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Unicorn Theatre

London's finest kids' theatre
  • Theatre | Off-West End
  • Tower Bridge
  • Recommended
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Time Out says

This light, bright children's theatre has two performance spaces and an increasingly formidable reputation. Over her eight years at Unicorn Theatre, its previous artistic director Purni Morell reenergised the venue with a boldness rarely associated with this sort of work. She's made astute use of the Unicorn's hefty ACE grant, bringing many 'grown-up' playwrights and directors on board to offer fare that's routinely praised by forward-thinking theatre buffs.

The Unicorn's new artistic director Justin Audibert looks set to keep the theatre's programming in similarly forward-looking shape: he's been behind a run of successful kids' versions of classic stories, as well as directing work for adult audiences at the RSC.

Today, Unicorn Theatre sits in a modernist concrete-and-glass building in London Bridge that has two separate performance spaces, and is full of quirky flourishes, including scratchy wall illustrations, a piano, and a kid-tempting range of snacks sold at its Unicornershop. But it's only been in situ there since 2005. Unicorn Theatre's history stretches right back to 1947, when it was known as Mobile Theatre, a theatre company that toured post-war Britain bringing performances to culture-strapped young people.

There's still a seriousness to its regular programming, with shows tackling gory Greek myths, exploring opera, or bringing in the most exciting experimental theatremakers around. But the venue also comes into its own with its joyful string of hit Christmas shows, as well as long-running favourites like 'Baby Show', which gets the next generation of theatregoers started very, very early.  

Find more shows for kids of all ages with our guide to children's theatre in London

Details

Address
147
Tooley St
London
SE1 2HZ
Transport:
Tube: London Bridge
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What’s on

How Does Santa Go Down the Chimney?

4 out of 5 stars
High priests of the theatrically random Told By An Idiot are a perfect match for Mac Barnett and Jon Klassen’s droll festive picturebook How Does Santa Go Down the Chimney? Adapted and directed by company leader Paul Hunter, it’s a glorious 50-minute non sequitur that should appeal to anyone with a sense of nonsense. The title question is posed many times throughout the show, which fails to ever offer a conclusive answer but does get delightfully bogged down in a series of absurd vignettes.  A cast of five chop and change the roles of Santa, his reindeer and miscellaneous others, multitasking their way furiously through sequences that interrogate such important questions as whether Santa does his laundry as he travels (in order to get the chimney soot off) and what do dogs think of Santa. A question asked repeatedly is how does Santa get into flats, a query that it absolutely refuses to answer properly but does drop in a game show sequence in which the audience is invited to offer its own suggestions and the cast try and act them out. It’s performed on a lovely Sonya Smullen set that somewhat apes the po-faced surrealism of Klassen’s art, but also has two big furry slides on it. They’re suggestive of the curve of a rooftop but mostly they just look incredibly fun.  A younger primary-school audience absolutely lapped it up, though I wonder if the extreme whimsy and lack of any real plot might baffle older kids. But if you’ve got any sense of the absurd, you’ll have a good...
  • Children's

Scrunch

The Unicorn Theatre’s baby-friendly long-runner is back for another year. Scrunch is a show about baby's first Christmas, where there's a ring at the door and some excitingly scrunchy paper to crumple. A sensory offering strictly aimed at babies aged 6-18 months.
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