Tag Archives: Review

DEAR LIAR

★★★½

Jermyn Street Theatre

DEAR LIAR

Jermyn Street Theatre

★★★½

“a warm celebration of two extraordinary people”

Nestled behind the ornate facades of Piccadilly is a charming secret, Jermyn Street Theatre. Designed as a studio space that’s easily accessible to the West End, with merely 70 seats, the theatre guarantees its audience is never more than four rows away from the action. It’s a fitting backdrop for Dear Liar, an intimate story which travels the forty-year correspondence between two towering theatrical egos, George Bernard Shaw and Mrs Patrick Campbell. Brought to life in Jerome Kilty’s epistolary play, Shaw and Campbell became friends, collaborators, and something more complex—the subjects of one of theatre history’s most celebrated letter exchanges.

There’s a certain geographical poetry to staging a play about Shaw (Alan Turkington) and Mrs Campbell (Rachel Pickup) just round the corner from where their work would have debuted. Kilty’s script dances through their correspondence—covering the opening of Pygmalion, the ebb and flow of devotion, the careful construction of self. As a piece, it revels in its meta-textuality: their letters to each other are performances in themselves, as intimate as they are curated. When they eventually debate and argue over the publishing of these letters, the layers multiply—private becomes public becomes theatrical becomes our interpretation of both.

Yet converting letters into dialogue brings inevitable clunkiness at moments. The language itself is often magnificent, but the epistolary format resists easy dramatisation. Kilty’s script does well to link the letters together into conversation where possible, but it soars highest when abandoning the letters entirely—imagining, for instance, Shaw following Mrs Campbell to the seaside, or their Pygmalion rehearsal together, a comic reversal of the famous play where instead the grand dame struggles deliciously to sound like a flower girl. Pickup seizes the moment, her faux attempts at cockney earning some of the night’s biggest laughs.

Pickup overall is strong as Mrs Pat, capturing both her vanity and her vulnerability, bringing warmth and imperious grace to a woman who knew her own worth. Turkington delivers a solid performance as Shaw, though at times he feels a touch too even-keeled for a man known for his firebrand polemic. There are glimpses of Shaw’s childish capriciousness and intellectual fire, particularly in his anger at a young soldier’s pointless death, but they never fully ignite.

Stella Powell-Jones’ direction ensures the piece never succumbs to static staging, finding visual interest throughout. She uses the space inventively, varying levels and sightlines to keep the two-hander dynamic. A particularly affecting moment sees Mrs Pat materialise behind a curtain as Shaw describes her first appearance in Hollywood, the staging rendering her almost ghost-like as he mythologises her legend.

Tom Paris’ design work across set and costume yields uneven results. His drapes section the playing area deftly, conjuring immediate worlds whilst sparse staging elements anchor the space. The costuming, however, stumbles in its attempt to blend modern and period. It succeeds for Mrs Pat, but Shaw is saddled with a graphic undershirt beneath his waistcoat that reads more high street than Shavian, drawing the eye for the wrong reasons. Chris McDonnell’s lighting offers more assured work, bathing the stage in soft pink warmth, though Harry Blake’s typewriter sound design veers between effective and unnecessarily intrusive.

At its heart, Dear Liar offers comfort theatre at its best—a warm celebration of two extraordinary people, presenting a mosaic of their lives that illuminates the humans behind the legends. It’s truly a theatre lover’s play, holding a bittersweet irony at its centre: Mrs Patrick Campbell’s performances were ephemeral, lost to time as all theatre must be, yet through these letters her words endure alongside Shaw’s. Productions like this preserve what the stage could not—her voice, her wit, her humanity—even as she protests to Shaw her inability to match his way with words. It may not break new ground, but it delivers wit, tenderness, and theatrical charm in abundance.



DEAR LIAR

Jermyn Street Theatre

Reviewed on 10th February 2026

by Daniel Outis

Photography by David Monteith-Hodge

 

 

 

 

 

DEAR LIAR

DEAR LIAR

DEAR LIAR

THE UNLIKELY PILGRIMAGE OF HAROLD FRY

★★★★★

Theatre Royal Haymarket

THE UNLIKELY PILGRIMAGE OF HAROLD FRY

Theatre Royal Haymarket

★★★★★

“balances spectacle with subtlety, and resonates with emotional depth”

The chances we miss often haunt us hardest. ‘The Unlikely Pilgrimage of Harold Fry’ is a tender, heartbreaking, profoundly human new musical offering new chances for those brave enough to take them.

Weighed down by years of regret, Harold Fry learns an old friend is dying. Though initially hesitant, Harold realises there may be time to put one thing right. So begins an unexpected journey, rekindling the joys of living on the way. But can he reach her in time – and what truths await if he does?

Rachel Joyce’s ‘The Unlikely Pilgrimage of Harold Fry’, adapted with Peter Darling and Katy Rudd, with dramaturgy by Nick Sidi, is a profound exploration of pain, forgiveness and renewal. A strikingly honesty portrait of self made prisons, it creates and unravels Harold’s uneasy mythology with impressive insight. Yet for all its gravity, it glows with warmth and humour. The writing, rich in subtext, excels at showing rather than telling – though later exchanges feel less nuanced, such as Maureen’s sudden absolution from a stranger and Kate’s unlikely departure from the pilgrimage. However, Harold and Maureen’s final scene restores the play’s understated humanity, closing with an authentic and unforgettable resonance.

Katy Rudd’s award winning direction, with Jamie Manton and Nicky Allpress, evolves with Harold. Early Brechtian elements – deconstructed set, ever-present ensemble, freezeframes – evoke a fractured existence, while later scenes bring realism and new life. The Balladeer’s shapeshifting nature is seeded with care, haunting Harold before vanishing at key moments. Chris Fisher’s illusions are brilliantly unsettling, while Timo Tatzber’s puppeteering is irresistibly endearing. Overall, the production balances spectacle with subtlety, and resonates with emotional depth.

With music and lyrics by Passenger, and additional contributions from Jeremy Holland Smith and Phil Bateman, the score is delicious, weaving country, smooth jazz, and pop into a cohesive folk sound. The careful construction builds and eases tension beautifully, with surprise chords underscoring emotional breakthroughs. Beautiful harmonies abound, including with the dog! The orchestra brings the score vividly to life under the baton of musical director Chris Poon and deputy Caitlin Morgan.

Tom Jackson Greaves’ choreography, assisted by Nell Martin and Edwin Ray, cleverly contrasts stillness with full blooded ensemble movement, weaving a rich mix of styles that celebrate the many paths to joy and fulfilment.

Samuel Wyer’s design, with Joseph Bisat Marshall (associate set and costume), Paule Constable (lighting), and Ash J Woodward (video), is cohesive, polished, and rich in symbolism. Circles recur from the proscenium arch to the performance space to the barrels, evoking cycles of change and unity. The barrels themselves carry additional meaning, while the circular arch becomes the frame through which we view Harold’s life. The tonal palette reveals stark differences, with Harold’s muted greys giving way to vivid sunsets, while Maureen stays stuck. Blake’s influence in the intense watercolour skies is clear. The only slight drawback is the sound design by Ian Dickinson and Gareth Tucker for Autograph, with voices occasionally struggling against orchestral swells. Still, the overall design grounds and drives the narrative with striking beauty.

The cast is outstanding. Mark Addy nails Harold Fry’s mix of bumbling charm and sincerity with no nonsense wit and warm vocals. Jenna Russell gives a beautifully nuanced Maureen Fry, compressing decades of resentment into a faded figure with crystalline vocals. Noah Mullins makes a dazzling West End debut as the commandingly mercurial Balladeer, delivering stunning vocals. The whole ensemble shines with vivid characterisations, powerful singing, and Tatzber’s enchanting puppetry.

Catch ‘The Unlikely Pilgrimage of Harold Fry’ while you can – this is a journey you won’t want to miss.



THE UNLIKELY PILGRIMAGE OF HAROLD FRY

Theatre Royal Haymarket

Reviewed on 10th February 2026

by Hannah Bothelton

Photography by Tristram Kenton

 


 

 

 

 

THE UNLIKELY

THE UNLIKELY

THE UNLIKELY