Oliver! at the Gielgud Theatre review: this darker take on the classic musical is all killer no filler

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Oliver! at the Gielgud Theatre review: this darker take on the classic musical is all killer no filler
Author: Nick Curtis
Published: Jan, 15 2025 11:03

Consider yourself consummately entertained if you get a ticket for this exceptional revival of Lionel Bart’s show. Distilled from Dickens and filtered through a mid-20th century sense of the capital’s shifting social tides and undercurrents, it’s the quintessential London musical.

Image Credit: The Standard

The score of Oliver! is all killer, no filler, from Food Glorious Food to Consider Yourself to I’d Do Anything. It’s boggling to think that the witty book, wildly diverse music and earworm lyrics all came from Bart, the son of working-class Galician Jewish refugees, still in his twenties when he wrote it.

Image Credit: The Standard

Producer Cameron Mackintosh has mounted blockbuster stagings in the past. Here, with director/choreographer Matthew Bourne, he’s created a more intimate version that evokes the spirit of the 1960 premiere but also treats the story’s trickier aspects with finesse and delicacy.

Image Credit: The Standard

Simon Lipkin’s piratical, showman Fagin, the Jewish paterfamilias of the underage criminal gang that adopts Oliver, is far from the grasping, kvetching stereotype of yore. Shanay Holmes is tremendous as Nancy, the sex worker in thrall to violent psycho Bill Sikes (Aaron Sidwell, scary).

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Image Credit: The Standard [The Maids at Jermyn Street Theatre review: this meditation on inequality and reality is an angry shout of a play]

Four boys share the role of Oliver but on opening night Cian Eagle-Service – so good as spoiled Bruno in The Witches at the National in 2023 – proved capable of heartbreaking pathos. He is also possessed of a high, clear voice and immaculate phrasing.

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Image Credit: The Standard [Titanique at the Criterion Theatre review: get on board with this outrageous Celine Dion parody]

Of course, there’s also a troupe of smut-faced urchins led by Billy Jenkins’ limber and personable Artful Dodger, their knees and elbows pumping in unison like locomotive pistons in the dance routines. And behind them the roiling tide of London: toffs and shopkeepers, thieves and lost souls. Only Oliver gets out of the workhouse, remember.

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Image Credit: The Standard [Cat On a Hot Tin Roof at the Almeida review: Daisy Edgar-Jones is a force of nature in this striking revival]

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