Basket
Remaining time: 

    Lost Boy Extends Run At The Charing Cross Theatre

    It has been announced that Phil Willmott’s new musical Lost Boy has extended its run at the Charing Cross Theatre to Saturday 29th March.

     The musical, which transferred from the Finborough to the Charing Cross Theatre last month, will end its current five-week season as planned on Saturday 15th February. Before the show re-opens on Monday 3rd March, Willmott will make some subtle changes to the production.

     
    “The break will allow me four days in the rehearsal room to focus the piece a little more, make cuts and improve one or two of the songs” Willmott said. West End star Jodie Jacobs joins the production from Monday 3rd March as Tinker Bell.
     
    Lost Boy is described as “a dark sequel” to Peter Pan that reunites JM Barrie's characters as young adults on the eve of the First World War. Willmott’s music has a unique sound, blending a contemporary musical theatre style with music hall influences, and has been arranged into a score with additional music by Mark Collins who is Assistant Musical Director on the West End production of Billy Elliot The Musical.
     
    Jodie Jacobs most recently starred as Regina in the West End production of Rock Of Ages at the Shaftesbury and Garrick Theatre. Her theatre credits also include: Evita (Adelphi), Little Shop of Horrors (Duke of York’s/Ambassadors), Fame (Aldwych) and We Will Rock You (Dominion).
     
    Lost Boy also stars Olivier Award nominee Andrew C Wadsworth as Captain Hook. The rest of the cast are Steven Butler, Lauren Cocoracchio, Grace Gardner, Hannah Grace, Richard James-King, Natalie Lipin, Luka Markus, Max Panks, David Scotland, Joseph Taylor.
     
    Peter Pan was the Harry Potter of the golden age of Edwardian children's literature. Tickets to Barrie's play and copies of the book sold in huge quantities with hardly a nursery in the Empire left untouched by the phenomenon. But when those children grew to adulthood, the world they encountered was a far cry from the utopia of Never Never Land. How did exposure to JM Barrie's masterpiece equip an army of frightened young men to deal with the horrors of trench warfare... and the complexities of grown up relationships?
     
    The culture clash between the enchantment of childhood fantasy and real life provides a rich vein for humour and drama as this original story explores the hopes and dreams of one particular young officer on the eve of battle with a copy of Peter Pan in his pocket. As sleep begins to blur his dreams and reality, fact and fiction become entangled and he finds himself central to one final “awfully big adventure" with the grown up Wendy, John, Michael and Tinker Bell.
     
    Lost Boy is directed by Phil Willmott, choreographed by Racky Plews and designed by Phil Lindley with musical direction by Isaac McCullough, musical supervision by Mark Collins and lighting by Mike Robertson. It is produced by Steven M Levy and Sean Sweeney and The Steam Industry in association with Neil McPherson for the Finborough Theatre.
     
    Andrew Tomlins
    Photo Credit: Scott Rylander
     


    Related news

    The Great Gatsby London tickets

    10 Great Facts about The Great Gatsby

    Posted on | By Sian McBride |

    Proving that a good story never goes out of style, one hundred years after the great American novel was published, th... Read more

    Starlight Characters as Tube Lines

    Posted on | By Sian McBride |

    Just call us Francis Bourgeois, because we’re obsessed with trains. Though we prefer the singing ones to those ... Read more

    Stranger Things the First Shadow London tickets

    Stranger Things: the First Shadow announces West End extension

    Posted on | By Sian McBride |

    The multi award-winning West End show is going Demogorg-on and on and on, with Stranger Things: the First Shadow toda... Read more

    Follow us for instant updates and special offers

    Sign up to our mailing list and be the first to hear about new West End shows and exclusive ticket discounts. We value your privacy. You can unsubscribe at any time. But we hope you won’t!