Tag Archives: Thrill Me: The Leopold and Loeb Story

THRILL ME – THE LEOPOLD AND LOEB STORY

★★

Waterloo East Theatre

THRILL ME – THE LEOPOLD AND LOEB STORY

Waterloo East Theatre

★★

“the twisted true crime core still holds interest”

Fifteen years since its London debut, Stephen Dolginoff’s ‘Thrill Me: The Leopold and Loeb Story’ returns with another dose of murder and manipulation. Like its characters, this true crime musical aims high but the execution doesn’t quite come together.

Inspired by true events, Nathan Leopold seeks parole decades after committing the ‘crime of the century’. Rewind to 1924 Chicago, his toxic bond with Richard Loeb spirals into a twisted mix of love, lust and privilege – until an innocent boy pays the price.

Dolginoff’s book has bold intentions, but the storytelling leans a little too heavily on exposition to build tension effectively. The characters could do with more space to deepen, currently feeling more sketched out than fully inhabited and making it harder to enter their distorted world. As a result, their devilish dynamic never quite earns its extremes and the impact of the final reveal is softened. That said, the twisted true crime core still holds interest.

Dolginoff’s music and lyrics have their bright spots – especially the trading of melodies and the rich harmonies. However other parts of the score feel less distinctive: some stylistic choices don’t quite match the emotion of the scene, and a few songs feel repetitive. Still, there’s a solid foundation.

Gerald Armin’s direction has some thoughtful touches and slick transitions, though the emotional beats don’t always land. The largely static staging and slightly clumsy seduction scenes keep the energy low and the chemistry muted, making the pair’s unusual connection harder to buy. Some pivotal moments like the fire scene could do with more urgency and clarity, and Nathan’s characterisation could use stronger definition. With more movement and sharper emotional focus, the piece could land far more powerfully.

Waterloo East Theatre’s design offers a clear aesthetic, with tiered blocks adding shape (though they don’t all feel essential) and papered surfaces smartly foreshadowing the pair’s future notoriety. Costumes neatly contrast their personalities, and the props feel suitably period. Jonathan Simpson’s lighting shifts place and tone effectively, though the shadowy prison settings hide Nathan’s eyes, making this unreliable narrator a little too inscrutable in places. The sound balance is mostly steady, with the occasional spike when the actors drift too close to each other’s mics.

Rufus Kampa gives a strong all round performance as Richard, pairing confident vocals with narcissistic charm. Jamie Kaye’s singing is a real strength, though a little more light and shade in Nathan’s characterisation would deepen the role. Richard Cunningham’s dual roles as the voice of the parole officer and newsreader add welcome weight and urgency.

This iteration of ‘Thrill Me: The Leopold and Loeb Story’ doesn’t quite live up to its name, but with some tightening it could earn its parole.



THRILL ME – THE LEOPOLD AND LOEB STORY

Waterloo East Theatre

Reviewed on 17th April 2026

by Hannah Bothelton

Photography by Robert Piwko


 

 

 

 

THRILL ME

THRILL ME

THRILL ME

Thrill Me

THRILL ME: THE LEOPOLD & LOEB STORY

★★★★★

The Hope Theatre

THRILL ME: THE LEOPOLD & LOEB STORY at The Hope Theatre

★★★★★

Thrill Me

“you find yourself simultaneously appalled and captivated by these two characters”

 

It’s Chicago in 1924 and two school friends are reunited. Nathan Leopold (Bart Lambert) is obsessively in love with Richard Loeb (Jack Reitman) and wants to resume their previous affair, but Richard has changed. Inspired and seemingly possessed by the controversial writings of German philosopher Friedrich Nietzsche, he exploits Nathan’s devotion in return for making him an accomplice in a series of crimes. Having signed a contract in blood, their pursuit of the ‘Ubermensch’ ideal inevitably leads the pair beyond arson and petty burglary and into more disturbing and challenging transgressions. They gain notoriety as the Thrill Killers – at a considerable cost…

Directed by Matthew Parker, the Hope Theatre’s production of Stephen Dolginoff’s 2003 true-crime musical is stunning. Narrated in flashbacks during a parole hearing 34 years later, it maintains an incredibly high level of drama – considerably aided by the sensitive and dynamic piano playing of musical director Tim Shaw. It helps that the source material – both the script and songwriting – is so consistently strong. When the dialogue stops and the singing begins in lesser musicals, it can often seem like filler. In Thrill Me, every song carries the narrative forwards and sharpens the focus on the personalities and motivations of the two men. Lambert and Reitman are note-perfect throughout – quite some feat given the sheer number of lines and lyrics they have to deliver across the eighty-minute performance.

There are a couple of fairly major plot twists, which means that the show continues to surprise you just when you think you’ve worked out how it will unfold. There’s real intensity conveyed, both in the vividness of Nathan’s feelings for the man he worships and in Richard’s fixation on amoral self-transformation.

Subtle lighting helps to build the atmosphere, particularly in the scene in which they set an abandoned warehouse ablaze – a perfect visual metaphor of their fiery passions. Creative use is also made of recorded voices (those of Dewi Hughes and Bryan Pilkington) and sound effects, providing a three-dimensional framework that instils the action with even more realism.

The play examines the psychology of egos, ethics and manipulative behaviour as well as tackling bigger themes of society and individualism. Primarily, it asks the question: what would you do for love? As it explores those extremes you find yourself simultaneously appalled and captivated by these two characters, whose escalating predicament is all the more chilling for being based on a true story.

 

Reviewed by Stephen Fall

Reviewed – 4th April 2019

Photography by lhphotoshots

 


Thrill Me: The Leopold and Loeb Story

Hope Theatre until 20th April

 

Last ten shows reviewed at this venue:
Fat Jewels | ★★★★★ | July 2018
Medicine | ★★★ | August 2018
The Dog / The Cat | ★★★★★ | September 2018
The Lesson | ★★★★ | September 2018
Jericho’s Rose | ★★★½ | October 2018
Gilded Butterflies | ★★ | November 2018
Head-rot Holiday | ★★★★ | November 2018
Alternativity | ★★★★ | December 2018
In Conversation With Graham Norton | ★★★ | January 2019
The Ruffian On The Stair | ★★★★ | January 2019

 

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