Close Menu
London ReviewsLondon Reviews
  • Home
  • What’s On News
  • Going Out
  • Reviews
  • Spotlight
  • AI News
  • Tech & Gadgets
  • Travel
  • Horoscopes
  • Web Stories
  • Forgotten eBooks

Subscribe to Updates

Get the latest creative news from FooBar about art, design and business.

What's Hot
Lenovo Legion Go 2 review: this gaming handheld is worth it for the screen alone

Lenovo Legion Go 2 review: this gaming handheld is worth it for the screen alone

January 28, 2026
Beautiful Little Fool review – F Scott and Zelda Fitzgerald musical needs jazzing up | Theatre

Beautiful Little Fool review – F Scott and Zelda Fitzgerald musical needs jazzing up | Theatre

January 28, 2026
Poet Beman publishes first book at 82 after life-altering accident reshaped his path

Poet Beman publishes first book at 82 after life-altering accident reshaped his path

January 28, 2026
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
  • Privacy
  • Terms
  • Advertise
  • Contact
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
London ReviewsLondon Reviews
Subscribe
  • Home
  • What’s On News
  • Going Out
  • Reviews
  • Spotlight
  • AI News
  • Tech & Gadgets
  • Travel
  • Horoscopes
  • Web Stories
  • Forgotten eBooks
London ReviewsLondon Reviews
Home » Gallus in Weegieland review – hilarious show sends Alice down a class rabbit hole | Theatre
Theatre

Gallus in Weegieland review – hilarious show sends Alice down a class rabbit hole | Theatre

November 24, 20252 Mins Read
Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email Telegram WhatsApp
Gallus in Weegieland review – hilarious show sends Alice down a class rabbit hole | Theatre
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

More than the odd playwright has discovered to their cost that Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland is harder to adapt than they might suppose. Yes, Lewis Carroll’s children’s classic is rich in novelty, wit and delight. But yes, too, its structure is episodic and its protagonist lacks agency. Stuff just happens to Alice, one thing after another: colourful but not dramatic.

Carroll purists would surely disagree, but in Gallus in Weegieland, Johnny McKnight makes a better fist of it than most. His version might divert from the original with a story about a girl travelling from Glasgow’s bougie West End to working-class Dennistoun, where she falls in love with a boy-rabbit, but it also gives this Alice Pleasance Liddell a motivation and an adversary.

Being a millennial, she is on a journey; in this case, to find bravery, imagination and love (and ideally a dance certificate). This she will achieve only by winning a good-versus-evil battle with Queenie of Hearts (an ebullient Louise McCarthy, the closest this panto has to a dame).

Newcomer Jorgey Scott-Learmonth makes a radiant Alice. With the relentless positivity of Ellie Kemper in Unbreakable Kimmy Schmidt, she is blind to the threat of the execution-happy Queenie and winningly deserving of the affections of Star Penders’s immature boy-rabbit. Their inevitable kiss is hilariously delayed for most of the show.

Gags … Catriona Faint, centre, as Hatter. Photograph: Mihaela Bodlovic

McKnight, who is currently playing the dame at the Macrobert, Stirling, has spruced up his 2017 script to include gags about Ozempic medication, new Pitlochry Festival theatre director Alan Cumming (himself a former Tron panto writer) and Celia Imrie farting on Celebrity Traitors. It’s not big, it’s not clever, but it is funny.

So too are director Sally Reid’s company, completed not only by Catriona Faint, on superbly deadpan form as Hatter, and Marc Mackinnon, as a laughably lugubrious Honey the Caterpillar, but also understudies Jessica Donnelly and Aidan MacColl giving extra power to Ross Brown’s upbeat songs. It is all played out on a set by Kenny Miller that, with its clashing black-and-white stripes and checks, is somewhere between a liquorice mint and a dazzle ship. It adds to the disorientation of a deliriously daft show.

At the Tron theatre, Glasgow, until 4 January

Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email

Related Posts

Beautiful Little Fool review – F Scott and Zelda Fitzgerald musical needs jazzing up | Theatre

Beautiful Little Fool review – F Scott and Zelda Fitzgerald musical needs jazzing up | Theatre

January 28, 2026
The Olive Boy review – a teenager’s love letter to mothers everywhere | Theatre

The Olive Boy review – a teenager’s love letter to mothers everywhere | Theatre

January 27, 2026
A Grain of Sand review – a child’s eye view of the horror in Gaza | Theatre

A Grain of Sand review – a child’s eye view of the horror in Gaza | Theatre

January 26, 2026
My Life With Kenneth Williams review – raconteur resurrected by an extraordinary mimic | Theatre

My Life With Kenneth Williams review – raconteur resurrected by an extraordinary mimic | Theatre

January 25, 2026
Guess How Much I Love You? review – shattering portrait of a pregnancy in crisis | Theatre

Guess How Much I Love You? review – shattering portrait of a pregnancy in crisis | Theatre

January 24, 2026
Our Town review – Michael Sheen brings warmth and wit to Welsh National Theatre opener | Stage

Our Town review – Michael Sheen brings warmth and wit to Welsh National Theatre opener | Stage

January 23, 2026
Editors Picks
Beautiful Little Fool review – F Scott and Zelda Fitzgerald musical needs jazzing up | Theatre

Beautiful Little Fool review – F Scott and Zelda Fitzgerald musical needs jazzing up | Theatre

January 28, 2026
Poet Beman publishes first book at 82 after life-altering accident reshaped his path

Poet Beman publishes first book at 82 after life-altering accident reshaped his path

January 28, 2026
The Olive Boy review – a teenager’s love letter to mothers everywhere | Theatre

The Olive Boy review – a teenager’s love letter to mothers everywhere | Theatre

January 27, 2026
Asus Zenbook Duo (2026) review: the dual screen laptop I’d pick for more than just productivity

Asus Zenbook Duo (2026) review: the dual screen laptop I’d pick for more than just productivity

January 26, 2026
Latest News
A Grain of Sand review – a child’s eye view of the horror in Gaza | Theatre

A Grain of Sand review – a child’s eye view of the horror in Gaza | Theatre

By News Room
Riviera Mayfair transports you to the south of France

Riviera Mayfair transports you to the south of France

By News Room
My Life With Kenneth Williams review – raconteur resurrected by an extraordinary mimic | Theatre

My Life With Kenneth Williams review – raconteur resurrected by an extraordinary mimic | Theatre

By News Room
London Reviews
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest Vimeo YouTube
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of use
  • Advertise
  • Contact
  • Disclosure
© 2026 London Reviews. All Rights Reserved.

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.