Seven Dials Playhouse

★★★★★

“a heartwarming celebration of the spirit of Christmas”

The Christmas Thing is a skit based on traditional TV variety shows. It’s entertainment with enough good-natured warmth to melt the heart of the biggest Grinch. This is brightly-coloured, ebullient comedy that’s ideal as your family festive theatre outing this year. Suitable for kids and teens, it will also charm elderly Morecambe & Wise fans. Part The Two Ronnies, part Muppet Show, it has a look and feel similar to Noel’s House Party.

Written, directed and performed by comedy duo Tom Clarkson and Owen Visser (with additional material from Dan Clarkson), the format is deliciously simple. You’re part of the studio audience for a live Christmas television special, complete with remote-controlled cameras, drumming robots, surprise guests, running gags, songs, Christmas games, and video sketches. Audience members become the star guests. Their participation is so expertly handled that it’s difficult tell whether “volunteers” are plants or remarkably game punters. Clarkson and Visser create a familial atmosphere where everyone feels comfortable playing along and where everyone’s silly, heart-warming talents are celebrated. In a world where we are reduced to consumers and observers, this show deserves full marks for encouraging the audience to be participants, joiners-in, have-a-goers and creatives.

Between song and dance numbers, Clarkson is the energetic host, whilst Visser works his technical magic upstage. The duo have risen with apparent ease to the technical challenges. Multimedia content is created and integrated into the show on the hoof. Audience-provided noises are remixed to produce the perfect sound effect at precisely the right moment. Somehow, it all comes together. By the end, it’s apparent that unlike most variety shows, the show has a compelling storyline.

The creative team delivers impressive work. Jack Garratt’s original music and Andy Chisholm’s musical direction provide festive sparkle, whilst Gus Melton’s video design and Bob Visser’s lighting transform the intimate Seven Dials space into a fully functioning TV studio. Multiple cameras beam audience members onto screens, creating moments that oscillate between laughter and good-natured embarrassment.

The staging evokes nostalgic mid-twentieth-century TV talk shows with bright colours, kitsch furniture, applause signs, and lots of retro gadgets. This is comedy on a limited budget that’s both very silly and very clever, combining finely-tuned craft with gleeful anarchy.

What makes The Christmas Thing special is its heart. This is a heartwarming celebration of the spirit of Christmas, capturing the joyful chaos of family gatherings and the magic of vintage festive television, executed using contemporary multi-media. There’s genuine warmth and nostalgia without sentimentality. The Christmas Thing is bonkers, nostalgic, and completely Christmassy.



THE CHRISTMAS THING

Seven Dials Playhouse

Reviewed on 3rd December 2025

by Elizabeth Botsford

Photography by Nia Visser

 

 

Previously reviewed at this venue:

DADDY’S FIRST GAY DATE | ★★★½ | October 2025
MONSTER | ★★★½ | September 2025
STORMS, MAYBE SNOW | | September 2025
BLUE | ★★★★ | March 2024

 

 

THE CHRISTMAS THING

THE CHRISTMAS THING

THE CHRISTMAS THING

L’INCORONAZIONE DI POPPEA

★★★★

Jacksons Lane

L’INCORONAZIONE DI POPPEA

Jacksons Lane

★★★★

“performances fit to grace any opera house”

When Emperor Nerone falls in love with the ambitious Poppea, their toxic romance becomes Rome’s ultimate power play. She’s ruthless, he’s unhinged, and together they’re unstoppable, leaving bodies and broken lives in their wake as Nerone divorces his wife Ottavia to crown his mistress empress. It’s a study in humanity’s capacity for ruthless ambition cloaked in the language of love. HGO’s superb production of Claudio Monteverdi’s masterpiece demonstrates why this company has earned back-to-back Offie Awards.

The plot unfolds like a telenovela. It’s a big mix-up involving murderous rulers, darkly comical servants and mistaken identity that wouldn’t be out of place in Shakespeare. As a matter of historical fact, Nerone murdered Poppea, rather than elevating her to Empress. Busenello’s libretto offers a rehabilitation, a ‘what-might-have-been’ where love conquers all, though at terrible cost.

Director Ashley Pearson delivers a minimalist production that trusts Monteverdi’s music and Giovanni Busenello’s cynical libretto to carry the drama. With little stage furniture and Sorcha Corcoran’s stripped-back set design, the focus remains laser-sharp on the performances. Sofia Alexiadou’s lighting design works to magnificent effect, sculpting the space and illuminating the psychological warfare unfolding between characters. Alice Carroll’s costumes feature light touches of 1980s styling, perhaps a nod to that era’s own excesses and power plays.

Two performances transcend an already strong ensemble cast. Theano Papadaki in the title role is a revelation—a Poppea of calculated ambition matched by a beautiful voice that makes her manipulation utterly seductive. Her final coronation feels both triumphant and unsettling, exactly as it should. Equally outstanding is Jasmine Flicker as Drusilla, bringing genuine pathos to the woman caught in Ottone’s obsession with Poppea. Flicker possesses a voice of exceptional beauty and uses it with intelligence and emotional authenticity.

The eight-piece HGOAntiqua baroque ensemble under Seb Gillot’s musical direction does a fine job with Monteverdi’s score. The theorbo (played by Kristiina Watt)—like a long-stringed bass guitar—joins viola da gamba (Kate Conway), violone (Jude Chandler), and portative organ (Seb Gillot) to create an authentic sound. The original orchestration may have included more wind instruments, but the ensemble creates rich textures nonetheless. This is music from the era of Greensleeves, beautiful and tender, culminating in the sublime final duet “Pur ti miro”.

Monteverdi’s vocal casting is rather top-heavy. Only Seneca provides a bass voice, and his character dies at the end of Act One. More characters with lower ranges would have been an easy win. Perhaps this limitation is only noticeable for an audience exposed to opera’s later golden age, when it was corrected with such great aplomb. Of course, any fault here is not with this production, but with the score itself.

The supporting cast handles the opera’s complex web of betrayals with apparent ease. The working-class characters—guards, nurses, attendants—inject knowing commentary, reminding us that the powerful destroy lives with casual indifference.

HGO continues its impressive mission to give young singers essential professional experience. This production demonstrates why that matters: these are real talents at the start of promising careers, delivering performances fit to grace any opera house.

 



L’INCORONAZIONE DI POPPEA

Jacksons Lane

Reviewed on 9th November 2025

by Elizabeth Botsford

Photography by Julian Guidera


 

Previously reviewed at this venue:

THE FAIRY QUEEN | ★★★★ | April 2024
THIS IS NOT A CIRCUS: 360 | ★★★★★ | October 2023

 

 

L’INCORONAZIONE

L’INCORONAZIONE

L’INCORONAZIONE