Tag Archives: Ethan Pascal Peters

CABLE STREET

★★½

Marylebone Theatre

CABLE STREET

Marylebone Theatre

★★½

“an important story with a compelling core and an impressive cast”

After two sold out 2024 runs, ‘Cable Street’ marches back into London. Based on the Battle of Cable Street, where ordinary people stood up to antisemitism and fascism, this musical offers a timely take on community but never quite finds its rhythm.

October 1936. Fascism is rising across Europe. Oswald Mosley’s antisemitic British Union of Fascists (BUF) plans to march through London’s Jewish East End. East Enders amass in their thousands in protest, reaching boiling point at Cable Street. The crowds roar “¡No pasarán!” (“They shall not pass”) – but can they hold the line, and at what cost?

Reworked since its 2024 productions, ‘Cable Street’ has a strong core but muddled execution. Alex Kanefsky’s book distils events into three quintessentially East End perspectives – Jewish, Irish and working class British. Kanefsky sharply captures how the increasingly disenfranchised, working class Ron is drawn in by the BUF, and how anger pushes Jewish Sammy to the brink of murder, offering a clear-eyed look at human complexity. Each period of unrest cleverly shifts the communities from resistance to rupture to resolve, emphasising the message of strength through solidarity.

Other elements land less well. The wider narrative feels scattered and superficial, juggling multiple families, supporting characters, conflicts and even centuries. The shared flat scenes grow more engaging as the families interweave, but never quite land on what binds them. Even central character arcs feel loose: the Sammy-Mairead romance (briefly a triangle with Ron) fizzles out by Act 2; and Ron’s unravelling feels underdeveloped. The present day frame – opening without a strong hook, fading out in Act 2, and ending on an underwhelming note – fades alongside the far richer 1930s thread.

Adam Lenson’s direction, with associate Hetty Hodgson‍, sharpens Sammy and Ron’s inner struggles and adds real weight to the mothers’ perspectives. However, there are some puzzling choices: the Hamilton style Act 1 button feels overfamiliar, the candy coloured BUF number is tonally confusing, the Times sandwich board feels cartoonish, and the leaflet based ‘violent resistance’ feels unintentionally ironic. Several sections feel static, with sparse and sometimes simple choreography from Jevan Howard Jones‍ which makes Sammy’s fluid street dance feel a little incongruous.

Tim Gilvin’s score, supervised by Tamara Saringer and directed by Dan Glover with Bianca Fung assisting, taps into the 1930s East End’s multicultural soundscape, blending Irish folk, Klezmer, Jewish liturgy and Caribbean influences. However, it’s also crammed with contemporary styles, such as R&B, drum and bass, and a big dose of rap for Sammy, which don’t always gel. Furthermore, genres change abruptly mid song – sometimes more than once – and don’t always align with dramatic tone. However, ‘Only Words’ and ‘Stranger/Sister’ are beautiful stand out songs. The band (Elizabeth Boyce, Robyn Brown, Joel Mulley, Max Alexander-Taylor) delivers a richness that belies their small size.

Yoav Segal’s set design is striking, with the bleak, raw exterior softening into the families’ homes. Sam Waddington and Ben Jacobs’ lighting leans into these contrasts with some strikingly dramatic moments, though others could be further developed. Charlie Smith and associate Mike Woods’ sound design is initially a little imbalanced but settles. The use of effects in high stakes moments is slick and impactful. Lu Herbert’s costumes feature slick transitions between present day and 1936, and similarities between the three families reinforce the sense they’re not so different after all.

The ensemble cast is superb. Isaac Gryn is outstanding as Sammy, oozing raw emotion and irresistible charisma, with commanding vocals and assured movement. Barney Wilkinson charts Ron’s radicalisation with striking authenticity and a stunning belt. Preeya Kalidas’ Edie and Elizabeth steal the show, pairing rich, soaring vocals with gritty, raw emotion. Jez Unwin shapeshifts effortlessly between multiple characters — sometimes within seconds — delivering ‘No Words’ with richness and emotional heft. Romona Lewis Malley gives Rosa’s supporting role real dimension and sings with impeccable precision.

‘Cable Street’ tells an important story with a compelling core and an impressive cast. However, several elements need refining for the production to land with the weight it deserves.



CABLE STREET

Marylebone Theatre

Reviewed on 26th January 2026

by Hannah Bothelton

Photography by Johan Persson

 

 

 

CABLE STREET

CABLE STREET

CABLE STREET

NERDS

★★★

Edinburgh Festival Fringe

NERDS

Edinburgh Festival Fringe

★★★

“Packed with technology-related puns, the script is generally entertaining”

In ‘Nerds’, Steve Jobs is a hippie-turned-leather-clad bad boy and Bill Gates a traumatised but vindictive incel. In an hour and a half, this musical charts their trajectories from garage-based geeks to some of the richest and most powerful men in the world, paying little mind to fact all the while. Despite the relatively weak script, director Nick Winston has managed to craft a highly entertaining show.

Kane Oliver Parry (as Steve Jobs) and Dan Buckley (as Bill Gates) both deliver stellar performances. Buckley’s treatment of Gates’ evolution from the butt of the joke to jeering bully is particularly satisfying, and his rapping is an unexpected treat. Jobs transforms from an idealistic hippie into a greedy tech bro, but Parry is given much, much less space in the script to flesh out this change. Teleri Hughes gives a particularly strong vocal performance as Myrtle, Gates’ love interest, while Elise Zavou as Jobs’ principled crush contributes a refreshingly critical note. The ensemble works well together and makes the creative choreography look effortless.

The set, designed by Sophia Pardon, consists of a table and a few shelving units, both on wheels, allowing for sleek and satisfying transitions. Paired with gorgeous lighting design by Matt Hockley, the show is a joy to look at. Additionally, the off-stage band, led by Chris Duffy, delivers a pleasing 80s-rock soundtrack that makes the piece feel cohesive where the writing falls short.

Packed with technology-related puns, the script is generally entertaining. However, various plotlines are abandoned as quickly as they are introduced. We hear something about a guy at IMB, a legal battle, intellectual theft, Jobs’ sudden interest in religion, etc, but all are discarded by the end of the relevant song. The ending, in which Jobs and Gates predictably give up their feud, felt unsatisfying.

Created by Jordan Allen-Dutton, Erik Weiner and Hal Goldberg in the 2000s, the tone of the musical is definitely silly, but it is not necessarily satirical. While Gates and Jobs are portrayed as self-centred and greedy, this is presented as a personal rather than a larger structural issue in Silicon Valley, and their flaws are mostly resolved by the end of the musical. The upbeat interpretation feels entirely disengaged from the right-wing, neoliberal thrust of Silicon Valley today, making the script feel rather outdated.

Nerds is not the topical, thought-provoking musical satire I was hoping for, but the talented cast and high production value make this worth a watch.

 



NERDS

Edinburgh Festival Fringe

Reviewed on 15th August 2025 at Cowbarn at Underbelly, Bristo Square

by Lola Stakenburg

Photography by Pamela Raith

 

 

 

 

 

NERDS

NERDS

NERDS