Tag Archives: Peet Jackson

SEVEN DRUNKEN NIGHTS

★★★

New Wimbledon Theatre

SEVEN DRUNKEN NIGHTS

New Wimbledon Theatre

★★★

“We haven’t learned a lot, but the craic has been grand”

The New Wimbledon Theatre’s website categorises “Seven Drunken Nights” as a concert. The press release’s headline claims it is the ‘story of the Dubliners’ – one of Ireland’s most iconic folk bands. Both announce that it is a celebration. Of that we can be totally sure. Now in its tenth year on the road, the production is still delighting audiences with its faithful arrangements of Irish classics. The eight-piece band – led by the creator, writer and director Ged Graham – fill the venue with the reels and ballads we have come to know and love.

Whether it is the story of The Dubliners is questionable. There is a fair bit of narration between the numbers, mostly delivered by Graham. If you are already a fan it is decidedly superfluous, if you’re coming at it afresh then it is equally irrelevant. The story telling is limited, restricting itself to dates and personnel changes; nothing that isn’t covered by a couple of column inches on Wikipedia. Bizarrely the back wall sports a giant video screen which frequently interrupts the action with vintage adverts for Beamish stout, Murphys or Harp lager. I guess it is supposed to enhance the effect that we are sitting in the back room of a Dublin pub somewhere in the seventies. More specifically O’Donoghue’s, tucked away on Merrion Row near St Stephen’s Green, which is where the band cut its teeth. The Dubliners were originally known as The Ronnie Drew Ballad Group (once mistakenly billed as The Ronnie Drew Ballet Group). Fellow band member, Luke Kelly, decided the name was misrepresentative, so looking up from his copy of James Joyce’s ‘Dubliners’, suggested their new name.

The show is named after The Dubliners’ chart hit from the sixties – “Seven Drunken Nights”, and is essentially a tribute act. With no introduction we are singing along to ‘The Wild Rover’, ‘The Irish Rover’, ‘The Leaving of Liverpool’, ‘Dirty Old Town’, ‘Finnegan’s Wake’ and many, many others. Without attempting to replicate the original line up, the band members give note prefect renditions of the songs with their full vocals and expert musicianship. In the background, a barman is serving pints of Guiness – visibly ‘Guiness Zero’ however – a reflection of the slight edge of sanitised inauthenticity. For the full effect we would need to be in a sweaty bar room, thick with cigarette smoke. Something is lost in the translation to a theatre auditorium.

But that doesn’t stop the charismatic personalities of the cast bringing us to our feet. Scattered among the toe tapping and hand clapping are moments of poignancy. An A Capella interlude demonstrates the glorious harmonies these singers are capable of, and a stripped back version of ‘Dublin in the Rare Old Times’ is soaked in nostalgia; also paying tribute to past ‘Dubliners’ members who are no longer with us. At one point, Ged Graham is alone on stage to give us a powerful yet mournful rendition of ‘The Town I Loved so Well’.

The show’s encore feels like an after-hours lock-in, for which we are grateful that we have hung around until closing time to be included in. There have been moments during the preceding two and a half hours when we have lost connection. The story jumps somewhat, then abruptly stops at the late eighties. Neither is there any political or social reference. The absence in the repertoire of the rebel songs, the anti-war themes and socialist overtones is perhaps a necessary choice, but it dilutes the history, and consequently the importance, of The Dubliners’ legacy. By now, though, the audience doesn’t seem to care. We are clapping along, not necessarily in time, and raucously singing along. Not necessarily in tune. What is spot-on, however, is the enthusiasm – on and off the stage. ‘Whiskey in the Jar’ morphs into the lower tempo ‘Molly Malone’. We haven’t learned a lot, but the craic has been grand.



SEVEN DRUNKEN NIGHTS

New Wimbledon Theatre then UK Tour continues

Reviewed on 7th April 2026

by Jonathan Evans

Photography by Prestige Productions

 


 

 

 

 

SEVEN DRUNKEN NIGHTS

SEVEN DRUNKEN NIGHTS

SEVEN DRUNKEN NIGHTS

A FAIRYTALE FOR CHRISTMAS

★★★

UK Tour

A FAIRYTALE FOR CHRISTMAS

Dominion Theatre

★★★

“we are delightfully thrown off track with diversions into traditional Irish numbers and some rousing instrumental breaks”

I’ve never experienced New York at Christmas, but I have many fond memories of celebrating the festive season in Dublin. From the Liffey, through O’Connell Street, and down Grafton Street to St Stephen’s Green, the lure of the pubs is irresistible with their warmth and sweat as locals, and strangers, bustle together. Fiddles, bodhrans and whistles barely drowning out the lilting babble, and the Guinness spilling from raised glasses as freely as the ‘craic’ is flowing. The long-running, touring concert – “A Fairytale for Christmas” – recreates the experience. But on its extended pub crawl, it has misguidedly stumbled into a venue too large to capture fully the intimacy of its intentions. But, hey, the energy from the thousand or so revellers in the auditorium, matched by the earthy pizazz of the performers up on the vast Dominion stage, seem to just about pull it off.

We’re not in the Fair City, judging by the vast backdrop, but in Central Park. A pop-up bar is open round the clock, to which the city’s drinkers and dancers and musicians are drawn. By the way, ‘this show is in no way based on, endorsed by, or affiliated or associated with the song titled Fairytale of New York…’. Despite this disclaimer in the advertising copy, there is a sanitised nod to the late, great Shane MacGowan. And, of course, the song does appear. How could it not?

Master of ceremonies is Shane Morgan (a close namesake to The Pogues’ leading man, especially if you slur your words). Morgan is credited as the Narrator. A loose job description unless you feel that being reminded repeatedly what city, and what season, you are in constitutes a good story. But he is in fine voice as he leads the core troupe of singer/musicians through their paces. They are literally (and it sounds like the opening of a joke) the Englishman, Irishman and Scotsman. Respectively, Oliver Cave on guitar, Peet Jackson on banjo and Caitlin Forbes on fiddle. All of them seasoned singers, along with soloist Molly Farmer who ups the quartet into a quintet. Swirling around the whirlwind of musical medleys are the dancers, brilliantly skilled, sassy and versatile; mixing traditional Irish stepdance with more contemporary Riverdance style choreography. A bit of MT and tap thrown in, along with glorious stagecraft courtesy of choreographer Leanne Kyte. Dave Richardson’s lighting and AV design is magical, spotlighting the glorious (uncredited) display of costume too. With Creative Director, Ged Graham, at the helm, the show is quite a spectacle.

The song list sets off on a predictable course. Santa Claus is coming to town, while we wish it could be Christmas every day (surely Santa’s going to protest). We are simultaneously driving home for, and stepping into, Christmas. You get the drift. But we are delightfully thrown off track with diversions into traditional Irish numbers and some rousing instrumental breaks, interspersed with a couple of quieter moments. Violinist Forbes’ intimate rendition of ‘Danny Boy’ is a highlight, while Cave gives us a haunting ‘Peace on Earth’, enriched by the harmonies of the ensemble. Unfortunately, an awful lot of the singing is lost in a gruelling and muddy sound mix. The bass drags the harmonies down into its silty undertow while the kick drum persistently paces behind the scenes – particularly during a bizarre arrangement of Slade’s ‘Merry Xmas Everybody’ – as though the giant from the ‘Jack and the Beanstalk’ panto down the road is pounding the walls, smelling the blood of an Englishman (and Irishman and Scotsman – oh, and Spanish… there’s a token of Flamenco added to the evening’s mix to give the required cosmopolitan feel).

By the time we reach the semi-eponymous finale number, MacGowan’s poignant lyrics are long buried underneath what resembles a raucous Saturday night chucking out time. Who knows who is singing what; but who cares? We’re loving it. The crowd are on their feet; phone flashlights are waving through the night air (I remember when it used to be cigarette lighters) and the resounding cry of ‘Yes!’ follows Morgan’s encore offer of ‘one for the road’. Like Santa, this show in London is a one-nighter. But if you’re quick you could catch it up in another town. And hopefully a smaller venue. It needs more of the intimacy of a spit and sawdust pub, not a cold, cavernous hall. But our hearts have still been warmed by the high energy display of tradition, wit, music and dance.



A FAIRYTALE FOR CHRISTMAS

Dominion Theatre then UK Tour continues

Reviewed on 23rd November 2025

by Jonathan Evans

Photography by Prestige Productions


 

Previously reviewed at this venue:

PUNK OFF! | ★★★★ | March 2025
THE DEVIL WEARS PRADA | ★★★★★ | November 2024
THE ROCKY HORROR SHOW | ★★★★ | September 2024
GREASE | ★★★★ | May 2022

 

 

A FAIRYTALE FOR CHRISTMAS

A FAIRYTALE FOR CHRISTMAS

A FAIRYTALE FOR CHRISTMAS