Skip to main content
Donate to the 95 years appeal
An energising stroll down a '60s memory lane
MICHAEL STEWART is transported breathtakingly back to the vitality of the 1960s
The cast [Darren Bell]

Summer in the City
Upstairs at the Gatehouse

 


OVATION’S Christmas show is a jukebox musical in which the tunes burst out of the jukebox and threaten to throttle the story. But that’s no great pity as the plot is only a device to showcase the songs of the ’60s. And what wonderful songs they are, full of vitality and heartfelt emotion, throbbing with joy.

Audiences of a mellow age are time-warped back to those heady days to wallow in hazy memories of rock and pop and groovy mayhem while younger people will find out just what they have missed.

Set in a cafe in Carnaby Street Soho, (which I assume is modelled on the 2i’s coffee bar which  spawned rock’n’roll in this country), whose owner Hetty (Helen Goldwyn) a wise, Jewish mother hen type employs as coffee boy Sam (Connor Arnold), a square-jawed American who’s a dead ringer for Superman and delivers the coffee with oodles of entrepreneurial pizzazz and go-getterism.

The 95th Anniversary Appeal
Support the Morning Star
You have reached the free limit.
Subscribe to continue reading.
More from this author
4WAAF
Theatre review / 19 August 2025
19 August 2025

MICHAEL STEWART applauds a fun send-up of the substandard Agatha Christie whodunnit

(L to R) Patrick Walshe Mcbride as Hugo, Eva Pope as Val, Vi
Theatre Review / 19 September 2022
19 September 2022
MICHAEL STEWART is left perplexed by an odd rag-bag of a play
Similar stories
 SISTERS IN HARMONY The Company of The ministry Of Lesbian Affairs [Pic Mark Senior]
Theatre review / 9 July 2025
9 July 2025

MAYER WAKEFIELD relishes a witty and uplifting rallying cry for unity, which highlights the erasure of queer women

The cast in Regarding Shelley / Pic: Upstairs at the Gatehouse
Theatre / 23 May 2025
23 May 2025

MARY CONWAY is disappointed by a play that presents Shelley as polite and conventional man who lives a chocolate box, cottagey life

(L to R) Oliver Sidney, Madeleine Morgan, Folarin Akinmade,
Theatre review / 19 December 2024
19 December 2024
'Witty and highly entertaining without being didactic,' writes JAN WOOLF
A FORM OF PROTEST: The Cribs performing live in 2018
Book Review / 13 September 2024
13 September 2024
ALISTAIR FINDLAY recommends a prime example of a Marxist history of popular music that entertains and inspires