The Rock’n’Roll Panto 2025: Jack and The Beanstalk

Jack and The Beanstalk at Liverpool Everyman. Image credit: Ellie Kurtz

Written by Chloe Moss

Directed by Kash Arshad

LIVERPOOL EVERYMAN

Review: Jack and the Beanstalk at Liverpool Everyman – a riotous, rebellious beanstalk bonanza.

Liverpool Everyman‘s annual rock ’n’ roll panto has always been more punk spirit than polished pageant, and Jack and the Beanstalk is no exception. In fact, this year’s offering may be the purest distillation yet of the theatre’s trademark magic: equal parts gleeful anarchy, local in-jokes, powerhouse vocals and the kind of good-natured silliness that could thaw even the frostiest Merseyside December.

From the moment the fabulous Adam Keast bursts onstage as Fairy Spacecake, it’s clear we’re in very safe and very outrageous hands. This is a show that doesn’t so much break the fourth wall as tickle it, tease it, and invite it on a night out down Hardman Street. The ensemble, every one of them actor-musician dynamos, bounce between instruments with the casual swagger of people who can absolutely shred a guitar solo and belt out a big ballad without breaking a sweat despite the non breathable costumes and the plethora of wigs.

Liam Tobin as Vera in Jack and The Beanstalk at Liverpool Everyman.
Image Credit: Ellie Kurtz

Malek Alkoni as Jack our hero is a hapless dreamer who initially seems less at home in panto than his comrades but gains confidence as the show progresses. Liam Tobin is the Everyman panto dame, Vera, who turns up in outfits loud enough to be seen from space and delivers zinger after zinger with sharp comic precision.  Amy Bastani is delightful as Jill and delivers some great vocals and harmonies. Even Daisy the cow (Elaine Hua Jones) has a scene-stealing number clad in a fabulous costume by Katie Scott. The ubiquitous star is Everyman panto stalwart Adam Keast who is a master of sly innuendo, always delivered with insouciant twinkly, charm.

The script, as ever, is a glorious mash-up: camp, cheeky, locally flavoured and just the right shade of ridiculous. You’ll get your beans and your beanstalk, sure, but you’ll also get a surprisingly sharp political aside, a slapstick chase sequence, and a musical playlist so crowd-pleasing it should probably come with a government warning. Expect everything from disco to pop-punk to a power ballad so earnest it might genuinely move you.

What makes the Everyman panto special isn’t just the gags or the tunes, it’s the warmth. The company radiates joy, the audience throws it back, and before you know it you’re on your feet, shouting, singing, and momentarily forgetting that you’re a fully grown adult who came in for “something seasonal” and is now screaming encouragement at a quirky Goose.

The set ramps up the fun with a beanstalk ascent that’s impressively bonkers, more DIY-in-the-best-way than Disney, and all the better for it. And when the giant finally appears… well, let’s just say the Designer Katie Scott clearly had a very good time and the result is delightfully unhinged.

In short: Jack and the Beanstalk at Liverpool Everyman is a raucous, big-hearted triumph that is exactly the kind of festive escapism that reminds you why pantomime, done properly and with plenty of swagger, remains one of theatre’s greatest communal pleasures. A giant of a good time.

LIVERPOOL EVERYMAN 15th November ’25  – 17th January ’26

ROMEO AND JULIET

Zoe West and Alicia Forde  as Romeo and Juliet at Liverpool Everyman.
Photo credit: Pamela Raith Photography

Written by William Shakespeare

Directed by Ellie Hurt

Liverpool EVERYMAN

⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️

The star-crossed lovers have been reimagined countless times, but the Everyman’s latest take on Romeo and Juliet proves there’s still fire in one of Shakespeare’s most famous tragedies. Director Ellie Hurt has shaken the dust off the Verona cobblestones and transplanted them into a world that feels strikingly contemporary, without losing the pulse of Shakespeare’s poetry.

The Everyman’s thrust stage, with its intimacy and edge, works wonders for a play about red hot passion colliding with simmering feuds. The opening brawl brims with a raw, streetwise energy that instantly declares this is not a Verona of ruffled sleeves and dainty sonnets, but one where violence is sadly as casual and lethal as in any British city today.

Alicia Forde delivers a Juliet played with a sharp wit and a teenager’s quicksilver emotional shifts, she resists the tragic heroine mould and instead feels vividly alive; by turns funny, impatient, fierce, and achingly young. Zoe West as Romeo is a mixture of impulsive swagger and genuine vulnerability that is utterly absorbing. The electric chemistry between these star crossed lovers burns not in polished declarations, but in stolen glances and nervous laughter, which makes their sudden plunge into tragedy all the more painfully poignant.

The production is peppered with smart choices as a perfectly cast Elliot Broadfoot delivers Mercutio’s bawdy humour with the  timing of a polished stand-up set. Kelise Gordon-Harrison as Benvolio is vibrant with youth yet wiser and more reflective than his peers. Eithne Browne brings real depth and humorous empathy to the Friar.

Kelise Gordon-Harrison and Elliot Broadfoot as Benvolio and Mercutio.
Image credit: Pamela Raith Photography

Live music underscores scenes with a throbbing, modern urgency from a score by Dom Coyote with music from Joy Division, Kate Bush and Jimmy Somerville interspersed with a hymnal poignancy delivered by the Chorus. The lighting design flips seamlessly from neon brashness to candlelit intimacy. The costume design fuses modern street fashion with that of Tudor times, with every costume having flashes of blood red suggestive of the impending tragedy.

But the Everyman’s greatest triumph here is clarity. For a play often drowned in its own reputation, this staging makes the story feel inevitable and freshly shocking. This could be a balcony in old Verona or a balcony on a council estate in Toxteth or Moss Side. By the time the lovers fall, you’re reminded that tragedy is not about inevitability, but about the exquisite, wasteful cruelty of timing.

This Romeo and Juliet doesn’t just retell a familiar tale—it makes you feel its sting anew, as though hearing that ancient line for the first time…never was a story of more woe.

LIVERPOOL EVERYMAN 13th Sept- 4th Oct 2025

The Rock ‘n’ Roll Panto Rapunzel 2024

The cast of The Rock ‘n’ Roll Panto Rapunzel 2024 at Liverpool Everyman
Image credit: Marc Brenner

Written by Jude Christian

Directed by Francesca Goodridge

Liverpool Everyman

With every passing year Panto season seems to come round quicker and this year is no exception. My first this year is at Liverpool Everyman and the weather heading into the city is a sleety blizzard with high winds guaranteed to wreck any freshly coiffered mane. Thankfully there is a warm welcome inside the Everyman and a thoroughly cheery production on the stage. Jude Christian has taken this classic Panto staple and set it in Liverpool with two hairdressing salons battling it out to the final blowout while a feisty Rapunzel escapes her prison and discovers family, friendship and freedom. This rock ‘n’ Roll take is full of crowd pleasing musical numbers and a multi-talented cast perform, sing and play all the instruments on stage.

The set and costume design by Janet Bird works brilliantly. The colourful stage on two levels with a magnificent four poster bed making frequent appearances is all bright pastels and glistening with glitter. The overall effect is a fun blend of a Barbie house merging with an Andy Warhol exhibition. The costumes are equally vivid and are further elevated with elaborate hair styles that look straight out of a Manga comic book. The Dame’s costumes are wittily designed to illustrate her ownership of the now fading salon The Blonde Bombshell. Decked out as an iconic Marilyn Monroe, a Scouse take on Lady Gaga’s infamous meat dress or as Madonna in a Gaultier conical corset while heavily pregnant; the designs all guarantee laughs for an on form  Michael Starke as Debbie UpDo.

Ai Kumar as Rapunzel at Liverpool Everyman Image credit: Marc Brenner

The multi-talented cast seem to relish in Francesca Goodridge’s lively fast paced production and the audience interaction is skillfully done and very effective. Adam Keast is a delight as Fairy Fixer-Upper and his blend of fey charm, mischievous asides and double entendres land well and make for good entertainment for all ages. Zoe West makes an excellent baddie as Mancunion rival Danny Ruff posturing like an overcharged quiff of testosterone as he tries to ruin his old Boss. Ai Kumar as Rapunzel and Rebecca Levy have great chemistry as the sweet duo seeking to escape the salon and find both independence and love. They are both vocally strong and provide a number of beautiful duets. Tomi Ogbaro and Emma Bispham are the salon assistants Trevor and Goop. The former is a hapless sweetheart while Goop is clearly modelled on the implacable Nessa from Gavin and Stacy. Ben Boskovic as Prince Timotei brings a nice silliness to the proceedings as the medieval Prince who seems a dead ringer for Lord Farquaad complete with his trusty steed Ed SheerRam.

Zoe West as Danny Ruff and Michael Starke as Debbie UpDo at Liverpool Everyman
Image credit: Marc Brenner

The musical numbers include Daytripper by The Beatles, a Blondie medley, numbers from Shania Twain, Lady Gaga and Queen. They all flow neatly within the script and involve a wide range of instruments played by all the cast. A genuinely fun night out for families that is colourful and entertaining with lots of surprises and laughs guaranteed. This is definitely a trip to the theatre where everyone is guaranteed to let their hair down and have fun.

Liverpool Everyman 16th November 2024 – 18th January 2025