Skip to main content
Donate to the 95 years appeal
Magic beanfeast makes for infectious panto fun

Jack and the Beanstalk
Lawrence Batley Theatre, Huddersfield

PANTOMIMES are the first time that many children get to experience the magic of the theatre and, based on the level of joyful interaction during Joyce Branagh’s version of Jack And The Beanstalk, it won’t be the last time for those present.

It's loosely based on the fairytale of a boy who sells the family cow in exchange for a bag of magic beans and there's enough well-timed slapstick and topical gags to make it rise above the purely formulaic.

Mark Walters’s framed set design resembles a giant children’s storybook with its bold colours and lashings of glitter. Yet even this is outshone by the costumes of Dame Dorothy Trott (Robin Simpson) which become increasingly absurd and disconnected to the plot — at one point, he's dressed as a cross between a Swiss army knife and medieval knight.

The star of the show, he’s ably supported by Declan Wilson’s kazoo-playing King Crackpot and James McLean as Nightshade, the Giant’s henchman. Camp rather than evil, his character's based on Bruno Tonioli to the extent that his musical motif is the Strictly Come Dancing theme.

This core trio are at the centre of the production’s set pieces, one of which involves a bouncy sofa, a pot of tea and a cream cake, a scene nearly derailed when the cake falls off the hostess trolley and has to be scraped off the floor.

But it’s the cast’s willingness to muck in and celebrate the chaotic fun that makes the show a winner.

If the principal actors aren’t exceptionally skilled singers or dancers, they compensate with energy and their obvious enjoyment is infectious.

Runs until January 6, box office: thelbt.org

 

The 95th Anniversary Appeal
Support the Morning Star
You have reached the free limit.
Subscribe to continue reading.
More from this author
tambo
Theatre review / 16 May 2025
16 May 2025

SUSAN DARLINGTON is bowled over by an outstanding play about the past, present and future of race and identity in the US

Jonathan Hanks in A Christmas Carol
Theatre Review / 23 December 2024
23 December 2024
SUSAN DARLINGTON enjoys, with minor reservations, the Northern Ballet’s revival of its 1992 classic
Tristan Sturrock and Katy Owen in Emma Rice’s Blue Beard
Theatre review / 6 March 2024
6 March 2024
SUSAN DARLINGTON revels in an exhilarating adaptation of the gruesome fairytale that invokes the real-life horror of women lost to male violence
(L to R) Eddie Ahrens, Rachel Hammond, Hannah Baker and Harv
Theatre Review / 23 May 2023
23 May 2023
SUSAN DARLINGTON is disappointed by a show that aims to highlight misogyny within the police but fails to arrest the audience's attention
Similar stories
Jonathan Hanks in A Christmas Carol
Theatre Review / 23 December 2024
23 December 2024
SUSAN DARLINGTON enjoys, with minor reservations, the Northern Ballet’s revival of its 1992 classic
DOUBLE TAKE: Dominic Semwanga and Megan Keaveney as Fes and
Theatre review / 4 December 2024
4 December 2024
PETER MASON reckons the NYT’s production of Shakespeare’s comedy is the pick of the Christmas shows on offer in London 
Suzy Kohane, Josie Benson and Edith Vernes in French Toast
Theatre review / 9 October 2024
9 October 2024
PETER MASON is disappointed by a clunky comedy that falls flat
KEW JUMPING: Fairies in Theatre on Kew's production of Midsu
Theatre review / 30 July 2024
30 July 2024
PETER MASON is unimpressed by an unsubtle production that disregards its woodland setting