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Performance times are: Mon-Sat 19:30. Wed,Sat Mat 14:30 (last Wed of each month only)
Synopsis
Based on the Songs of Queen and with a book by Ben Elton, We Will Rock You has been playing at the Dominion Theatre since May 2002.
A blend of Science Fiction, Comedy and brilliant songs by Queen, We Will Rock You London is set in the future, in a place that was once called Earth. Globalisation is complete and everywhere, the kids watch the same movies, wear the same fashions and think the same thoughts. It's a safe world where Rock 'n' Roll has been banned for centuries. Legend persists that somewhere instruments still exist and the Bohemians need a hero to find them...
We Will Rock You, The Queen Musical features 31 of their greatest hits including Radio Ga Ga, I Want to Break Free, Somebody to Love, Killer Queen, Play the Game, Under Pressure, A Kind of Magic, Don't Stop Me Now, I Want It All, Crazy Little Thing Called Love, Who Wants to Live Forever, Another One Bites the Dust, These Are the Days of Our Lives, We Will We Will Rock, We Are the Champions and of course Bohemian Rhapsody.
The show won five of our Whatsonstage.com awardsincluding Best New Musical, Best Actor in a Musical, Best Actress in a Musical, Best Supporting Actress in a Musical and Best Director.
The show also won the 2011 BBC Radio 2 Olivier Audience Award.
A number of international productions have followed the original London theatre We Will Rock You including Ireland, Australia, Canada, Russia, Spain, Japan, South Africa, Zürich, Vienna, New Zealand, South Korea, Singapore, Bangkok and Hong Kong.
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Please note: strobe lighting is used in the performance.Seats labeled CIRC RV are restricted view by a handrail. Customers must be 5'4 in order to see over the handrail clearly. Customers under 5'4 will have the handrail in their view.
Nine years on, We Will Rock You continues to rock with just as much enthusiasm and as many Queen anthems (31 in total) as the day it opened.
Three hundred years into the future, we are catipulted to a world where all live music has been outlawed. Scaramouche and Galileo, first finding each other, then find themselves pitted against the Killer Queen in a bid to salvage instruments buried under the wreckage of Wembley Stadium and rescue rock.
The audience, apparently ready and prepped for a two-and-a-half hour celebration of everything Freddie Mercury and co. have a ball, apparently happy to overlook the beyond-laughable Ben Elton book for some rousing renditions of the Queen classics.
The vocal performances are fantastic, Ricardo Afonso and Sarah French demonstrating stunning belts as Galileo and Scaramouche alongside Brenda Edwards as the Killer Queen. For crowds seeking spectacle, over-blown video projection, outrageous costume and voices that do stadium rock justice in a West End theatre, this show is still a winner.
There is a smack of irony to the We Will Rock You world, commercialisation reigning supreme, being overrun by brain-washed Ga Ga Kids. Nearly a decade into this show's London run another totem of pop music commercialism, Lady Gaga herself, draws on the 1984 Queen track for her stage name.
And what more to top off a birthday celebration? Queen bandmates Brian May and Roger Taylor on hand to show off the musical's recently earned Olivier Audience Award for Most Popular Show, as chosen by their dedicated and very vocal fans.
- Andrew Girvan
NOTE: The following THREE-STAR review dates from 14 May 2007 and the production's fifth anniversary.
We Will Rock You is the musical equivalent of pornography: gratuitous, exploitative and entirely delicious.
Five years after opening at the Dominion Theatre it remains easy to fault its distorted, inaudible lyrics, wince at its gaudy videography, and roll embarrassed eyes during terribly dated gags, but that cannot take away from the fact this spectacle framing the irrepressible music of Queen is acutely aware of both its loyal audience and itself.
Some 300 years in the future the world has become a homogenized shopping mall run by the totalitarian monopoly Globalsoft that has forbidden the creation of “real” music and banned all instruments. It is up to unwitting outcast Galileo Figaro (Peter Johansson), who dreams the lyrics of history’s greatest pop songs, and his sassy love-interest Scaramouche (Jenna Lee James) to recover the fabled rhapsody and release the bohemians from oppression. The result is a thunderous and extravagant ride through Queen’s back catalogue written and directed by comedian Ben Elton that will bring anyone without a heart condition to their feet.
Tim Goodchild’s costume design remains the star of the show. Kilts and corsets collide for the neo-punk miscellany of the fringe-dwelling bohemians contrasting the figure-hugging studded leather of busty tyrant Killer Queen (Mazz Murray). Allusions to Boy George and Tina Turner are scattered throughout, but the Geri Halliwell-inspired union jack number in the Australian production is sorely missed.
While a five-year run has proved We Will Rock You an international commercial success the script, which has undergone only minor adjustments, has dated significantly and it is hard to imagine new audiences remembering the Teletubbies. The quest to release inner rock will also offend lovers of 90s boy and girl bands with its unyielding infantile jibes against the genre (though I do recall Queen playing on the 5ive cover of the title track some years back).
Even non-Queen fans can continue feasting on this well-fermented musical cheese brimming with passionate performances and the infectious energy of an arena concert. Rock on Dominium.
- Malcolm Rock
NOTE: The following THREE-STAR review dates from 14 May 2002 featuring this production's original cast.
There's a certain sad irony about a production that so viciously attacks today's consumerist devotion to marketing and global brands while at the same time spending £1 million-plus on pre-opening hype, raising West End ticket prices to an all-time high and flooding the stalls with backpack-clad Coca Cola girls hawking drinks at a 100% mark-up.
Ah well, the creators and performers - if not the marketers - for We Will Rock You have more pressing concerns. How to cope with an onslaught of technological props? How to squeeze 31 Queen songs into two and a half hours? And, most critically, how to fashion any kind of sensible story around them? Their efforts in rising to such challenges meet with varying degrees of success.
Ben Elton's Flash Gordon-meets-Arthurian legend book is nothing short of preposterous. Some 300 years in the future, globalisation is complete and live music banned in favour of computer-produced cyber stars, but the ruling Killer Queen is facing growing resistance from the Bohemians intent on reviving the Golden Age when kids wrote their own songs. Enter young rebel Galileo, whose mission is to pull the sword (in this case, a gold lame electric guitar) from the stone and thus free the enslaved masses - as foretold by Queen, rock's freedom fighters of yore who saw the future and buried their musical instruments at Wembley.
If that little synopsis doesn't send you screaming in terror, then you may well enjoy We Will Rock You. Yes, it's cheesy and utterly ridiculous, but you can't deny it's somewhat cleverly serendipitous, and it does have its amusing moments - most especially when Nigel Planer's hippy librarian (an older Neil from The Young Ones) turns up, rather late in the day, to fill in the potted musical history.
There are other outstanding performances, particularly from the female principals. Diva extraordinaire Sharon D Clarke gives it large as the Killer Queen and, as Scaramouche, Hannah Jane Fox relishes some great sarcastic put-downs, proving herself as "one gutsy chick, man" with an even gutsier voice. Amongst the men, Alexander Hanson is underutilised despite his characteristically light comic touch as the albino commander, while Tony Vincent's performance as the hero Galileo is a bit too earnest and underpowered, though he makes up for it in his solo spot at the end.
Though many will detest them as too rock concerty, I also quite liked Mark Fisher and Willie Williams' set with its army of blinding lights and constantly refreshed bank of digital screens (the tagline teasers at the start and finish work especially well). No, the real problem is that there are simply too many songs, some very awkwardly shoehorned in and many of which just don't qualify for the "greatest hits" label.
If I were director Christopher Renshaw, I'd be tempted to ditch the also-ran tunes for a much zippier, if no less unapologetically kitsch or overhyped, production. That said, one number that should under no circumstance be excised is the choral curtain call of "Bohemian Rhapsody" - I wouldn't have missed that for anything.
After the initial culture shock of the first 20 minutes of this futuristic musical I am pleased to say I got into it and enjoyed it. I think people who do appreciate proper music played on instruments and not manufactured music will appreciate and understand the very tongue-in-cheek, witty story (written by Ben Elton and Queen) which is based on the music of Queen and manages to link together over 24 songs.
The story is set 300 years in the future in a world where proper music has been banned by the Global Soft Corporation. Any rebels who are interested in music are sought out and captured. There were some likeable characters that were appreciated by the audience, the main 2 being Galileo Figaro and Skaramoosh. There were also guest appearances by Kevin Kennedy (Pops), Jonathan Wilkes (Khashoggi) and Brenda Edwards (Killer Queen).
All of the singers and dancers were extremely talented, and although the tone of the show was mainly light-hearted, I was particularly moved when the cast paid tribute to rock stars that had died too young including Michael Jackson, Kurt Cobain and Jim Morrison by featuring the Queen song No One but You (Only the Good Die Young.)
I also agreed and cheered and clapped very loudly to ‘Pops’ anti-Big Brother statement along with a lot of the audience! The atmosphere was electric and the cast received 2 standing ovations which I haven’t seen in many years! As long as you are prepared to let your hair down, not take a show too seriously and have fun, We Will Rock You rocks!
- justrelaxmagazine.co.uk
17 Aug 09
A witty script and some awesome songs. We Will Rock You is one of the best musicals I've seen since Wicked. - David Dawson
08 Aug 09
I loved this show, it was so good. I don't know why people slate it so much, musicals are meant to be a form of escapism, not to be taken too seriously and WWRY is a perfect example of it. I loved the whole cast especially Sabrina Aloueche and Mazz Murray. i saw this on the 27th March and i thought everything about it worked. Cant wait to go again! - Kirsty
30 Mar 09
Absolutely brilliant, funny, world-class singers and a spectacular set! Take a big bow for the band!! Ricardo Afonso - u rock! - Nicolas
12 Mar 09
i personally loved it and think all of the people who have been putting ben elton down are lacking a sense of humor, read any of his books and you will se that the man is a genius ( recommend blind fait or dead famous for starters) - Louise
08 Jan 09
For some reason this year I have booked tickets for those shows I swore I'd never see: Grease, Dirty Dancing and now, God help me, We Will Rock You. If a great musical requires a great book then it is fair to lay the blame for this farrago entiely at the door of Ben Elton. What passes for a plot makes little sense and the script is ludicrous, cringingly unfunny and frequently crude. The sound system trades volume for clarity, not helped b some shockingly awful performances (take a bow of shame Killer Queen) which render familiar songs incomprehensible. This might be deliberate of course as it disguises the fact that most of the songs have virtually no relevance to the story. Ultimately though it's best to succumb to the lowest common denominator of some of stadium rock's most memeorable anthems and try to ignore my wife's request to see the whole thing again. - David Baxter
31 Jul 08
Utter, utter, utter, drivel. Don't go. - John
26 Jul 08
..Scaramouche? I am not sure but I am guessing her name David Stevens of Duelkan, Germany. - IRS
08 May 08
Great show! It really is very good and i havn't heard ONE bad review from members of the public outside theatre based discussion boards.
Thanks Queen and Ben Elton for such a great night out! - Jonny
05 Apr 08
I saw the production in September-7th to be precise at the Dominion.
What a brilliant show.
Who was the actress who played Scaramouche she was outstanding
Well done Brian May, Ben Elton and the cast and production team.
David Stevens Duelken Germany
I made a mistake should have been 5 not 3 - David Stevens
The site was originally that of a brewery. The theatre opened on 3 Oct 1929 and has 2000 seats. Society of London Theatre member. Wheelchair bookings on 0171 636 2295.
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