Starlight Express: Andrew Lloyd Webber musical 'more preposterously OTT' than original
'Head-spinning' show about roller-skating trains is a lot of fun

Andrew Lloyd Webber's "Starlight Express" is back, four decades after making its West End debut.
Critics may have "sneered" at the show in the past for "lacking sophistication", and admittedly Richard Stilgoe's lyrics can be as "bland as an old British Rail sandwich", said Dominic Cavendish in The Telegraph. But director Luke Sheppard and his team have conjured a "head-spinning wonderland", infused with "magic and life-affirming meaning".
The gleaming revival is "bigger, camper and more preposterously OTT" than the 1984 original, said Arifa Akbar in The Guardian. Yet somehow, this "bizarre juggernaut" "pulls it off".
Subscribe to The Week
Escape your echo chamber. Get the facts behind the news, plus analysis from multiple perspectives.

Sign up for The Week's Free Newsletters
From our morning news briefing to a weekly Good News Newsletter, get the best of The Week delivered directly to your inbox.
From our morning news briefing to a weekly Good News Newsletter, get the best of The Week delivered directly to your inbox.
It begins, "gently enough", with a child called Control playing with trains before drifting off to sleep. What follows, said Tim Bano in The Independent, is a "two-and-a-half-hour neon fever dream" where roller-skating trains in "iridescent costumes" zip around the stage. The audience is "rooting" for Rusty (Jeevan Braich) – an old steam engine who competes with rivals Greaseball and Electra in the hopes of impressing observation car Pearl.
The show has been given some "substantial" updates. In the context of the intensifying climate crisis, a new character, Hydra, has been added as "our hero's helper", teaming up with Rusty and persuading him to use hydrogen to win the race and be crowned fastest engine in the world.
"Nobody looks even slightly like a train," said Andrzej Lukowski in Time Out. But it's a "tremendous thrill" having the cast "whistle past you at high velocity" and "frankly it's a lot of fun". While it is "technically dazzling", I couldn't help but wonder why Sheppard's production couldn't have "a better story, characters to actually care about, or basic internal coherence".
The "wafer-thin" characters leave you longing for more personality, agreed David Benedict in Variety, and the new songs "add little". One of the high points, though, is Howard Hudson's skilful lighting which "ignites and punctuates everything": lasers, pulsing lights and "intense washes of turquoise and purple" give the show a thrumming energy.
This works in tandem with the "amazing" video design which transports you "inside a feverish child's mind", added Bano in The Independent. "To be frank, it often sounds like a child has written the music and lyrics too". It certainly isn't Lloyd Webber's finest score. But ultimately it doesn't really matter: more "spectacle than sense", "Starlight Express" is an "extraordinary creative onslaught" designed to "delight your inner child – which it really does".
Starlight Express is at Troubadour Wembley Park Theatre, London, until June 2025.
Sign up for Today's Best Articles in your inbox
A free daily email with the biggest news stories of the day – and the best features from TheWeek.com
Irenie Forshaw is a features writer at The Week, covering arts, culture and travel. She began her career in journalism at Leeds University, where she wrote for the student newspaper, The Gryphon, before working at The Guardian and The New Statesman Group. Irenie then became a senior writer at Elite Traveler, where she oversaw The Experts column.
-
Podcast Reviews: 'The Ex Files' and 'Titanic: Ship of Dreams'
Feature An ex-couple start a podcast and a deep dive into why the Titanic sank
-
Critics' choice: Restaurants that write their own rules
Feature A low-light dining experience, a James Beard Award-winning restaurant, and Hawaiian cuisine with a twist
-
Why is ABC's firing of Terry Moran roiling journalists?
Today's Big Question After the network dropped a longtime broadcaster for calling Donald Trump and Stephen Miller 'world-class' haters, some journalists are calling the move chilling
-
One great cookbook: 'The New Book of Middle Eastern Food'
The Week Recommends Where the academic and the practical coexist
-
Comedians to see on tour this summer
the week recommends Beat the heat with humor
-
Summertime eating is good at these 7 restaurants across the country
The Week Recommends Patios and big flavors are in season
-
10 great gifts to make yourself Pop-ular on Father's Day
The Week Recommends Make his day with a thoughtful present
-
6 captivating new US museum exhibitions to see this summer
The Week Recommends Get up close to Gustave Caillebotte and discover New Vision photography
-
5 horror movies to sweat out this summer
The Week Recommends A sequel, a reboot and a follow-up from the director of 'Barbarian' highlight the upcoming scary movie slate
-
5 electrifying books to read this June to spark your imagination
The Week Recommends A love story set in space, a pair of ambitious debuts and more
-
Fast-and-furious zombies, serial killer sharks and a matchmaking conundrum in June's new movies
the week recommends Danny Boyle is back with '28 Years Later' and Dakota Johnson has a Sophie's choice to make in 'Materialists'