Tag Archives: Karen Newby

DAGMARR’S DIMANCHE

★★★

Crazy Coqs

DAGMARR’S DIMANCHE

Crazy Coqs

★★★

“plenty of star quality, with stunning vocals and a carefully curated set list”

If you’re craving golden age Hollywood glamour, the next instalment of Dagmarr’s Dimanche: ‘Songs from the Cinema’ at Crazy Coqs delivers silver screen seductresses, past and present. Though the opening is a little hesitant, Dagmarr’s voice and charisma soon light up the room.

“Willkommen, bienvenue, welcome” to an evening of cinema’s timeless temptresses – none more luminous than Hersh Dagmarr, of course. Dagmarr’s worldly ghost insists they’ve shaped everyone from Hollywood’s first chanteuses to today’s femme fatales. They’re not bitter, but it should have been them – and tonight they’re out to prove it.

Created and performed by Hersh Dagmarr with Karen Newby on keys, this cabaret channels 1920s Weimar Berlin and smoky French chanson. Dagmarr recounts a gloriously chequered past, lifting the curtain on everyone from Mae West to Madonna, and unleashes punchy vocals across a setlist spanning Sondheim, Gershwin, Kander and Ebb, and more.

Dagmarr’s singing is the clear highlight of the evening. Dagmarr’s technique and versatility are striking, moving effortlessly through musical styles with a thrilling brassy belt, soaring falsetto, and soft, intimate whispers that would make many singers jealous. The spoken sections initially land a little tentatively, with early stumbles and wobbly pacing that leaves a few punchlines adrift – though Dagmarr eventually finds the rhythm. It also takes time for the persona to fully snap into place, but once it does the magnetism is electric. Once in full stride, an irresistible enchantress emerges; it’s just a pity they don’t arrive sooner.

From a writing perspective, the act shows real promise but needs refining. The central concept takes time to surface, and the spoken sections could be snappier in places, with a few wordy detours slowing the pace. In terms of direction, Dagmarr could make a far bolder entrance – the current one is so understated it’s almost missed. Greater use of space and some choreography would lift earlier numbers, though things bloom as the persona settles.

The set list celebrates the golden age of Hollywood, with a few newer numbers adding welcome freshness. The arrangements cleverly give everything a silver screen shimmer, and the curation flows smoothly from big showstoppers to intimate torch songs that show off Dagmarr’s range.

Pianist Karen Newby plays with the ease and flair of a seasoned jazz musician. The arrangements are impressively cohesive across styles, though a few big moments – particularly the finales of ‘Mein Herr’ and ‘I’m Still Here’ – could use a fuller piano line. Newby’s own vocal cameo is charming and expressive, even if the brief duets highlight the contrasting singing styles a little too sharply.

The cabaret design is pared back, with a set composed of the signature Crazy Coqs’ red velvet curtain, piano and mic stand. The lighting is similarly simple, creating intimacy but occasionally dipping before the final note ends. The sound levels never quite hit the sweet spot between singing and speech, though Dagmarr’s soaring belt still shines. Costume wise, the glittery Dietrich esque tailcoat is a smart choice but could push the persona further, with the mid show costume change into another fur coat feeling like a missed opportunity.

Dagmarr’s Dimanche: ‘Songs from the Cinema’ has plenty of star quality, with stunning vocals and a carefully curated set list; it just needs to sparkle from the very beginning.

Hersh Dagmarr returns every Wednesday in March for their Roses of Elagabalus residency, and takes to the stage again at Circle & Star Theatre on 24th March.



DAGMARR’S DIMANCHE

Crazy Coqs

Reviewed on 1st February 2026

by Hannah Bothelton

Photography by Ian Archer


 

 

 

 

DAGMARR’S DIMANCHE

DAGMARR’S DIMANCHE

DAGMARR’S DIMANCHE

MINOGUEUS SANCTUS

★★★½

The Divine

MINOGUEUS SANCTUS

The Divine

★★★½

“often weirdly wonderful, like a chilled shot of chartreuse you didn’t know you needed”

“We’ve all already been Minogued,” says Hersh Dagmarr, kitted out in a perfect imitation of Kylie’s iconic Can’t Get You Out of My Head costume. Judging by the ripples of recognition that met almost every number, he may be right. With a pop career approaching four decades (plus the Neighbours years), Kylie has a longevity many would die for.

Which is, in fact, one of the premises of Minogueus Sanctus, the latest show from London-based French singer-songwriter Hersh Dagmarr at The Divine in Dalston. Dagmarr performs as an immortal Weimar-era cabaret artiste with a side hustle in vampirism. It’s a fabulous conceit that allows Kylie’s chart-toppers to be filtered through a decadently chilling lens. Offering a glimpse into the cabarets of Paris and Berlin, we get an interpretation of Can’t Get You Out of My Head to the distinctive tinkling of “Money Money” from Kander and Ebb’s Cabaret. Dagmarr even sings a verse in German, which thoroughly wows the crowd.

For Dagmarr, age is nothing but a bourgeois social construct — you can just say no! (Though a smidge of bloodsucking may be required to secure the outcome.) After this revelation, numbers such as On a Night Like This, It’s in Your Eyes, and even Better the Devil You Know, the latter sung by accompanist Karen Newby, take on a more villainous air, with the line “I’ve been watching you lately…” assuming a new, darker meaning.

Hersh Dagmarr’s Weimar-era treatment of Minogue the chanteuse is inspired. But it’s not always clear whether Minogueus Sanctus is sincere or a send-up. Dagmarr performs with such unwavering seriousness that the audience is often unsure when to laugh. Moments of physical comedy, like an exaggerated squat in Slow, land well, but others feel unintentionally earnest, more X Factor audition than arch cabaret. A bit more wink and nudge would serve the material better.

After a short interval, during which most of the audience seemed to be debating whether they could name any more Kylie hits, Dagmarr returns in gold sequins for a stronger second half. Highlights include a haunting take on Where the Wild Roses Grow, a mashup of Mack the Knife and I Believe in You, and summer 2023’s viral hit Padam Padam, delivered in the smoky spirit of Edith Piaf. These numbers marry theatrical flair with real musical ingenuity, bringing the show’s promise fully into focus.

There’s little narrative thread in the chatter between songs, but that’s part of the cabaret tradition: character and charisma over plot. What Minogueus Sanctus lacks in narrative cohesion, it makes up for in atmosphere and audacity. It’s not always campy enough to be fully funny, nor sincere enough to be moving — but it’s often weirdly wonderful, like a chilled shot of chartreuse you didn’t know you needed.



MINOGUEUS SANCTUS

The Divine

Reviewed on 28th July 2025

by Amber Woodward

Photography by Ethan Mechare

 

 

 


 

 

 

Previously reviewed by Amber:

BRIXTON CALLING | ★★★★ | SOUTHWARK PLAYHOUSE BOROUGH | July 2025
HERCULES | ★★★½ | THEATRE ROYAL DRURY LANE | June 2025
MRS WARREN’S PROFESSION | ★★★★★ | GARRICK THEATRE | May 2025
DO YOU WANT SOMETHING TO CRY FOR | ★★★½ | THEATRE PECKHAM | May 2025
CORINNE BAILEY RAE PRESENTS BLACK RAINBOWS | ★★★★★ | ROUNDHOUSE | April 2025
FRONTIERS: CHOREOGRAPHERS OF CANADA | ★★★★ | SADLER’S WELLS THEATRE | October 2024
WHEN IT HAPPENS TO YOU | ★★★★★ | PARK THEATRE | August 2024
DORIAN: THE MUSICAL | ★★½ | SOUTHWARK PLAYHOUSE BOROUGH | July 2024
BOYS FROM THE BLACKSTUFF | ★★★ | GARRICK THEATRE | June 2024
JAZZ EMU | ★★★★★ | SOHO THEATRE | June 2024

 

 

 

MINOGUEUS SANCTUS

MINOGUEUS SANCTUS

MINOGUEUS SANCTUS