Simon Lipkin has built up a solid body of work over the years, but his Fagin is surely a career-defining moment. Much younger, more vibrant and channelling something of Captain Jack Sparrow, Lipkin conveys the character with real knowingness. He is v...
Critics' Reviews
It's well worth picking a pocket or two for this simply glorious musical revival
Among the wonderfully Dickensian eccentrics and grotesques, vivid characters all, are Oscar Conlon-Morrey’s preening (and often show-stealing) Mr Bumble, Katy Secombe as his eager paramour Widow Corney, and Stephen Matthews and Jamie Birkett’s cr...
Brotherston’s set of gantries and iron stairways turns on a revolve, emphasising the bustle and vastness of the city but allowing vivid vignettes to emerge within it; Bourne’s choreography sets the boys in the orphanage scrubbing the stage in fie...
Much of the show’s capacity to hold an audience enraptured rests on the tender shoulders of the juvenile lead. It’s hats off once again (and thrown to the rafters) to Cian Eagle-Service, affecting in Chichester and no less so here. Doubtless the ...
Please, sir: give me more of this five-star hit
Director and choreographer Matthew Bourne has surely opened the musical of the year with his astounding dance sequences. It’s especially the ensemble numbers that are sheer staggering feats of imagination, offering insane levels of detail to bring ...
Consider yourself at home in this warm revival
And Fagin himself? Actors have fumbled for decades with the Jewish tics of the role — get rid or embrace? — but Simon Lipkin’s wonderfully reimagined portrayal goes full kosher and makes something really remarkable (and very funny) out of the o...
Delivers – with a flash of extra panache
Simon Lipkin’s Fagin, a rackety con man with a flair for theatrics, is a scene-stealer, his carapace of ruthlessness, hardened by decades of survival and self-preservation, occasionally cracking to allow some tenderness to seep out, as when he puts...
The biggest flaw, though, is one that’s haunted the show for decades: Olivier himself is just pretty bland. I’m not going to single out the child actor who was on when I saw it, because I think the problem lies firstly with Bart and secondly with...
Review: Oliver! (Gielgud Theatre)
Produced and reconceived by producer Cameron Mackintosh with director and choreographer Matthew Bourne, this production of Oliver! manages to retain the charm and essence of the story while bringing its own twist, introducing new elements into the m...
New West End production of Oliver! is an absolute triumph – review
his is a superb revival of Oliver! – it doesn’t shy away from the story’s darker moments, and a handful of scenes are genuinely moving, while key themes of class and social inequality land well. There’s a real nuance to these performances, sh...
Raucous reimagined Oliver! is a West End must-see
It’s been billed as a “reconceived” production of Lionel Bart’s 1960 musical but it’s certainly not as radical as some of Bourne’s other work. Rather, Bourne and producer Cameron Mackintosh walk a canny line between the upbeat Cockney car...
Superb lighting by Paule Constable and Ben Jacobs shows the action as if through Oliver’s eyes: a harsh glitter of grey over the workhouse; a deceptive golden glow for Fagin’s den. Lez Brotherston’s busy brown Victorian stock design is unsurpri...
Oliver! gets its first big makeover in 30 years — and it’s gorgeous
Where Mackintosh has most visibly rung the changes, very smartly, is with Fagin. Too mean and he’s the antisemitic stereotype. Too cuddly and you’re taking out what tension there is. Simon Lipkin, who has been with the show since it began in Chic...
Oliver! is immaculate - but it left me cold
The first half hour in particular is a dangerously low-fi grind, with the action coming over as laboured and effortful and the exaggerated working-class London accents a trial by glottal stop. The threat to young Oliver (at the performance I saw the ...
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