My Shows
News on your favorite shows, specials & more!

Born With Teeth West End Reviews

About the Show

In these dangerous times, who will burn brightest — and who will burn out? Winter 1591. It is a dangerous time for artists: the country is full of conspiracy and... (more info)

Theatre Wyndham's Theatre
Previews Aug 13, 2025
Opened Aug 13, 2025
Critics' Rating
6.57 Mixed
2 Positive
5 Mixed
0 Negative
Readers' Rating
No ratings yet
Rate This Show
Select a score 1–10
Write a Review

Critics' Reviews

8
Thumbs Up

Will Marlowe and Shakespeare snog or not? That is the question.

From: BroadwayWorld  |  By: Cindy Marcolina  |  Date: 9/3/2025

Innuendos and double-entendres immediately settle in as a second language while they start to excavate the nature of poetry and espionage. They orbit each other with crackling charisma in an ambiguous limbo designed by Joanna Scotcher. Three walls of...

6
Thumbs Sideways

Ncuti Gatwa and Edward Bluemel are playwrights dancing with death

From: WhatsOnStage  |  By: Sarah Crompton  |  Date: 9/3/2025

The most interesting sections – at least if you care about Shakespeare – are those which probe the differences between the two writers. Marlowe insists on inserting his own bold personality and controversial beliefs into every line he wrote while...

6
Thumbs Sideways

Ncuti Gatwa simmers in Elizabethan battle of the playwrights

From: The Guardian  |  By: Kate Wyver  |  Date: 9/3/2025

But this is Gatwa’s show. His boisterous Kit sweats in Zoë Thomas-Webb’s leather two-piece, his every lithe action a flirtation. He lunges towards Will first out of pure instinct, as something to shag, but he grows gentler, softened by his liter...

Ultimately what Born with Teeth suffers from the most is asking us to imagine a sex and paranoia crazed Elizabethan society while not actually showing it to us. At one point Marlowe is literally lecturing Shakespeare with a diagram about how patronag...

Both actors sink their teeth into this juicy material. Gatwa is a charismatic force of nature as Marlowe, whether snorting drugs, swishing his cape like a matador, stroking his “throbbing quill”, or leaping across the table to pounce on Shakespea...

You wait in vain for this Marlowe to acquire some nuance when he flirts with Edward Bluemel’s ingenuous Will — “Who do you f***: boys or girls?” — as they begin their collaboration on the Henry VI series. (The play’s title comes from Glou...

Whether you’re resistant or receptive to the main premise, there’s delight to be had in seeing a friskily rivalrous rapport form between the famous duo, even if we’re given little tangible sense of the wider Elizabethan world. Bolstered by a mo...

Audience Reviews

Add Your Review

To add an audience review, you must be Registered and Logged In.

Videos