Tag Archives: Keith Strachan

HMS PINAFORE

★★★★★

Theatre at the Tabard

HMS PINAFORE

Theatre at the Tabard

★★★★★

“small-scale theatre at its very best: warm, witty, and quietly extraordinary”

The Tabard’s H.M.S. Pinafore, a follow-up from the same creative team behind last season’s much-loved Mikado, is the rarest of theatrical conjuring tricks: a production so thoroughly delightful you forget it has no orchestra, no ensemble of dozens, and a notable absence of rigging, given its setting on a Royal Navy warship. For all its ultra-low budget limitations, this production is not merely charming. It is enchanting.

Director Keith Strachan corrals Gilbert and Sullivan’s 1878 satire on class, love and social hierarchy into an intimate ninety-six-seat space with a confidence that borders on cheek. Captain Corcoran’s daughter Josephine (played by Stevie Jennings-Adams) is in love with the humble sailor Ralph Rackstraw (Finan McKinney). Her father (Leopold Benedict) has grander designs, in the form of Sir Joseph Porter, First Lord of the Admiralty (John Griffiths). A harbour trader with her secret of mistaken identities does the rest.

The standout is Gloria Acquaah-Harrison’s Little Buttercup. Warm and mischievous, she gives the dockside vendor a rich emotional centre that anchors every scene she touches. With the plot hinging on her secret, Acquaah-Harrison provides both glint and genuine feeling.

Equally remarkable is Marissa Landy as Cousin Hebe. When she is not delivering tart comic timing in the chorus, she picks up a flute to provide half the score, and at one point breaks into a tap routine with such joy that the audience cheered. To sing, dance and play in one performance is graft elevated to high art. Kieran Wynn’s Bosun and Ryan Erikson Downey as Dick Deadeye round out the company with cheerful aplomb.

The sublime score is carried by Landy’s flute and Musical Director Annemarie Lewis Thomas at the piano. Sullivan’s tunes emerge as bright and shapely as ever.

Gilbert and Sullivan was always meant for rooms like this. In Victorian times the score travelled the Empire in sheet music, sung by families round the parlour piano and in British clubs from Calcutta to Cape Town. This production sits squarely in that tradition. It is conventional, too, to tweak the lyrics to the moment; here the music itself has been gently rearranged for the company’s gifts, with doo-wop renderings of old favourites. The entire evening was a delight.

What the production lacks in budget it more than answers in invention. There is a particularly clever moment during “He Is an Englishman” when the audience waves Union Jacks, while the cast brandish flags reflecting their own heritage, for example a Scot raises the Saltire. Watching it, I understood for the first time the irony of how the high-Victorian expressions of patriotism that Gilbert lampooned in 1878 inspired the nationalisms that undid the empire. From the first rumblings of Irish Home Rule in the 1880s to the long road that led, eventually, to Sir Muhammad Iqbal and the idea of a separate state for India’s Muslims, it was the British who showed them how to do it. Patriotism, it turns out, is contagious.

This is small-scale theatre at its very best: warm, witty, and quietly extraordinary.



HMS PINAFORE

Theatre at the Tabard

Reviewed on 7th May 2026

by Elizabeth Botsford

Photography by Matt Hunter @huntercollins_photography


 

 

 

 

HMS PINAFORE

HMS PINAFORE

HMS PINAFORE

About Bill

★★★★★

Theatre at the Tabard

ABOUT BILL at Theatre at the Tabard

★★★★★

About Bill

“a deeply heartfelt piece of musical theatre”

Sixty years is quite a time span to slot into a little over sixty minutes. It is quite an epic endeavour, especially in the intimate confines of an eighty-seat venue, but the decades are pinpointed with a flawless and nostalgic precision in Kim Ismay’s one woman musical “About Bill”. More than just a backdrop, the passing years are the context in which Ismay takes us on a journey (or rather, several journeys) through the lives, recollections and revelations of ten very different but connected women. The show is as much, if not more, about them as it is about the title character – whom we never see. Bill Fitzgerald, the renowned (fictitious) jazz trumpeter, who blazed with a rock ‘n’ roll star’s headline grabbing self-destruction, scandals and love-affairs. Adored the world over for his music, these women who shared his life pull focus on the many other shades of love that this charismatic maverick inspired.

As the shockwaves of the 1929 Wall Street Crash reach our shores, pregnant showgirl Stella has more important things on her mind as she wishes for a girl rather than a boy. Fast forward ten years and we discover her wish was not granted. It was a boy – Bill – later abandoned by his mother to be raised by pious Auntie Dot. Already, the skill with which Ismay switches characters is firmly revealed. Each endearingly individual woman is meticulously real, convincing and natural; the range of emotions matching the diverse personalities. As the accents and costumes change, so are our hearts tugged in varying directions. Never before have we witnessed such a perfect balance of humour and pathos, of laughter and tears, vaudeville and poignancy. Bernie Gaughan’s script, written specifically with Ismay in mind is a perfect vehicle, but it resonates far deeper than that. Ismay undoubtedly owns the material, along with the late Matthew Strachan’s music and lyrics into which she breathes the very souls of those characters.

After Auntie Dot, we behold the sixteen-year-old Joyce, smitten by the ‘bad boy’ Bill, seeking answers in the agony aunt pages of the local rag. Next up is Gloria, the gin-swigging landlady, past her prime and seduced into lowering the rent. By the 1960s we meet Auntie Dot again. Bill is world famous now, and Dot fears for him. She fears he will go the way of his mother, the victim of a lonely death. There is Sally, Bill’s lovechild born of a tryst with the teenage Joyce. We encounter the aristocratic first wife, forever in therapy, and young enough to quit while the going’s good. As we tear through the seventies and eighties, we meet Mexican grifter Lopita, music journalist Karen and fellow addict Helen, until the final, heart-rending reappearance of Sally. Keith Strachan’s staging lets us know exactly where we are in time and space, but it is Ismay’s spellbinding performance that anchors us there, along with Matthew Strachan’s songs (accompanied by Paul Crew at the piano) that reflect the varying periods, as well as allowing Ismay to delve into the many depths of feelings that are brilliantly conveyed in the book and lyrics.

“About Bill” is a deeply heartfelt piece of musical theatre. The satire is evident, but the humanity is a sheen that dominates and resonates. Ismay’s versatility is frankly astounding. She makes use of an array of wigs and (self-made) costumes, but frankly she doesn’t really need them. Her talent and sensitivity does it all. Speaking and singing she is a delight. The show is a perfect mix of monologue and music. You’ll be enthralled. You’ll laugh, you’ll cry. You’ll want more.

 


ABOUT BILL at Theatre at the Tabard

Reviewed on 30th August 2023

by Jonathan Evans

Photography by Anthony Sajdler

 

 

 

 

Recent shows reviewed by Jonathan:

 

Ride | ★★★ | Southwark Playhouse Elephant | July 2023
This Girl: The Cynthia Lennon Story | ★★ | Upstairs at the Gatehouse | July 2023
The Lord Of The Rings | ★★★★★ | Watermill Theatre Newbury | August 2023
String V Spitta | ★★★★ | Soho Theatre | August 2023
La Cage Aux Folles | ★★★★★ | Regent’s Park Open Air Theatre | August 2023
The Garden Of Words | ★★★ | Park Theatre | August 2023
The Great Gatsby | ★★★ | St Paul’s Church Covent Garden | August 2023
Death Note – The Musical In Concert | ★★★★ | London Palladium | August 2023
Dark Nature | ★★★ | Canal Café Theatre | August 2023
Eve: All About Her | ★★★★★ | Soho Theatre | August 2023

About Bill

About Bill

Click here to read all our latest reviews