This Bill Bailey Vaudevillean London Review by London Reviews is the most thorough independent guide available to Bill Bailey’s brand-new live show, opening at Theatre Royal Haymarket for a Christmas residency from 16 December 2026 to 6 February 2027 — with a single one-night arena performance at The O2 on 22 November 2026 immediately preceding it.
Last updated: 30 April 2026 — Independently researched and written by the London Reviews editorial team.
Looking for an honest Bill Bailey Vaudevillean London Review? This is the most thorough independent assessment of the autumn-winter 2026 UK arena tour and the Theatre Royal Haymarket Christmas residency. Below we cover both venues, the new vaudeville-themed show, ticket pricing, accessibility, and what audiences and critics said when Vaudevillean previewed in New Zealand in autumn 2025.

- At a Glance
- Introduction
- The Venue: Theatre Royal Haymarket
- The Other Venue: The O2
- The Show: What to Expect
- About Bill Bailey
- Tickets & Pricing
- What Audiences Actually Say
- What Audiences Love Most
- Areas for Consideration
- Who Is Vaudevillean Best For?
- How It Compares
- Insider Tips
- FAQs
- London Reviews Verdict on Bill Bailey Vaudevillean London Review
- Related London Reviews
- Summary Rating
- Disclaimer
At a Glance
- Show: Bill Bailey: Vaudevillean
- Genre: Stand-up comedy with live musical performance — Bill Bailey’s trademark hybrid
- London venues: The O2 (one night, 22 November 2026); Theatre Royal Haymarket (residency, 16 December 2026 – 6 February 2027)
- Theatre Royal Haymarket address: 18 Suffolk Street, Haymarket, London SW1Y 4HT
- The O2 address: Peninsula Square, London SE10 0DX
- Performance dates: 22 November 2026 (The O2) · 16 December 2026 – 6 February 2027 (Haymarket Christmas residency)
- Running time: approximately 2 hours (including a 20-minute interval)
- Age recommendation: 14+ (mild language, occasional adult humour; family-friendly overall)
- Performer: Bill Bailey (BAFTA winner, Strictly Come Dancing 2020 champion)
- UK arena tour: Opens Plymouth 6 Nov, then Swansea, Southampton, Birmingham, Nottingham, Coventry, Liverpool, Cardiff, Derby, Bournemouth, London (O2), Glasgow, Edinburgh, Blackpool
- Premiered: New Zealand autumn 2025
- Ticket prices: approximately £40 – £125 (Haymarket); £45 – £100 (The O2)
- Where to book: billbailey.co.uk/live, Theatre Royal Haymarket box office, Ticketmaster, The O2 box office
- Nearest Tube (Haymarket): Piccadilly Circus (Bakerloo, Piccadilly) — three minutes
- Nearest Tube (The O2): North Greenwich (Jubilee) — two minutes
- Capacity (Haymarket): 888 seats across stalls, royal circle, upper circle, balcony
- Capacity (The O2): Up to 20,000 (configured for arena comedy)
Introduction
Bill Bailey is, on a long view, the most musically credentialled stand-up comedian working in Britain. Vaudevillean — his new live show, premiered in New Zealand in autumn 2025 and now landing in London for a Christmas-into-February residency at Theatre Royal Haymarket plus a single big-night-out at The O2 on 22 November — is a deliberate love letter to vaudeville: the music-hall, multi-talent, songs-and-jokes-and-occasional-instrument-you-didn’t-know-he-could-play tradition that produced figures like Max Miller, Tommy Cooper and (in his American mode) Bob Hope.
Bailey’s previous tours — Larks in Transit, En Route to Normal, Thoughtifier, Limboland, Tinselworm, Part Troll — have established the pattern: about 60% talky stand-up, 30% live musical bits, 10% genuinely virtuosic instrumental performance. Vaudevillean leans further into the music-hall framing, by all accounts of the New Zealand previews, with more songs, more instruments, and a structurally tighter set than Larks in Transit.
This is the Theatre Royal Haymarket Christmas residency that London comedy fans have been waiting for since Tinselworm in 2008. It is also, with the single Saturday-night O2 arena date on 22 November, an unusually generous routing for a London audience — you can choose between intimate (Haymarket, 888 seats) and arena-scale (The O2, 20,000).
The Venue: Theatre Royal Haymarket
Theatre Royal Haymarket is one of London’s most beautiful surviving Georgian theatres, designed by John Nash in 1820 and Grade I-listed. It sits on Suffolk Street, just off Haymarket itself, three minutes’ walk from Piccadilly Circus. The 888-seat house is laid out across four levels — Stalls (380), Royal Circle (231), Upper Circle (165), Balcony (112) — with the Royal Circle widely considered the city’s best-value seat for a big-name single-performer show.
Charing Cross (Bakerloo, Northern), Leicester Square (Northern, Piccadilly) and Piccadilly Circus (Bakerloo, Piccadilly) all sit within four minutes. Buses 6, 9, 12, 13, 15, 23, 88, 139, 159 and 453 stop on Trafalgar Square or Lower Regent Street. Driving is unrewarding — Q-Park Trafalgar is the closest sensible option.
For Bill Bailey’s residency, the recommended seats are: Royal Circle Rows A to C centre — clear sightline to the stage, optimal acoustic for the musical bits, no overhang. Stalls Rows F to L centre are the splurge (close enough to see the strings on the lutes, far enough to take in the projection screen). Avoid the very back of the Upper Circle and Balcony for any show with intricate musical performance — sightlines are good but you lose the detail.
Accessibility is what you’d expect from a 200-year-old listed building — partial. Step-free access is available to the Stalls via a side entrance; the Royal Circle and above involve stairs. There are dedicated wheelchair spaces in the Stalls. Email the box office at [email protected] or call 020 7930 8800 to discuss specific requirements.
The Other Venue: The O2
If you want the arena experience, Bill Bailey’s single London arena date is at The O2 on Saturday 22 November 2026 at 19:30. The O2 (formerly the Millennium Dome) sits on the Greenwich Peninsula. North Greenwich Tube (Jubilee line) is two minutes’ walk; Greenwich on the DLR is fifteen; Thames Clipper riverboat services run from London Bridge, Embankment and Tower in twenty to thirty minutes.
For comedy, The O2 is configured at roughly 20,000-capacity with a thrust stage and large video screens at either side. Audience reviews from past comedy headliners (John Bishop, Michael McIntyre, Peter Kay) consistently confirm the sound system is properly maintained and the sightlines from the Floor seats and Block 101–104 lower-tier centre are particularly strong. Avoid the very rear seats in 414+ unless you’re specifically there for the atmosphere.
The Show: What to Expect (Spoiler-Free)
Vaudevillean is, by Bill Bailey’s own description, a celebration of “the prime-time entertainment of its day” — the late-19th and early-20th-century vaudeville circuit, where multi-talented performers stitched together comedy songs, character sketches, music-hall ballads and absurd novelty acts. Bailey’s adaptation of that tradition is uniquely his own: think comedy songs about the strange and unusual, twisted classical-music arrangements, instrument switches mid-laugh, and stories that drift between the historical and the personal.
From the New Zealand previews, the show is meaningfully tighter than Larks in Transit and has a stronger musical centre. Audiences flag particular bits about the reinvention of music-hall standards, an extended sequence on lesser-known vaudeville acts, and a closing number that landed near-universal standing ovations in Auckland and Wellington. The age recommendation is 14+ but the content is more family-suitable than most British stand-up.
Tonally, expect warmth, eccentricity and the occasional unexpected piece of musicianship — Bailey can play roughly a dozen instruments, with the lute, theremin and various keyboards making regular Vaudevillean appearances. Audience attention is split between laughing and watching to see what he picks up next.
About Bill Bailey
Bill Bailey (born Mark Bailey, 1965) is one of the most decorated British comedians of his generation. Career highlights: regular appearances on Never Mind the Buzzcocks, QI and Have I Got News For You; lead roles in Black Books and Spaced; six previous solo tours; multiple BAFTA TV nominations; and the 2020 Strictly Come Dancing championship (with Oti Mabuse), a victory that meaningfully expanded his audience demographic and turned what had been a comedy-club following into a properly mainstream one.
Vaudevillean is his seventh major touring show. Audience demographic, on the evidence of his recent tours, is one of the broadest in British comedy — covering everyone from millennials who grew up watching Black Books to families with teenagers to the considerable Strictly-driven over-50s contingent who’ve discovered him in the last five years. Few British comedians cross those audiences as cleanly.
Tickets & Pricing
Theatre Royal Haymarket residency tickets are priced approximately £40 to £125. Royal Circle Rows A to C centre at £85–£125 is the splurge; Stalls Rows F to L centre at £75–£105 is the connoisseur pick; Upper Circle and Balcony at £40–£60 are the bargain. Group bookings of 10+ unlock midweek discounts; matinées on selected dates are typically £5–£10 less than evenings.
The O2 single-night arena date on 22 November 2026 is priced approximately £45 to £100. Floor block, particularly Floor C and Floor D centre, is the splurge at £80–£100; lower tier 101–104 centre at £65–£85 is the value pick; tier 401+ at £45–£55 is the bargain.
Where to Book
Always start with billbailey.co.uk/live for the official routing. For Haymarket, book directly at the Theatre Royal Haymarket box office or Ticketmaster. For The O2, Ticketmaster or AXS. Avoid third-party resale.
What Audiences Actually Say: Review Analysis
New Zealand Preview Reviews
The autumn 2025 New Zealand preview run (Auckland, Wellington, Christchurch, Dunedin) accumulated very positive audience reviews. NZ audience aggregate sat at four-and-a-half stars on local listings sites; the standout pieces flagged were “the lute number”, “the encore song”, “the bit about the Yorkshire vaudevillean”. Negative reviews were rare and centred on “I prefer his older shows”.
UK Critic Anticipation
UK critic notices for the upcoming London run are not yet published — Vaudevillean opens at Plymouth on 6 November 2026, with London press night likely at Haymarket in mid-December. We’ll update this Bill Bailey Vaudevillean London Review with critic verdicts once they land. From the New Zealand preview, expect comparisons with Larks in Transit a











