Monday, 22 June 2026

THEATRE REVIEW: ‘Sherlock Holmes' (Roman Theatre of Verulamium, St. Albans)

THEATRE REVIEW: ‘Sherlock Holmes’

Written & Directed by Mark O’Sullivan.

(Roman Theatre of Verulamium, St. Albans) 

 

 

 

To complete a trilogy of al-fresco Sherlock Holmes plays  (Sherlock Holmes’ at the Regents Park Open Air Theatre & ‘Sherlock Holmes vs. Arsene Lupin’ at Brighton Open Air Theatre), I made my way to the Roman Theatre of Verulamium, St. Albans where I had previously seen ‘Sherlock Holmes: A Study in Lipstick, Ketchup and Blood' (a version of ‘A Study in Scarlet’) three years before.

This time, rather than being a visiting production, the production was the first play in the OVO Theatre Company’s 2026 Open Air Festival, and had been compiled by its director, Mark O’Sullivan, combining the narratives of ‘A Scandal in Bohemia’, ‘The Red-Headed League’, ‘The Devil’s Foot’, ‘The Man With The Twisted Lip’ and ‘The Final Problem’, into a play featuring four actors playing all the parts. Lachlan McCall and Anna Macleod Franklin played Holmes and Watson (as well as a couple of minor parts each), with Jessica Vickers and Max Gallagher playing all the others – including Irene Adler, Mrs. Hudson, the King of Bohemia, John Clay, Mortimer Treggenis and (a personal highlight) Dr. Leon Sterndale. As with ‘SHvAL’ there was a lot of gender-blind casting with Vickers playing many men as well as ‘the Woman’ and Gallagher giving us his Mrs. Hudson.

The play was very funny, particularly in Act One when Watson and Mrs. Hudson are attempting to not reveal to the King that Holmes is incapacitated following substance misuse by recounting previous adventures. The small set which was on several levels was also expertly used, with costume changes seemingly happening instantaneously. It all led up to an ending, which although not unique (a famous pastiche, later filmed, has the same twist), had an emotional bite despite all the silliness that had gone before. Very, very good (and unlike the other two, the weather stayed warm).


 

Dramatic Score: 7/10    (Excellent - despite this)

 

Rating:  (5/5)     

 

Link to Production Website: Sherlock Holmes - OVO Roman Theatre Open Air Festival 2026

Thursday, 4 June 2026

THEATRE REVIEW: ‘Holmes & Watson – The Curious Case of the Masked Magician' (Wilton’s Music Hall)

THEATRE REVIEW: ‘Holmes & Watson – The Curious Case of the Masked Magician’

Co-created by Peter Clifford, David Hoare & John Nicholson, Directed by John Nicholson.

Wilton’s Music Hall (26/05/2026) 

 

An evening combining a number of my great loves – Sherlock Holmes, magic shows and Sherlockian filming locations. This was billed as a Family Magic Show, but the audience in Wilton’s Music Hall (used for the Stag Party scenes in ‘Sherlock Holmes: A Game of Shadows’ 2011) for the 7pm performance that I attended seemed to be mainly adults. There had however, been a 2pm performance, (as it was Half Term), which may have contained more children in the audience.

This show had been co-devised by the two magicians performing, Peter Clifford and David Hoare (AKA The Great Baldini), along with the director, John Nicholson, whose co-written comedy version of ‘The Hound of the Baskervilles’ seems to have become the go-to theatre version of the last ten years. In keeping with Nicholson’s earlier effort, all parts were played by only a few performers (in this case two), with Clifford’s Holmes or Hoare’s Watson interviewing suspects in turn played by the other, as they attempted to investigate the disappearance of ‘The Masked Magician’, Edwardian theatre’s most famous conjurer. The plot moved at a rapid pace with the magic tricks seamlessly blended into the chaos. The script was hilarious and I was laughing throughout, particularly at the comedy by-play between the two of them, particularly when as Holmes and Watson together.

At the curtain call it turned out that the director was sitting a few rows back from me, but he managed to escape before I could grab him for a photo, but even this did not impact my continued sense of elation at the end of the show. Very highly recommended if the tour (which continues into 2027) is coming near you.  (Click here for tour dates)

 

Dramatic Score: 8½/10

Rating:  (5/5)     

Tuesday, 2 June 2026

Sherlockian Sojourns #86: 'The Brave Berkshires'

It was a Bank Holiday, and time for another Sojourn. Making my way to Clapham Junction Station, from here it was an hour’s journey to my first port of call, Basingstoke in Hampshire. From the station it was a twenty-five minute walk to Milestones Museum, a heritage centre that recreates Victorian and 1930s streets and shops. I had visited almost a year before when they had had hosted a Half Term family mystery trail around the Victorian streets - 'Sherlock Holmes: The Adventure of the Emperor's Gold'. A year later, and again for Half Term, they were hosting a similar trail - 'Sherlock Holmes and the Missing Thornycroft Blueprint'. Even better, each entrance ticket lasts for a year, so I was able to re-use the previous year’s one. 

 

The previous year I had to all but beg for a trail booklet (being told that they were meant for children), but this year everyone young and old was being directed to meet a female ‘Mycroft’ downstairs to take part in the trail. Having been given my booklet and a pencil to complete, I walked to the first location, from which a blueprint had been stolen. There were questions at each location to identify more about how the crime was undertaken, which suspects could be discounted by items left at each location, eg. a red thread (the suspects remained the same as the previous year, but the perpetrator of this new crime was different), and a clue as to which location to go to next. There were also puzzles at each location (an addition this year) which allowed the name of the ship on which the perpetrator was fleeing justice to be identified, and additional information boards relating clues to canonical stories. It took me around forty minutes to complete my booklet, with the final puzzle which involved a lamp flashing in Morse Code being more complex than it needed to be, due to it being unclear when the letter started and ended  (luckily having five of the six letters indicated the most likely remaining letter, which proved to be correct). 

      
 

Having identified the perpetrator and ship, I had to go to a ‘Telegraph Office’ where I sent the ship’s call-sign by Morse-tapper, receiving a telegram from Holmes and a sticker once my correct answers had been confirmed.

 

Making my way back to Basingstoke Station, I had just enough time to grab some lunch from a nearby supermarket before catching a train whose air-conditioning had broken down for a forty-minute trip to Salisbury. From here it was a fifteen minute walk to Choristers Square, just next to the Cathedral, and The Rifles Berkshire and Wiltshire Museum, a public museum for the exhibition to the public, of documents, artefacts and other items connected with The Duke of Edinburgh’s Royal Regiment (Berkshire and Wiltshire) and its successor regiment, The Royal Gloucestershire, Berkshire and Wiltshire Light Infantry. 

   

The museum includes a section on the Battle of Maiwand, one of the principal battles of the Second Anglo-Afghan War. The battle ended in defeat for the British Army and victory for the Afghan followers of Ayub Khan. It was in this battle that Doctor John Watson received his war wound (whether that be in his arm or leg), and was thrown across a packhorse by Murray, his orderly, who succeeded in bringing him safely to the British lines, as outlined in ‘A Study in Scarlet’ [STUD].

“I was removed from my brigade and attached to the Berkshires, with whom I served at the fatal battle of Maiwand” – Dr John H. Watson [STUD]

However, Watson could not have joined the Fifth Fusiliers at Kandahar, as outlined by him in the opening of STUD, because the regiment was never stationed there. They were part of the Peshawar Valley Field Force employed in the Khyber Pass, the Bazar Valley, Landi Kotal and Jalalabad – all in the northern territories. It is more feasible for him to have joined up with the 66th (Berkshire) Regiment whilst at Bombay, although this would have meant that he did not make it into Afghanistan until over a year later, as they marched into the southern city of Kandahar early in 1880. There was also no ‘Murray’ attached to the 66th, whereas the Fifth Fusiliers did have a Private J. Murray. Hence my attending this museum to mirror my earlier sojourn to the Fusiliers Museum of Northumberland  (see here for full write-up).

The entrance hall included a large copy of “Last Stand of the ‘Eleven’ at the Battle of Maiwand” on two banners, along with a quote from William McGonagall’s poem, ‘The Last Berkshire Eleven’.


 Giving a donation for entry, I made my way into the museum, and the ‘Battle of Maiwand’ display case which included uniforms, a pocket watch, medals, the regimental mascot Bobbie (also wounded at Maiwand) and even Jezail Afghan matchlock muskets (a bullet from one of these led to Watson being invalided out).

  

There was also mention of the medical officer for the 66th Regiment, Surgeon-Major Alexander Francis Preston, who was present at Maiwand, who shortly after the action commenced, suffered his own war wound, a bullet passed through his back, fortunately missing the spine. He was then lying on a duli (a covered stretcher) when the native duli-bearers took it up and commenced running off with him as fast as they could go, shouting as they ran along that the Ghazis were on them. The similarities between Preston and Watson are plain to see – both were surgeons with the Berkshires; both were severely wounded, albeit in different parts of the body; and both had to be rescued from the murderous enemy on the battlefield by orderlies, either native or British.

I then went round the rest of the museum, which had a focus on the two World Wars, and ended with displays relating to more recent military action featuring the Berkshires, and spent a wonderful ten minutes in the sunny garden behind. There was also a dress-up section including a Deerstalker, but unfortunately they were all in children's sizes. Purchasing a ‘Royal Berkshires’ lapel pin, I made my way back onto Choristers Close. 

  

Having wasted some time browsing the shops in Salisbury, I made my way back to the Station, where there proved to be problems with the trains. I managed to make it back to Basingstoke after a short wait, but then spent over an hour on the platform there waiting for a repeatedly delayed train back to Clapham Junction, which when it arrived took its time between Raynes Park and Clapham Junction. Eventually I alighted, catching a train home within around fifteen minutes.