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Oh, Mary! Brings Tony Winning Camp Comedy To The West End With A Star Turn At Trafalgar Theatre

The West End has gained an unexpected new hit with the arrival of Oh, Mary!, Cole Escola’s anarchic comedy that has already smashed box office records on Broadway and collected two Tony Awards. Now playing at the Trafalgar Theatre until April 25, the production is being hailed as one of the funniest shows London has seen this year.

Directed by Sam Pinkleton, Oh, Mary! offers a deliberately distorted portrait of Mary Todd Lincoln, reimagined as a hard drinking, wildly frustrated cabaret performer trapped inside the constraints of 19th century respectability. The action unfolds in the tense days leading up to Abraham Lincoln’s assassination in 1865, although historical accuracy is gleefully sacrificed in favour of outrageous satire and theatrical excess.

At the centre of the production is Mason Alexander Park, delivering what many are calling the funniest performance currently on the West End stage. Park’s Mary is volatile, absurd and flamboyant, yet never reduced to parody. Beneath the camp exaggeration lies a recognisable emotional truth about repression, ambition and the need for self expression.

The production leans fully into its theatrical artifice. Period inspired sets are deployed with tongue firmly in cheek, while booming piano interludes repeatedly mock the grand seriousness of 19th century theatre. The tone is set from Mary’s explosive entrance, storming on stage in hoop skirt and ringlets, demanding alcohol her husband has attempted to hide.

Giles Terera plays Abraham Lincoln as a furtive, exasperated president who barely tolerates his wife’s antics. Kate O’Donnell appears as Mary’s long suffering chaperone, absorbing the brunt of the First Lady’s sudden mood swings, while Dino Fetscher brings a note of romantic sincerity as Mary’s charismatic acting tutor, briefly puncturing the chaos with moments of genuine tenderness.

While the comedy revels in camp frivolity, arch gags and exaggerated behaviour, it also finds unexpected emotional resonance. Mary’s lament that being kept off the stage makes the world miserable lands as both ridiculous and oddly moving, transforming the farce into a broader reflection on the cost of denying people their identity and voice.

Running a brisk 80 minutes, Oh, Mary! delivers a transgressive burst of energy that feels both silly and subversive. As the West End year draws to a close, this irreverent Broadway import arrives as a sharply funny and surprisingly touching finale.

Oh, Mary! is now playing at the Trafalgar Theatre, London, until April 25.

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