Tag Archives: Shane ShayShay Konno

WICKED WITCHES: A POPULAR PANTO FOR ADULTS!

★★★★★

Pleasance Theatre

WICKED WITCHES: A POPULAR PANTO FOR ADULTS!

Pleasance Theatre

★★★★★

“an evening of uproarious fun, blasphemy and laughter”

Pantomime season has opened, we’re hurtling toward Christmas so there is no better way to get into the festive spirit than spending an evening at the Pleasance Theatre at this gloriously chaotic remix of Wicked and the Wizard of Oz.

You know you are in for a great evening as soon as you get to your table – the theatre is mostly laid out in cabaret style. The bar has been packed with characters from across the spectrum sending the sound levels sky high, while in the performance space, sparkly lights and a shimmering green fringe curtain get you in the mood for what’s to come.

Soon the green-skinned wicked witch (Gigi Zahir) bursts on to the stage bewailing her lot and spraying curses. Her name, it turns out, is Adele and her departed sister was the unfortunate ruler of Winkie Country killed by Dorothy a few years back. But – the clue is in the name – is she actually wicked or just misunderstood? There are going to be a lot of twists and turns before the end.

Soon Dor (Ro Suppa) and Tin 2.0 (Lew Ray) appear. Dorothy has turned non binary (a joke is made about non-binary, one syllable names) and the Tinman has refashioned into a woman. Dor has been swept out of Kansas (again) by a great wind and dumped down here in Oz-Lington (we get a lot of play on words and on the local setting). There is a great blizzard (get it?) coming to destroy everything and her mission, with Tin, is to save the area from it/him/her/them. That it actually was freezing cold outside, on press evening, somehow added to the fun.

Soon the Good Witch (Eleanor Burke in a magnificent frothy gown) and her brainless assistant, Scarecrow (Nick MacDuff) appear to spread happiness and, with a puppet lion attached to Scarecrow, our cast is complete.

Writer/director Shane ShayShay Konno has given us everything here: a fabulous set and costumes (creations of Isabella van Braeckel); great songs (pop parodies, of course); glorious characters; and lots and lots of audience involvement. The characters are not always what they seem – the good witch (Eleanor Burke) is making a lot of environmentally unfriendly bubbles in spreading joy. There are climate crisis references and diversity tolerance messages; skin tone, cosmetically enhanced boobs and breast removal scars are all present.

Finally, in what must have been a great coup for the cast and creative team, we have two celebrity appearances, albeit on a small drop-down screen, with Jeremy Corbyn (the wizard of Oz-Langton) and Ian McKellen (Toto the dog). Can anyone mimic an old dog, with his tongue hanging out, like Sir Ian?

Forget the tired innuendo of your Aladdins and Jack & the Beanstalks. This is a great drag romp and pantomime brought bang up to date. The cast were all superb, with the outstanding performances belonging to Zahir and Burke as the witches prancing about to audience boos and cheers.

It’s confession time. I don’t follow TikTok, listen to pop songs, or usually go to Christmas pantomimes. Worse, I have never seen Wicked. For cultural references this evening, I was a dinosaur. Most of the parody and jokes went straight over my head, and I failed at the audience singalongs and gesture dances. All of which, after a great evening in the company of massive talent and a fully engaged audience, made me think about how much I must be missing. If you are in the same boat, please make sure you find your way down the yellow brick (Caledonian) road to Oz-Lington for enlightenment and an evening of uproarious fun, blasphemy and laughter.



WICKED WITCHES: A POPULAR PANTO FOR ADULTS!

Pleasance Theatre

Reviewed on 20th November 2025

by Louise Sibley

Photography by Ella Carmen Dale


 

Previously reviewed at this venue:

MISTERO BUFFO | ★★★★ | September 2025
THE LAST INCEL | ★★★ | May 2025
THE SIMPLE LIFE & DEATH | ★★★★★ | November 2024
16 POSTCARDS | ★★★ | October 2024
GIRLS REALLY LISTEN TO ME | ★★★★ | May 2024
GISELLE: REMIX | ★★★★★ | April 2024

 

 

WICKED WITCHES

WICKED WITCHES

WICKED WITCHES

THE SIMPLE LIFE & DEATH

★★★★★

Pleasance Theatre

THE SIMPLE LIFE & DEATH at the Pleasance Theatre

★★★★★

“spot-on comedic timing delivers the infinite number of stunning one-liners”

When Paris Hilton wrote the song Stars Are Blind, she was manifesting the divine power that brought the creators of The Simple Life & Death together. How do you create a show that is wildly niche while still making the entire audience feel included on the joke? You do it exactly like this.

The Simple Life & Death, created by Shane ShayShay Konno and Fizz Sinclair, is a masterclass in camp theatre that makes you laugh to the extent where you become deeply concerned for your own health. The performance is set in a current day TV studio on the Arkansas farm where The Simple Life, the noughties reality series starring Paris Hilton and Nicole Richie, was filmed from 2003 to 2007. At the top of the show, it is established that we are the studio audience for the live reunion special of the iconic TV series. We are introduced to Paris (Shane ShayShay Konno) and Nicole (Fizz Sinclair) in velour Juicy Couture tracksuits and blonde wigs. They are joined by surprise celebrity guests who, through rapid costume changes, are all brilliantly portrayed by Sinclair.

The set design (Ray Gammon) features pink directors’ chairs, a large haybale, film cameras and a neon ON AIR sign. What starts off as a delightful reunion with Paris, Nicole and friends quickly turns dark when one of the cast members is MURDERED. Cue the terrifying lightning and thunder. This incites Paris’ hunt for the killer so she may prove her innocence before she “gets cancelled by Gen Z on Tik-tok”. With the culprit in the studio, Paris starts interviewing all the celebrities turned suspects. Who dunnit?

This performance uses drag, sketch comedy, music and a satisfying amount of British panto elements to give us a highly original take on a murder mystery. Paris and Nicole welcome the audience and introduce their lovely assistant, Twinkerbell (Aïsha Kent) who is also the legit stage manager for the show, instilling the notion that the performers are appearing as themselves in various drag and comedy personas. They play with this throughout the evening as Twinkerbell facilitates scene changes for Konno and Sinclair who make off the cuff comments to the audience. It’s impressive how effortlessly they navigate between the narrative and sincere acknowledgments of self-awareness, thereby creating an immersive space. We are all in on the joke.

The ingenuity of the writing is effortlessly carried by Konno and Sinclair. Their spot-on comedic timing delivers the infinite number of stunning one-liners, all accessible to the audience with their varied references from Y2K nostalgia to current day pop culture. Some include Legally Blonde, White Lotus and Ghost Hunting with Girls Aloud. This diversity in the text allows the past and present to come together in a celebration of shared memories between audience members, further immersing us in the performance space. The sound design (Eliyana Evans) is also employed to create this shared familiarity through sounds from recognisable TV series such as X-Factor, Judge Judy and American Horror Story. The dramaturgical frame of the fictional TV special is continuously reinforced through ‘filming’ breaks and reoccurring parodical product placements for Paris’ numerous entrepreneurial endeavours.

Seamlessly moving between wholesome, witty and irreverent, Konno and Sinclair are consistently funny. With fabulous costumes, hysterical singing outbursts and mesmerising stage presence they deliver a truly remarkable display of showmanship. Creating an inclusive and immersive performance that could put top comedians to shame, Konno and Sinclair are masters of their craft. We can only hope that their collaboration continues. In the meantime, do yourself a courtesy and RUN to see The Simple Life & Death. It’s really hot.


THE SIMPLE LIFE & DEATH at the Pleasance Theatre

Reviewed on 28th November 2024

by Lara van Huyssteen

Photography by Lucy Hayes

 

 


 

 

 

 

Previously reviewed at this venue:

16 POSTCARDS | ★★★ | October 2024
GIRLS REALLY LISTEN TO ME | ★★★★ | May 2024
GISELLE: REMIX | ★★★★★ | April 2024
GWYNETH GOES SKIING | ★★★ | February 2024
CASTING THE RUNES | ★★★ | October 2023
DIANA: THE UNTOLD AND UNTRUE STORY | ★★★★ | November 2022
DIRTY CORSET | ★★½ | April 2022
SHE SEEKS OUT WOOL | ★★★★ | January 2022
DOG SHOW | ★★★★★ | December 2021
LIGHTS OUT | ★★★★ | October 2021

THE SIMPLE LIFE

THE SIMPLE LIFE

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