Tag Archives: The Glitch

THE LOST LIBRARY OF LEAKE STREET

★★★★

The Glitch

THE LOST LIBRARY OF LEAKE STREET

The Glitch

★★★★

“There is wonder and enchantment here”

Are you ready for some Christmas magic? Well by stepping down into a basement beneath a café in Waterloo, you may find a taste of what you’re looking for.

In a beautifully designed (Oli Savage) low-ceilinged room, adorned with Moroccan rugs and shelves piled high with everything from juggling balls to Marlboro Reds, hard hats to plush toys, this dark-panelled space becomes The Lost Library of Leake Street. Though billed as suitable for ages 8+, it’s a surprisingly grown-up festive show. There is wonder and enchantment here, certainly, but once the premise settles, the story leans into weightier themes: grief, loss, and the unexpected kinship that can arise from both.

Our guide to this hidden world is Isla (Ronay Poole), the narrator and emotional anchor of the piece. She introduces us to the library with cheeky energy, teasing out the idea of how such a place might become “lost”. The explanation, never fully watertight, that this is a library of lost things doesn’t quite align with what we see. The most likely explanation, that it’s a library of lost things, doesn’t quite seem to fit the narrative. Here, every item holds a story dear to its owner, and can be deposited as payment in kind for an item with a story of equal value. The mechanics of the mythology may be slightly fuzzy, but it hardly matters; the emotional logic is sound.

The story unfolds through Isla’s discovery of the library for the first time, meeting its enigmatic proprietor, Maximilian Crimp (Malcolm Jeffries).

Both actors are ineffably charismatic. Poole is delightful both as a curious young girl encountering this den of delights and later as Max’s partner, told through the stories of the keys to the library. Jeffries, meanwhile, brings a gentle melancholy to Max, a sort-of-Scrooge whose hermit-like habits stem from an ill-fated love, cut short in its prime.

Together, they navigate a script that is rich, sometimes dense, and delivered at a clip that takes a moment to adjust to. Writer-director Oli Savage clearly relishes language – most evident in saddling his protagonist with the delightfully pompous name “Maximilian Crimp”. Occasionally the running gag of Isla refusing to call the place a library, and Max’s repeated reprimands, wears thin. But otherwise the script is tight, its drama emerging less from interpersonal conflict than from the stories the characters tell, and the emotional worlds those stories open up.

Ultimately, The Lost Library of Leake Street is a play about storytelling itself – about the power of narrative to transport us from our humdrum or grief-stricken realities. In its love of stories, one hears echoes of Matilda, Little Women, even Cinema Paradiso. At its best, it transported me back to evenings listening to my father read to me and my siblings before bed, some of my most treasured childhood memories.

Sweet without being saccharine, this show offers a gentle reminder that the real magic of Christmas lies in connection – through family, friendship, and the tales we share. It’s Christmas-adjacent rather than overtly festive, but delivers the warm glow of the season all the same.



THE LOST LIBRARY OF LEAKE STREET

The Glitch

Reviewed on 27th November 2025

by Amber Woodward

Photography by Phoebe Dyer


 

Previously reviewed at this venue:

BOY BAND | ★★★ | October 2025
NEVER GET TO HEAVEN IN AN EMPTY SHELL | ★★★ | July 2025
THE RISE AND FALL OF VINNIE & PAUL | ★★★★ | April 2025

 

 

THE LOST LIBRARY OF LEAKE STREET

THE LOST LIBRARY OF LEAKE STREET

THE LOST LIBRARY OF LEAKE STREET

BOY BAND

★★★

The Glitch

BOY BAND

The Glitch

★★★

“Kunze and Shipman manage to get us on side by their sheer love of being up there”

In these grim times, sometimes you want a show that simply refuses to take itself seriously. Boy Band is the romping, refreshing, silly night out you didn’t know you needed.

Created by Michael Kunze, Hugh Edwards and Fergus Shipman, and performed at The Glitch by Kunze and Shipman, Boy Band roughly traces the creation of – you guessed it – a boy band in one of the member’s childhood basements. Built mostly around original songs packed with laugh-out-loud pun-filled lyrics. The show delights in squeezing every last drop out of the boy band trope, even staging a thinly veiled and extremely short-lived band break up as a marketing ploy.

The songs are deliberately terrible and catchy in equal measure, ranging from a lament about an affair with a love bot to a suggestive number about chips and nacho cheese featuring some disturbingly wacky choreography that may have permanently ruined nachos for me.

The set is a simple circle of mismatched battery-powered candles arranged in a circle on the floor– an endearingly incongruous choice that somehow adds to the impression that we are not watching a show but instead watching a couple of dope smoking friends winging it in their basement – which of course was the entire point.

Michael Kunze plays self-proclaimed “bad boy” Jools Jacuzzi with a goofy abandon that is inexplicably charismatic. Fergus Shipman is Ray Jay Jay Jay, Jacuzzi’s quieter, cooler understated self-conscious counterpart, who at one point seems to be on the verge of opening up about a body image crisis and ends up singing a song about ice cream. Early on, the two address the elephant in the room (“Hello Elephant”) by saying that their third member, Hugh Way (played by Hugh Edwards), wasn’t there. It does feel a little incomplete – leaving me speculating about what a third band member would have brought to the on-stage dynamic. They miss an opportunity to make it into a real band break up, but Kunze and Shipman are to be commended by how they step up, making me think for a while that maybe, despite the poster evidence, the third cast member had never actually been there at all.

If the characters had been a little more developed, their relationship between each other more intentional, and the story arc of the band more finely drawn, Boy Band could have been a triumph – not only making us laugh but also making us care about these full-grown would-be boys.

Nevertheless, Kunze and Shipman manage to get us on side by their sheer love of being up there. At one point they asked a brave audience member up on stage. After serenading them with an improvised song, they asked, “What advice would you give your younger self?” The answer: “Have more fun.” Kunze looked genuinely moved for a second, as if he couldn’t have scripted it better himself. Touching his heart he said, “Wow, wow, that is the whole point of this show, man…” And if that was indeed the point of the show, Boy Band pulled it off with flying colours.

 

BOY BAND

The Glitch

Reviewed on 11th October 2025

by Samantha Karr

Photography by Lilla Hodossy


 

Previously reviewed at this venue:

NEVER GET TO HEAVEN IN AN EMPTY SHELL | ★★★ | July 2025
THE RISE AND FALL OF VINNIE & PAUL | ★★★★ | April 2025

 

 

BOY BAND

BOY BAND

BOY BAND