Vaudeville Theatre
404 Strand, Covent Garden, London WC2R 0NH 0330 333 4814
- Synopsis
- Theatremonkey show opinion
- Reader reviews
- Performance schedule
- Ticket prices
WHERE TO BUY TICKETS / "BUY OR AVOID" SEAT GUIDE
Singalong performances: 12th January 2025 at 7pm and 4th May 2025 at 7pm. Monkey report of the May 2023 one is available here.
Audio Described performance: 21st December 2024 at 4pm, 22nd December 2024 at 3pm, 23rd March 2025 at 3pm.
Captioned performance: 28th December 2024 at 4pm, 16th March 2025 at 3pm.
Signed performances: 29th December 2024 at 3pm, 22nd March 2025 at 4pm.
From Tudor Queens to Pop Princesses, the six wives of Henry VIII take to the mic to tell their tales, remixing five hundred years of historical heartbreak into a 75-minute celebration of 21st century girl power. These Queens may have green sleeves but their lipstick is rebellious red.
Watch the 2023 video promo here.
The current company includes Nikki Bentley as Catherine of Aragon, Thao Therese Nguyen as Anne Boleyn, Caitlin Tipping as Jane Seymour, Reca Oakley as Anna of Cleves, Inez Budd as Katherine Howard, Janiq Charles as Catherine Parr, Gabriella Stylianou as Alternate Catherine of Aragon & Jane Seymour/Dance Captain, Naomi Alade as Alternate Anne Boleyn & Anna of Cleves, Hannah Lowther as Alternate Katherine Howard & Catherine Parr, Meg Dixon-Brasil as Super Swing, Hana Stewart as Super Swing, and Ellie Jane Grant as Super Swing.
The band features Ladies in Waiting Carol Arnopp as Musical Director/Keys, Alice Angliss on Drums, Emma Jemima on Guitar, Kelly Morris on Bass, and Ella Ingram as Assistant Musical Director.
Social media:
Facebook: sixthemusical
Twitter: @sixthemusical
Instagram: @sixthemusical
www.sixthemusical.com
(seen at the afternoon performance on 7th March 2020 at the Arts Theatre, London)
On the day before “International Women’s Day,” a quirk of scheduling had the monkey seeing first, at 2.30pm the outstanding “Far Away” by Caryl Churchill at the Donmar Warehouse. With that over by 3.20pm, it had plenty of time to catch another celebration of female creativity just down the road (that it had been itching to see for months) – “Six” at the Arts Theatre at 4pm. It heartily recommends this double-bill.
Beautifully constructed, great music teamed with sparklingly intelligent book and witty yet accessible lyric, this hits every single right note.
It’s about the woman, not Henry VIII. Starting as a popularity contest (and, frankly, a pointless one as Anne Boleyn well knows) it becomes very quickly not just a string of biographical songs, but a highly accessible dissection of the role of women at court of that time... and just how closely many female lives are lead today.
Every lady is individual, and the programme breaks down the song styles as each Queen parallels a modern recording artiste or two. This isn’t a string of pastiches, though. The show is far too brilliant for that. The music is a jumping-off point for personalities to emerge, and for the ladies to blend as they compare notes.
Zara MacIntosh (Catherine of Aragon) is bright and strong enough not to take things lying down. As Courtney Bowman’s Anne Boleyn usurps her place, it isn’t without a fight. Bowman keeps the running joke funny, and her wise instruction is hilarious.
Natalie Paris (Jane Seymour) is a tragic figure with downbeat comic timing and stage presence to accept the teasing coming her way. Alexia McIntosh (Anna of Cleves) is central to the longest segment of the show – a delicious satire and one of the best songs, following, too.
Sophie Issacs (Katherine Howard) is careful not to unbalance the show with her own cheeky individuality and dazzling moment in the spotlight. It is left to Hana Stewart (Catherine Parr) to return us to solid ground, which she does to lead the show to a fun and deeply thoughtful conclusion.
The live band “Ladies In Waiting” has Katy Richardson, Alice Angliss, Amy Shaw and Terri De Marco belting out the tunes on a stepped Emma Bailey set. Carrie-Anne Ingrouille keeps the ladies moving in Gabriella Slade’s eye-catching Tudor Rock frocks – off which Tim Deiling keeps the lights bouncing.
There isn’t a dull moment visually, audibly or intellectually. Best of all, it’s young and British. Sure, musical theatre creation is alchemy, and lightning rarely strikes more than once or twice for even the very best composing teams, this is one of those rare million-volt hits. See it.
Standing ovation.
(from the current production)
Box seat C1: Sold as restricted view but don't really miss anything important in Six. Great legroom as seats are movable. Would sit here again.
______________________________
I saw ‘Six the Musical’ at the Vaudeville in Oct 2022, it was a fabulous production as expected. I was seated in A7 and noticed that the poor chap in AZ5 spent most of the show with the centre spotlight in his face. This spotlight shines out into the audience and it is used in the solo numbers that make up most of the show. On the plus side, the whole front row has the chance to interact with the cast near the end of the show.
(from the Lyric Theatre, Shaftesbury Avenue production)
Six at the Lyric at beginning of June - I sat in D11 in the stalls - almost dead centre and with the show being like a pop concert it was good to be at the front. Amazing amounts of leg room (not sure if this is standard or they’ve adjusted for social distancing) so I was really comfy. Not much of a rake but not needed being so close to the stage. A great spot and I felt really involved.
Loved the show too - brilliantly clever lyrics, great performances from all six of the cast and I had several of the songs stuck in my head for days after which is always a good sign!
(from the Arts Theatre, London)
I took in 'Six' earlier this week (February 2019).
I think everything has already been said about the show, it's great fun (and educational too!).
I sat in Stalls A9. This is the second row for this particular show, and 9 is relatively central. So an amazing view for the most part, with the six queens making direct eye contact regularly. However, I think it was this seat that they seemed to have focussed all the back of stage lighting on, I was regularly absolutely blinded! Also expect to be deafened, both from the music on stage, and from the full audience behind you!
I would say the "gig" nature of this show means it may be more important than usual to choose a row as far forward as possible, in order to feel fully involved, and to take in the quite stunning concert-like light show (even if it did dazzle me at times).
Special note for the last song of the show, which they invite/urge the audience to get out their cameraphones and film it. They seem to have developed a tradition of grabbing one or two lucky person's phone and taking it around the stage for some extreme closeups before returning it. The lucky phones on my show came from A10 and A11 next to me so sit central BB or A if you want a chance of that.
About the Arts Theatre in general; they only ever seem to want to sell programmes upstairs in the bar/foyer area not in the auditorium itself, so make sure you get one before going downstairs; because getting back up that narrow staircase when everyone else is coming down, is a battle. Also, the toilets at the Arts Theatre are an absolute disgrace, use facilities elsewhere if you can!
__________________________________________
Let’s leap straight in: We all know 'Six' is the story of the Six Wives of Henry VIII. And the premise of the show is simple: Who suffered the most? Cue the only way to decide… a sing-off!
Each of the Queens takes centre stage, telling their story in song. And the show gleefully raids a range of musical styles: Beyonce, Adele, Lily Allen, Rhianna, Eurodisco/Krautrock, Ariana Grande and Alicia Keys are drawn upon for the queen’s individual and group numbers.
As you can see from the above, this is no ordinary musical, it is a mix between a musical and a gig. And It never lets up the pace.
All Six Queens were wonderful, but I have to mention Millie O’Connell as Anne Boleyn - all attitude and sass, but allowing vulnerability to bubble under the comedy. And our Jane Seymour that night was Grace Mouat - her rendition of the beautiful ballad ‘Heart of Stone’ was tender, touching and emotional. But the song you’ll find yourself singing is Katherine Howard’s Ariana Grande inspired ‘All You Wanna Do’, belted out with controlled power by Aimie Atkinson. How she changed the emotion in each chorus was riveting.
I must also praise the all-female band, who move from musical style to style effortlessly, driving the show forward.
And ‘Six’ revived my interest in the history of the period! I’d forgotten quite how remarkable sixth wife, Catherine Parr’s achievements were. And ‘Six’ neatly dissected the normal portrayal of the aforementioned Kathryn (how she spelled it in her only surviving letter) for a more naive young woman. When I got home that evening I found myself delving into their individual histories and want to learn more.
Who says musical theatre isn’t educational?
I loved this show. And so did the audience (quite a few pretty young kids: personally I question the suitability of ‘Six’ for such a young audience). I’m not typically a pop fan (rock, folk and increasingly country are more my usual cup of tea), but I bought the cast album before leaving the theatre. 75 minutes flew by, I could easily have sat down and enjoyed it all over again.
What I would say is; go in with an open mind. ‘Six’ deals with it’s subject matter in a very different way. That might not be to all tastes, but sit back and let the Queens show you they are very, very much more than one word each in the old rhyme.
Seat Review: Stalls, seats J1 and J2
These seats are sold as ‘restricted view’. The only way anything would be lost was if it appeared in the top right-hand corner of the stage. They’re nicely close to the front, as said previously the sightline is not affected one iota by the pillar. They are comfortable with sufficient leg room. If you are offered these at reduced prices, snap them up.
Bob Pickett.
__________________________________________
C4 in the Circle. Good view but very tight on leg room.
The choreography is superb, 75 minutes of pure energy.
There really is very little substance to this but it's a lot of fun and is sure to run for some time.
Leave your brain at the box office and enjoy.
4 stars.
Taljaard.
__________________________________________
The Sing Along is ideally for the mega-fan. The sort of person that went, loved it, bought the soundtrack before leaving the theatre, played it constantly and gets very odd looks singing it when riding their motorbike... ahem.
Be warned, if you don't know the words, you're not getting any help. I wondered if they would be back-projected or something. Nope, you're on your own.
Not that it was a problem for the audience! From the first number, how many were word perfect was amazing. First big giggle is (if you know the opening number) when Jane Seymour says she is "the only one he truly loved" and the whole audience went - quite loudly - "RUDE!" and burst into laughter after! "Woof" during 'Get Down' gets a similar treatment!
The audience really gets into it's stride for "Don't Lose Your Head". But every number is accompanied in perfect time.
For anyone worried normal theatre decorum goes out the window, don't worry. Yes, the idea is you sing along. But still no photos (except for the lucky pair who get their phones taken on stage during the 'MegaSIX' at the end), everyone is politely asked to remain seated until said MegaSIX.
Don't rush away after, some of the audience's costumes are quite wonderful - I just had to congratulate one girl whose Anne Boleyn outfit did the onstage original justice.
You can go as a first time Queen and have fun (I overheard two women who had never been before and they loved it), but to get the most of it, go to a 'normal' show, get the soundtrack, learn the words (they're now available on the site), come back and join in!
Seat Review: Stalls J17 and J18
J18 has a (slightly) restricted view behind a pillar. For Six, when the Queens are lined up at the start, you lose Katherine of Aragon. For most of the time this isn't an issue, as the bulk of the action is centre stage. J17 has no such issues. Both great value at a reduced price, but go for J1 and J2 if available.
Bob Pickett.
_________________________________________
Stalls A4. Tons of legroom as no seat in front of you. Do have to look up a little bit. Happy with the seat as I only paid £25 as a day seat, but honestly probably would have been ok with full price here as well.
The monkey advises checking performance times on your tickets and that performances are happening as scheduled, before travelling.
Tuesday at 8pm
Wednesday at 8pm
Thursday at 4pm and 8pm
Friday at 8pm
Saturday at 4pm and 8pm
Sunday at 3pm and 7pm
NO MONDAY PERFORMANCES.
Runs 1 hour 15 minutes approximately, with no interval.
THERE ARE NO PERFORMANCES OF ANY PRODUCTION ON 25th DECEMBER 2024.
During the "Holiday Season" from 16th December 2024 until 5th January 2025, the above schedules will vary.
Charts showing scheduled performances during this period are available using the links below:
For Monday 16th December 2024 until Sunday 22nd December 2024, click here.
For Monday 23rd December 2024 until Sunday 29th December 2024, click here.
For Monday 30th December 2024 until Sunday 5th January 2025, click here.
WHERE TO BUY TICKETS / "BUY OR AVOID" SEAT GUIDE
Theatres use "dynamic pricing." Seat prices change according to demand for a particular performance. Prices below were compiled as booking originally opened. Current prices are advised at time of enquiry.
RUSH TICKETS: App Todaytix are offering £25 "Rush tickets," located at venue discretion, for all performances. Released for the performance on that day, first-come, first-served. Download the App from Todaytix, unlock the "Rush Ticketing" feature by sharing on Facebook or Twitter, and that will allow you to buy tickets.