STARLIGHT EXPRESS | London, Troubadour Wembley Park Theatre, Starlight Auditorium

Recommended

Due to overwhelming demand, Andrew Lloyd Webber’s Starlight Express has already extended bookings through to 16 February 2025. Seen by over 20 million people across the world since its London premiere in 1984, Starlight Express will make its triumphant return to London from 8 June 2024 at the specially designed Starlight Auditorium at Troubadour Wembley Park Theatre, a state-of-the-art cultural destination only 12 minutes from central London.

A true theatrical event, Starlight Express will fully immerse audiences of all ages inside a world of speed, song and storytelling as an incredible cast of 40 whizz around and above, performing some of musical theatre’s most beloved songs, including “AC/DC”, “Make Up My Heart”, “Light at the End of the Tunnel” and the iconic “Starlight Express”.

As a child’s train set magically comes to life and the engines race to become the fastest in the world, Rusty the steam train has little hope of winning until he is inspired by the legend of the ‘Starlight Express’. Casting and all further information regarding the production will be announced in due course.

The first show by Lloyd Webber Harrison Musicals, Sunset Boulevard is currently playing at the Savoy Theatre in London. Starlight Express will be the second show produced by Lloyd Webber Harrison Musicals, the new partnership of Andrew Lloyd Webber, composer of some of the world’s most famous musicals, and Michael Harrison, critically acclaimed, award-winning international producer.

Playing at the Starlight Auditorium 8 June 2024 – 16 February 2025.

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INTERVIEW: TOM FOWLER (Hope has a Happy Meal)

Interview

Tom Fowler is the writer of Hope has a Happy Meal, directed by Royal Court Associate Director Lucy Morrison, and playing at the Jerwood Theatre Upstairs, 3 June – 8 July 2023.

– Please describe your new play, Hope has a Happy Meal.

It is a magical realist fairy tale, about a woman called Hope, returning to the People’s Republic of Koka Kola, to find the family she left behind twenty-four years ago. I came up with the title and premise in 2016: at the time, Britain had recently voted to leave the EU, Donald Trump had just been elected president of the US – I heard a lot of people talk about hope as if it had just disappeared overnight.

– Is this a… ‘hopeful’ play?

I want to show ‘hope’ as beautiful and powerful, but unreliable. It can lift you up, but then tear you down just as easily. I would say the play is firmly rooted in now, but by it being set in the People’s Republic of Koka Kola, rather than Britain, there’s a detachment that hopefully makes it feel a little more universal.

– How have rehearsals been?

Rehearsals have been great. Lucy Morrison, who’s directing, has been reading and noting drafts of the play since the very beginning of the process, and also directed the short piece I wrote for the Royal Court’s Living Newspaper project, so there’s lots of trust there. Plus the cast and creative team are all brilliant – I feel very lucky.

– What does it mean to you to have your play on at the Royal Court?

Since learning about the Royal Court, and discovering some of the incredible writers and plays that started here, having my first professional production be here has always been a goal. So yeah, it’s amazing and I’m very excited to finally share the play.

Playing at the Royal Court in London, 3 June – 8 July 2023.

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