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Review: Cabaret at the Playhouse (London)

Promotional image for the musical 'Cabaret' at the Kit Kat Club, featuring a performer with vintage styled hair and makeup, highlighted in gold lettering.

This production has a central insight: that the glitter and the terror of Cabaret are not opposites but dance partners. The Kit Kat Klub is both refuge and warning, a place where pleasure becomes a kind of defiance and denial becomes a kind of doom. This staging leans into that contradiction with confidence. It lets decadence and danger sit side by side until the audience can no longer tell where one ends and the other begins. The political becomes personal, the personal becomes political, and the entertainment becomes quietly, insistently unsettling.

The design does a great deal of this work. The Kit Kat Klub appears at first like a jewel — warm, golden, inviting — but the closer you look, the more you see the cracks. The circular stage, capable of rising and turning, creates a sense of perpetual motion, as if Berlin itself is spinning faster than its inhabitants can keep up. Musicians perched in balconies on either side of the Dress Circle add to the intimacy: the sense that the audience is not watching a performance so much as being folded into it. As the story darkens, the lighting shifts from amber glow to cold, surgical blues, guiding us through the slow descent without ever announcing it.

Into this world wanders Baker Mukasa’s Clifford Bradshaw, searching for inspiration and finding Eva Noblezada’s Sally Bowles — a woman who performs herself with such conviction that she almost believes the act. Their relationship becomes the show’s emotional axis, even as the world outside begins to tilt. This production honours the fluidity of Berlin’s social and sexual landscape. Cliff’s bisexuality, so often erased in adaptations, is acknowledged lightly but unmistakably: the flirtatious ease with Lucas Koch’s Ernst Ludwig, the MC’s insinuating presence, the staging of “Two Ladies” with its playful nod to a ménage à trois. It’s a Berlin where improvisation — sexual, social, moral — is simply how people survive.

Eva Noblezada’s Sally is all brittle glamour and bravado. Her costumes are less overtly sexual than in some productions, and that choice pays off: it reveals her fragility rather than her allure. She is a woman who performs even when no one is watching, because the performance is the only thing holding her together. Her abortion is handled with restraint and clarity — not sensationalised, not softened. It is the moment her fantasy of freedom collapses. She chooses the cabaret over domesticity, chaos over stability, the night over the morning after. Her final “Cabaret” is not a victory cry but a desperate insistence that she is still in control, even as the world closes in around her.

The quieter love story between Robert Hands’ Herr Schultz and Ruthie Henshall’s Fraulein Schneider becomes the production’s emotional anchor. Their romance is gentle, almost old‑fashioned, a fragile pocket of hope unfolding in the shadow of something monstrous. When Schneider decides not to marry Schultz, it is not hatred that drives her but fear — the small, frightened compromises ordinary people make when the world begins to harden. Henshall’s delivery of “What Would You Do?” becomes a lament for the way authoritarianism seeps into daily life, not through grand gestures but through the erosion of courage.

Lucas Koch’s Ernst Ludwig embodies that erosion. He begins as a charming, worldly traveller — the sort of man who seems to know everyone and everything. Cliff trusts him. The audience trusts him. And that is precisely the point. His eventual reveal as a Nazi organiser is not a twist but an inevitability. He represents the banality of extremism: the friendly man who helps you with your luggage may also be helping dismantle your society.

Hovering above all this is Reeve Carney’s MC, the production’s most visually striking presence. His costumes — one sharply sinister, one grotesquely clownish — capture his duality: playful on the surface, predatory underneath. His stamping on a glass, echoing the Jewish wedding tradition, during the attack on Herr Schultz’s property is one of the production’s boldest symbolic gestures. It is a moment where the cabaret’s illusions shatter.

Musically, the production is at its strongest when it uses the score to chart the emotional and political descent. “Mein Herr” is delivered with delicious cheek, the line about “crossing Europe man by man” landing with perfect comic timing. The choreography leans into humour rather than seduction, revealing Sally’s wit as armour. “Tomorrow Belongs to Me” appears twice — one as something almost pastoral, the other as something rigid and chilling. The contrast is devastating: the same melody, one seemingly innocent, one poisoned.

Fraulein Schneider’s “What Would You Do?” becomes the show’s heartbreaking centrepiece. It is not a political speech but a weary confession. She is not choosing fear over love; she is choosing survival over hope. The production gives her space, and the result is quietly shattering.

“If You Could See Her” is staged as a deliberate provocation. Without the film’s visual cue of a mocking Nazi audience, the anti‑Semitic punchline lands with a jolt. The production refuses to soften it. The ugliness is the point. It is the moment the cabaret’s humour curdles.

What this revival captures with unnerving clarity is the moment when the party finally ends — not with a crash, but with a tightening. The walls don’t slam shut; they inch inward. The audience feels it before the characters do. The Kit Kat Klub, once a sanctuary of permissiveness and possibility, begins to feel smaller, the air thinner. The decadence that once felt liberating now feels like a distraction — a glitter curtain pulled across a gathering storm.

And the tragedy, of course, is that most people inside the club don’t see it coming. Or rather, they see something, but they refuse to believe it is as bad as it looks. This production understands that authoritarianism rarely announces itself. It creeps. It flatters. It reassures. It tells you that everything is fine, that the ugliness is temporary, that the men in armbands are only keeping order. It tells you that you can keep dancing.

Fraulein Schneider embodies this perfectly. She is not naïve; she is frightened. She knows the world is changing, but she clings to the hope that if she keeps her head down, if she makes the “sensible” choice, the danger might pass her by. Her decision not to marry Schultz is not a capitulation to hatred but to fear — the quiet, corrosive fear that convinces ordinary people to make small compromises that become, in hindsight, catastrophic.

Ernst Ludwig’s unveiling is the clearest sign of how the walls close in. He doesn’t change; we simply see him more clearly. The genial traveller becomes the face of a movement that has been growing in plain sight. The production makes the point sharply: extremism does not arrive as a monster. It arrives as a neighbour.

Even the MC, once the embodiment of mischief and possibility, becomes a darker figure as the show progresses. Carney’s grin sharpens. His jokes curdle. His presence becomes less an invitation and more a warning. When he stamps on the glass, it is the moment the cabaret’s illusions shatter. The club is no longer a refuge; it is a mirror held up to a society that has already surrendered.

By the time Eva Noblezada sings “Cabaret,” toward the end, the party is already over. She is performing in the ruins, insisting she is fine because the alternative — acknowledging the collapse — is unbearable. Her defiance becomes a kind of denial, a refusal to look at the world as it is. And that, the production suggests, is how societies fall: not because no one sees the danger, but because too many people convince themselves it is exaggerated or won’t affect them personally.

The brilliance of this revival is that it shows how the collapse happens in increments. A joke here. A shrug there. A song sung in a different key. People tell themselves it’s not their problem, not their fight, not yet. They keep dancing because the music hasn’t stopped — and by the time it does, the exits are already blocked.

One of the evening’s unexpected pleasures was the strikingly young audience. Their presence gave the production an added charge. Cabaret has always been a warning as much as a story — a reminder of how quickly freedoms can erode. Seeing younger theatre‑goers respond so strongly to those themes made the political resonance feel sharper, more contemporary, more urgent.

This Cabaret understands the show’s political heart: that authoritarianism rarely arrives with a bang. It arrives with a shrug, a joke, a song sung in a different key. Societies collapse not through dramatic gestures but through small compromises, quiet fears, and the seductive belief that the party can go on forever. This production refuses that comfort. It shows us the party ending, the good times over.

By Pat Harrington

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