1. Underbelly Boulevard
    craig sugden
  2. Boulevard Theatre, 2019
  3. Underbelly Boulevard
    craig sugden
  4. Underbelly Boulevard
    craig sugden
  5. Underbelly Boulevard
    craig sugden
  6. Underbelly Boulevard
    craig sugden
  7. Underbelly Boulevard
    Underbelly Boulevard

Underbelly Boulevard

Boutique Soho theatre turned cabaret joint
  • Theatre | Private theatres
  • Soho
  • Recommended
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Time Out says

The Underbelly Boulevard replaces the sadly shortly-lived Boulevard Theatre, a boutique theatre venue with an impressive initial line-up that was totally screwed over by the pandemic and never reopened. 

We’re not quite clear to what extent the Underbelly Boulevard is likely to be physically different inside – from the supplied press images, it looks like it will remain pretty much identical – but the vibe seems very much to be ‘cabaret’ rather than ‘theatre’.

Details

Address
6 Walker’s Court
London
W1F 0BT
Transport:
Tube: Piccadilly Circus
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What’s on

Sophie’s Surprise Party

In this circus show-slash-house party with a banging ’90s soundtrack, a different random audience member is cast as ‘Sophie’ every night, the unexpected guest of honour at a party that spirals massively out of control.
  • Circuses

Mario the Maker Magician

4 out of 5 stars
This review is from 2024. The show is probably somewhat different, although the same basic idea. We tend to think of New Yorkers as pathologically grouchy souls. But primary schooler-orientated NYC wizard Mario the Maker Magician is defined by his infectious elan. Whether he’s goofing around with the petty logic of a seven-year old or accessibly expounding on his love for Andy Warhol and Jean-Michel Basquiat, it’s the giddy atmosphere that the Sesame Street and David Blaine-endorsed Mario fosters in his show that makes it work as much as the actual magic. And the magic is great: a lot of sleight of hand stuff that impresses and winds up the smaller members of the audience in equal measure, plus a fair amount of out-and-out trolling of the adults. And this is the key: while never actually losing control, Mario encourages an air of borderline anarchy that’s extremely good fun (one audience member is required to look after a box and run off if Mario gets anywhere near her… which he does, a lot). His nominal USP is his homemade robots and devices (the ‘maker’ bit), and it has to be said that while these are very much part of the show – there is a very cute extended section with one little DIY droid – his act doesn’t lean on them quite as much as one might expect from the spiel. But that’s hardly an issue unless you’re an obsessive robophile: Mario himself is the main attraction. To be honest, aside from shonky kids’ party entertainers I’m not sure I can remember another...
  • Children's
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