British Theatre
New style of ‘broken’ musical premieres at the King's Head in March
HomeNews & ReviewsNew style of ‘broken’ musical premieres at the King's Hea...
22 January 2016 · 1 min read · 189 words

New style of ‘broken’ musical premieres at the King's Head in March

Broken CabaretDan PhillipsJohn MyattNewsOff West EndSimon Arrowsmith

Broken Cabaret presents Something Something Lazarus - a dark comedy about resurrections, second chances and the healing power of performance.

It’s being described as a “broken” musical: a fast-dissolving rehearsal ending with a fractured show, where songs are interrupted, directed, repurposed, and undercut.

This new British musical transports the audience to a half-dead cabaret bar where, with the unveiling of a delivery from the owner’s distant past, matters quickly skid into overdrive.

Alongside the action on stage, Something Something Lazarus endeavours to change the way audiences consume stories with the tools and techniques of transmedia storytelling – characters, spaces and motifs will have a web presence, websites, social media accounts … Email them and get a response. Tweet them and see how they react.

With strong queer sensibilities and language, song and perspectives pointed towards the world of cabaret, the theatrical and musicals, John Myatt, Simon Arrowsmith and frequent King’s Head collaborator Dan Phillips promise a new type of show, taking all of the excellent ingredients already on offer and adding a dash of originality.

Something Something Lazarus runs from 8 March - 2 April at Kings Head Theatre

E
Emily Hardy

Emily Hardy is a contributor at British Theatre, covering West End productions, London theatre news, casting updates, and UK stage trends.

Stay in the spotlight

Get the latest theatre news, reviews and exclusive offers straight to your inbox.

Shows mentioned

More from Emily Hardy

Adapting Roald Dahl For The Stage

News

Adapting Roald Dahl For The Stage

On the whole, adaptors have tended to skirt around the 'darker' elements of the stories, fearful of the brutal, gory comeuppances (for which Dahl has faced criticism).

E

Emily Hardy

News & Reviews

Related articles

Type to search...