The Phil Willmott company and their giant mirror return to the Union for Stephen Sondheim’s brotherhood-gone bad tale, Road Show.
The show plays to 5 March.
The Phil Willmott company and their giant mirror return to the Union for Stephen Sondheim’s brotherhood-gone bad tale, Road Show.
The show plays to 5 March.
Production shots from the beautiful production of Brecht’s Fear and Misery of the Third Reich at the Union Theatre.
The show runs to 30 January.
New musical The White Feather looks (very touchingly) at the plight of soldiers executed for cowardice during the First World War.
The show runs at the Union until 17 October inclusive.
Some of the production shots below.
When we sat down to talk about the poster for World War I musical The White Feather (coming to the Union in September), we knew three things.
It was going to have a feather in it. It was going to be shot in studio. And we were going to shoot it for real.
Well, sometimes photoshoots evolve as they go on.
As star Abigail Matthews looked gamefully morose-but-content-but-triumphant — which, in case it’s not obvious, isn’t the easiest look to pull off — we tried holding a feather in front of her on a wire, having her throw feathers at herself and flinging feathers at her via a wind machine. But the feathers just wouldn’t go where we needed them and it all risked looking like a comedic farce or — the horror — a little bit arty.
I’m a great believer in doing things practically when you can. But, when you can’t, there’s always computer magic.
So what we ended up doing was showering feathers from the ceiling and taking what we’d intended — Abigail staring at a single feather — and turning it into a feather flock.
All against the backdrop of two skies from opposite sides of the world: Te Anau in New Zealand and the Pointe du Grouin in Brittany.
Production shots from the very beautiful retelling of Shakespeare’s Henry VI Parts 1, 2 and 3 for the Game of Thrones generation, HVI: Play of Thrones.
The show runs at the Union Theatre up to 24 January.
Who knew? Shakespeare’s King Lear works rather better when Lear’s a queen than a king.
Production shots from Lear at the Union Theatre, with Ursula Mohan in the title role.
The show runs to 28 June and you can book tickets here.
It shouldn’t be possible to squeeze a cast this size into the Union Theatre and have them whirl and jig with all the gusto they do. And yet, somehow, they fit.
Shots from the amazing Finian’s Rainbow, in its first professional London revival since its original West End run. The show runs until 15 March.