The show no longer lands the shock that it did; subversive musicals are more of the norm these days such as Oh, Mary! and The Book of Mormon (which Lopez went on to co-write after Avenue Q). It's easy to simply be offensive; it's much harder to be wi...
Critics' Reviews
The puppet show strictly for adults is back with a bang in the West End
Avenue Q’s bawdy puppets are back – and more outrageous than ever
Twenty years ago, the bonkers-yet-ingenious “Sesame Street for adults” musical Avenue Q romped into the West End, juxtaposing cute puppets with jaw-dropping comic songs like Everyone’s a Little Bit Racist and, unforgettably, a rampant sex scene...
People who remember Avenue Q from first time round will know what they’re getting, the uninitiated may find themselves taken aback at the assertion that “everyone’s a little bit racist” or the eye-watering crudeness of a number like “You Ca...
Provocative puppets return for a feast of filth and fun
The force of the show’s faux-naivety works because of the comic dissonance between the puppets’ innocence – wide eyes, cutesy voices – and their adult misbehaviour (drunkenness, pole dancing, sex and betrayal). Lopez and Marx’s songs are a ...
The profane puppet musical back in town, and if it no longer feels audacious, it is very charming
There’s a slightly woolly message to it all about growing up and learning to be yourself that could be most kindly viewed as another homage to Sesame Street. Still, the story isn’t that substantial – Jeff Whitty’s book is secondary to the con...
The legendary adult puppet musical is still a total hoot
There are some half-hearted nods to the present, with references to AI, ChatGPT, and Trump. A Spotify playlist Princeton makes for Kate is framed as a “mixtape from the olden days”. But otherwise, things stay much the same. Even Gary Coleman – ...
Deliciously louche humour with smart lyrics
eff Whitty’s book and Anna Louizos’s brownstone set offer a snapshot of a New York neighbourhood where the residents scuttle around in pursuit of elusive goals. The superb young cast, led by Noah Harrison and Emily Benjamin, manipulate a collecti...
An illicit, profane, puppet joy
It’s both hilarious and liberating to see goggle-eyed, gape-grinning puppets drinking, swearing and shagging. The pitch-perfect, genre-mocking songs (Robert Lopez and Jeff Marx) and the book (Jeff Whitty) gleefully demolish taboos in a way that sho...
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