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Home Theatre Charlie Cook's Favourite Book Tickets

Charlie Cook's Favourite Book Tickets

Trafalgar Studios, London
Running time: 1hr (no interval)
Age Restrictions: This production is recommended for ages 3+
Tickets from £15.00

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Charlie Cook's Favourite Book Tickets

OFFER: Was £26.50 Now £20 Saving £6

SAVE UP TO 39% Valid all performances 5 December 2024 - 5 January 2025. Book by 8 December 2024.

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The ultimate page to stage adaptation!

“A musical adaptation of the best-selling book by Julia Donaldson and Axel Scheffler”

Following a critically-acclaimed UK tour, the musical adaptation of Julia Donaldson and Axel Scheffler’s beloved children’s book plays a limited West End engagement at the Trafalgar Theatre this festive season from 5 December – 5 January 2025.

Charlie loves reading. Especially books about pirates. But his sister hates it – it’s boring! Can Charlie convince her that reading is fun? Perhaps if she reads a book about a pirate, who is reading a book about Goldilocks, who is reading a book about a knight…

Come and delve into a range of books with Charlie Cook, brought to life with puppetry and enchanting songs and perhaps you will be able to help his sister discover the wonderful world inside a book…

Adapted by Barb Jungr and Samantha Lane
Directed by Samantha Lane
Music and Lyrics composed by Barb Jungr
Set & costumes designed by Ellie Mills
Puppets designed by Maia Kirkman-Richards
Lighting Design by Sherry Coenen
Stage managed by Olivia Preston

**Due to limited storage space, the venue will only accept collapsible strollers. These can be left from 45mins before the show with the venue team and will be stored in the Dress Circle level. Strollers must be collapsed before handing to a team member. Babes in arms are allowed for this production, subject to availability. Babes under 12 months sitting on an adult’s lap do not require a ticket. All other patrons require a ticket for entry.**

Venue information

Trafalgar Studios
Trafalgar Studios
14 Whitehall
London
SW1A 2DY

Trafalgar Studios is London’s most exciting new venue. Formerly The Whitehall Theatre until 2004, is a West End theatre in Whitehall, near Trafalgar Square, in the City of Westminster, London. It is a unique development with two intimate, flexible and dynamic performance spaces - Studio 1 and Studio 2. Trafalgar Studios prides itself as a starting place for new productions to find their home in London.

Studio 1, the larger of the two spaces with 380 seats, opened on June 3, 2004 with the Royal Shakespeare Company's production of Othello. Studio 2, with 100 seats, opened in October 2005 with the play Cyprus. Studio 2 features innovative work from both national and international companies.
 
Trafalgar Studios History

The original Whitehall Theatre, built on the site of the 17th century Ye Old Ship Tavern was designed by Edward A. Stone, with interiors in the Art Deco style by Marc-Henri and Laverdet. The theatre opened on September 29, 1930 with The Way to Treat a Woman by Walter Hackett, who was the theatre's licensee. In November 1933 Henry Daniell appeared there as Portman in Afterwards. Hackett presented several other plays of his own before leaving in 1934, and the theatre built its reputation for modern comedies throughout the rest of the decade. During World War II it housed revues, which had become commonplace entertainment throughout the West End. In 1942, The Whitehall Follies, featuring Phyllis Dixey, the first stripper to perform in the theatre district, opened with great fanfare and became an immediate success. Dixey leased the theatre and remained in it for the next five years. A series of farces, presented under the umbrella title The Whitehall Farces by producer Lord Brian Rix, were staged over the next twenty-two years, with many of them televised.

In 1969 a nude revue called Pyjama Tops took over the venue and remained for five years, after which the building was shuttered. After considerable refurbishment that retained most of its Art Deco features, it reopened on March 5, 1986 with a successful revival of J. B. Priestley's When We Are Married. Subsequent productions included When I Was a Girl I Used to Scream and Shout, The Importance of Being Earnest, The Foreigner, Run For Your Wife, Absurd Person Singular, Travels with My Aunt, tributes to Patsy Cline, Roy Orbison, and the Blues Brothers, and solo performances by Ennio Marchetto and Maria Friedman.

Between 1997 and 1999, the theatre was converted into a television and radio studio used primarily to broadcast Jack Docherty's popular talk show and BBC Radio 4's Live from London. It returned to theatrical use, with such productions as Three Sisters, Puppetry of the Penis, "Art", Rat Pack Confidential, and Sing-a-Long-a-ABBA, before its owner, the Ambassador Theatre Group, announced the building would be reconfigured and reopen with a new name.

Past productions at Trafalgar Studios include Sweeney Todd, Alan Bennett's The Old Country, an adaptation of Jane Eyre, and Bent.

The theatre was Grade II listed by English Heritage in December 1996, noting "The auditorium has a decorative cohesion and prettiness rare in theatres of its day, and has the best surviving original fabric of this type of theatre".

Please note, the Trafalgar Studios Seating Plan illsutrates the layout of the Trafalgar Studios 1 theatre. Trafalgar Studios 2 has a different seating plan layout.

Travel by train: Charing Cross. Nearest tube: Charing Cross Underground Station

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