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Stranger Things: The First Shadow

Phoenix Theatre - Charing Cross Road, London, WC2H 0JP 
Showing from Fri, 17th November 2023 to Sun, 5th April 2026

Small town USA 1959. Henry Creel and his family arrive to start a new life. For local youngsters Jim Hopper, Bob Newby and Joyce Maldonado, things change.

Based on the Netflix television series, this is an original story taking place at the beginning of things – and possibly hinting at how they will end.

Stranger Things: The First Shadow

For performances from 02nd December 2025 until 30th January 2026. BOOK BY 16th NOVEMBER 2025.
Offer expires: Sun, 16th November 2025
Book between: Tue, 2nd December 2025 and Fri, 30th January 2026

Buy best available third premium price tickets up to £125, top non-premium price tickets up to £80 and second price tickets up to £65 (from agency / offer allocation) at special prices of £100 / £65 / £45 each at all Tuesday to Friday performances ONLY.

Original ticket prices may vary by performance, and some prices are not available on all dates, the system will advise at time of enquiry.

Some seats at second price are in the restricted view rear stalls (ground level) or restricted view rear dress circle (first tier). The circle has seats which may have a restricted view and / or limited legroom. Please do not purchase if this is not acceptable to you. Seat information.

Some "peak dates" are excluded - including 20th December 2025 to 04th January 2026 - the system will advise at time of enquiry.

Ticket selection is from agency's allocation. Subject to allocation availability, change, withdrawal and agency discretion.

(seen at the afternoon preview performance on 12th December 2023). Some actors have now left the cast.

For those like the monkey who don’t have paid television channels thanks to not having enough time to watch even much terrestrial TV, “Stranger Things” is just another phenomenon it knows nothing about beyond hearing of its success.

Thus it is in the interesting position of being able to discuss whether this stage version is likely to be of interest to the keen theatregoer without any pre-knowledge.

The answer is that provided you read the crucial programme notes beforehand which explain the concept of alternative universe “Upside Down” and that the lead character’s son vanishes at the start of the television series, then this will work for you as a play.

Being set in the 1950s, decades before the 1980s of the television series helps, as the characters are created fresh so there is no pre-history needed. Speaking to keen fans seated beside it, what those without knowledge will apparently miss are constant “oh yes” moments as “back history” of much-loved characters is filled in.

Playwright Kate Trefry works with original show writers The Duffer Brothers and wonder-writer Jack Thorne to create a script which sometimes veers too far towards television rather than theatrical language. The pace drops but recovers as the theatrical parts of the television programme redress the balance.

Constructed like a TV programme with a spectacular pre-titles sequence – Jamie Harrison and Chris Fisher as illusion and visual effects designers earning their money alongside set designer Miriam Buether from the start. Further in, the creepy stuff continues, and it is no spoiler to say that arachnophobes may prefer seats at the back... or in another theatre altogether.

Stephen Daldry makes good use of the almost constantly revolving stage to keep nearly three hours of action moving like the series source. The first half has more action, the second is mostly static as we move further into the science-fiction realm.

The cast are required not only to act, but take part in stunts, magic, fights, dance routines (notes for Coral Messam, Gerrard Martin, Mateus Daniel, Lynn Page and Kev McCurdy’s work) as the tale unfolds.

In a huge cast it is difficult to pick out a few as all deserve comment. The most notable would be Louis McCartney as new arrival Henry Creel. Misfit by nature or is something more sinister at work? It’s a creepy performance whichever, redeemed as he allows the good to shine through.

Meeting Dr Brenner, Patrick Vaill is nuanced in his examination of Creel. Clinical yet never revealing much about true motivations and producing some chilling second act scenes.

Equally cold, Shane Attwooll as Chief Hopper is a brutal bully, his son James giving Oscar Lloyd the opportunity to exploit a delightful character arc from victim to someone willing to fight back.

Far happier, school Principal’s daughter Claudia Yount has one of the few truly happy sequences, Maisie Norma Seaton making the most of her personal drama and radiating a feeling of adrift in the world.

Trying to escape her world, Isabella Pappas as Joyce Maldonado has dreams after high school. That she becomes a leading character in the television show later is a pre-signal of her story here. Still, Pappas returns to the West End stage for the first time as an adult and gives us the full benefit of her clear diction and expressiveness only a teenage girl like Joyce can radiate.

The ensemble works hard over three hours. With that running time there are plot holes – the use of blindfolds to change dimension is not consistent or particularly well explained. The ending could also be re-arranged, as the more natural conclusion occurs before the actual one. Moot for fans, but non-fans would probably be more satisfied that way.

Still, the point is a well-considered spin-off which is far more than a simple “cash-in” extension of the franchise and is accessible to the majority. Engaging story staged with originality and with a cast without a weak link. The First Shadow could herald the dawn of an international event.

We were both blown away by it. We are both huge fans of the TV show so were really riveted by the prequel story about Henry Creel. We thought the whole cast were great and the special effects were fantastic. I thought it was interesting as when you are watching a show, people are usually fidgeting, coughing etc but the whole audience were completely silent and seemed captivated by it all.

We were sitting J1 and 2 in the Grand Circle but could see everything absolutely fine so glad we didn't buy expensive tickets.
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I had no idea what the fuss was about up until I went to see "Stranger Things". The special effects were amazing, the plot was really okay and the actors were brilliant. If you want to criticize anything, then it's the length (more than three hours) and the fact that the flickering lights were used too often.

Nevertheless 5 bananas.

The monkey advises checking performance times on your tickets and that performances are happening as scheduled, before travelling.

Run Time:3 hours, including one interval
 
Monday:X
Tuesday:7pm
Wednesday: 7pm
Thursday: 7pm
Friday:1pm, 7pm
Saturday:1pm, 7pm
Sunday:3pm

Venue Box Office & Current Prices

0333 009 6690
Venue box office details and show price charts are available on the Phoenix Theatre page.

TodayTix

Stranger Things: The First Shadow
TodayTix charge between 10% and 20% booking fee per ticket. Discounts are often available as this is a large global ticketing company with this specific aim.

Ticketmaster

Stranger Things: The First Shadow
Ticketmaster charge around 8% to 10% booking fee per ticket. Handling fees may also be added. This is the largest ticketing agency worldwide.

London Theatre Direct

Stranger Things: The First Shadow
London Theatre Direct.com charge between 10% and 25% booking fee per ticket. Discounts are frequently available. Part of Trafalgar Theatre Group, known for customer service and unique offers.

See Tickets

Stranger Things: The First Shadow
See Tickets charge around 10% booking fee per ticket, plus £2.75 per booking (not per ticket) postal charge. They are owned by ticketing group Eventim.

LoveTheatre.com

Stranger Things: The First Shadow
LOVEtheatre charge around 10% booking fee per ticket. They are owned by Ambassador Theatre Group (ATG) and often have good deals on shows at ATG venues.

Location: Box office discretion
Availability: Box office discretion
Price: £25
Notes: App Todaytix are offering £25 “Rush tickets” for all performances. Released for the performance on that day, first-come, first-served. Download the App from Todaytix.

Venue: Phoenix Theatre
Address: Charing Cross Road, London, WC2H 0JP
Box Office: 0333 009 6690

More details: Seats to buy or avoid at this venue plus travel information and other details can be found on the Phoenix Theatre page
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