The best-reviewed show in West End history has just opened in Manchester, and it’s a must-see for any theatre lover.
When you think of a great topic or story for a glitzy musical, an underground secret mission of World War II doesn’t exactly spring to mind.
But Operation Mincemeat suddenly turns this very serious snippet of history into the most hilarious thing you’ve ever seen.
From starting out as a small fringe musical about a covert British war plan, Operation Mincemeat is now a huge West End and Broadway Smash having received a monumental 88 five star reviews.
Image: Supplied
So, how did the British MI5 trick Hitler with a corpse, an engagement ring, a love letter and a collection of receipts?
ADVERTISEMENT
Well, this musical walks you through it in a style that combines Monty Python with Six the Musical, in the most brilliant way.
The cast consists of only five performers, each who play a myriad of rolls of both genders – and this is no mean feat.
ADVERTISEMENT
Image: Supplied
Holly Sumpton leads the troops as the Eton-educated, dapperly dressed and much too self-assured Montague.
It’s a perfect performance that leads the narrative, and pokes fun at the posh male entitlement that is only heightened by her physical humour made better by the cross-casting.
Seán Carey plays the bumbling and sweet scientist Charles, a character that lacks the boarding school confidence yet gains the trust of the audience as we root for his success. Carey’s physicality and playfulness made for some of the night’s funniest moments.
ADVERTISEMENT
Image: Supplied
Charlotte Hanna-Williams plays a headstrong Jean as she tries to break through the misogynistic ideals of war time Britain, and Jamie-Rose Monk is an absolute hoot as Bevan and a whole host of other roles – popping up in places you’d never expect somehow wearing a different hat or waistcoat.
The highlight performance for me though was Christian Andrews, who flicks between the slimy coroner Spilsbury and meticulous yet loveable MI5 matron with utter ease.
The song Dear Bill was a welcomed tender moment nearing the end of act one in the high-pace, slapstick performance that left no dry eye in the house.
But it’s not the individual performances that make Operation Mincemeat so spectacular, it’s an absolute masterclass in multi-rolling with no performer missing a beat throughout.
It’s fast, it’s risky (there’s even a couple of swastikas), at often times its heartfelt, and its downright bloody hilarious.
ADVERTISEMENT
This is why original musicals matter, and this one certainly deserves its flowers.
Operation Mincemeat is at The Lowry until Saturday28 February before embarking on a world tour, and you can get your tickets here.
The North West’s most infamous horror attraction Scare City is becoming an immersive theatre show
Emily Sergeant
One of the North West’s most infamous annual horror attractions is being turned into an immersive theatre show.
Scare City is the spine-chilling immersive horror experience that takes over the abandoned Camelot Theme Park even spooky season, becoming one of the region’s most-popular Halloween events along the way – with tens of thousands having visited over the last five years.
But this time, there’ll be no trails and no abandoned theme parks – just pure, live horror.
That’s because, this spring, the creators will drag audiences into a new kind of nightmare with the arrival of the Scare City Experience Live, bringing out of the Camelot grounds and into an ‘inescapable’ stage production.
Built from the twisted world of the original Scare City, the production will resurrect fan-favourite zones, characters, and signature scares, but ‘reimagine’ them for the stage with a relentless descent into fear, soaked in atmosphere and dread.
This time, there is no darkness to hide in, no escape route, no safe distance, and no way to look away as the nightmare unfolds in real-time and audiences watch the action play out inches away from their faces, with ‘disturbing’ imagery and a suffocating tension.
Scare City is returning as an immersive horror theatre show this spring / Credit: Supplied
Designed to push the boundaries of live horror, Scare City Experience Live will combine theatrical storytelling, live performers, sound, lighting, and ‘unsettling’ visuals to create an unforgettable and relentless experience with each performance playing the audience at the heart of the action, where the fear comes to them.
The production will offer both long-time Scare City fans and first-time visitors a new way to experience the brand’s dark universe.
Scare City Experience Live will be taking over the Liverpool Olympia between 22-25 May and 28-30 May 2026, and tickets are officially on sale now from £38 per person.
Featured Image – Jason Roberts Photography (Supplied)
Theatre
New stage adaptation of The Haunting of Hill House to arrive in Manchester this Halloween
Emily Sergeant
A brand-new stage adaptation of a bestselling horror novel and TV series is coming to Manchester this Halloween.
Following the critically acclaimed Netflix hit series that introduced a new generation to the eerie masterpiece, author Shirley Jackson’s famous The Haunting of Hill House is being turned into a brand-new stage adaptation later this year, and will be taking to one of Manchester’s most iconic stages at the spookiest season of all.
Written by Olivier and BAFTA award-winner Stef Smith, and directed by Martin Constantine, the new production is set to conjure the iconic supernatural thriller on stage.
It will be making its world premiere with a UK tour this autumn, stopping off in several major towns and cities along the way.
If you’re unfamiliar with the story, The Haunting of Hill House follows a group of daring investigators who take on the mystery of Hill House, before their curiosity quickly descends into fear.
A new stage adaptation of The Haunting of Hill House is coming to Manchester this Halloween / Credit: Supplied
“The Haunting of Hill House is one of the greatest supernatural novels of the last hundred years and to have the chance to adapt it for the stage is a true privilege,” explained writer Stef Smith, as the UK tour was announced this week.
“I find Shirley Jackson’s world intoxicating, thrilling and gut-wrenching.
“I believe there is something so deeply theatrical at the heart of Hill House. From the spooky, to the surreal, through heartache and hope. I hope that our cast of characters will take the audience along for a ride quite unlike anything else. Above all we will examine that the biggest horrors are usually human.”
The brand-new stage adaptation of The Haunting of Hill House will arrive in Manchester and take to the stage at Manchester Palace Theatre from Tuesday 27 October right through to Halloween itself (Saturday 31 October 2026).