Looking for Soho’s best pre-theatre menus or a top pantomime for Christmas? Follow actor Sam Harrison's guide to the culture-packed British capital…
Less“This is one of London’s newest, most vibrant theatres, right at the foot of the redeveloped Battersea Power Station. The artistic director here, Paul Taylor Mills, has worked with Andrew Lloyd Webber and champions new work. I knew I needed to collaborate with him on my show Love is Only Love. The story, which I wrote, is about a young boy’s search for love, using Hollywood musicals as his guide. It’s autobiographical and celebrates love, acceptance and the joy of theatre itself.”
“This hotel is less than a 10-minute walk from London’s best theatres, including the National Theatre, the Old Vic and the Young Vic. It’s also close to the South Bank, home to one of London’s top Christmas markets with glühwein and hot donuts. But despite the central location, the road it’s on is really peaceful, and also has a great ice-cream shop, Candiero Gelato. I love that the hotel decor is colourful and anarchic – you almost feel like you’re in a circus tent – and the bar is cosy."
“Glamorous but affordable, this brasserie in the heart of theatreland is a cross between a Wes Anderson film and an Agatha Christie novel. There’s a fin de siècle Viennese vibe with gold, red velvet, marble pillars, chandeliers – even a pianist tinkling in the background. And, I think, the best service in London. Order the prix-fixe because it’s cheap and delicious, ticking off three courses, including steak. I go before catching a West End show, or Zédel’s own cabaret in the Crazy Coqs bar.”
“Hackney Empire has one of the greatest pantomimes in the country. It’s a local show – as all good ones should be – with the jokes made for residents and the team reflecting the diversity of Hackney itself. But the production values are West End standard. The Empire has one of the best pantomime dames too, Clive Rowe, who is charismatic, utterly loveable and deliciously saucy. Tickets go on sale as early as a year in advance.”
“If you want to catch West End actors from Phantom of the Opera or Les Misérables on their break between performances, head to this old-fashioned greasy spoon on Wardour Street. On a two-show day, we turn up to Bruno’s before warm-up for an enormous English breakfast with white toast dripping in butter, streaky bacon and tea you can stand a spoon in. In between the matinee and evening performance, we come back for family-style Italian plates of spaghetti bolognese and sfogliatelle pastries."
“One of my favourite places, the Seven Dials Playhouse – formerly known as the Actors Centre – offers an array of one-off workshops on all the skills that go into being an actor, whether you’re an amateur or professional. Sign up for something broad, like Shakespearean monologues, or go really focused, working on American accents. If you want to pick up pantomime skills, I’d suggest clowning workshops, physical comedy or commedia dell’arte – a type of Italian medieval street theatre."
“The V&A has something called the Theatre & Performance Collection, covering almost everything related to the history of theatre, from theatrical designs to books, plus props used in famous productions. My favourites are the costumes worn by famous actors – standing in front of them is almost like seeing a ghost. It’s moving and thrilling at the same time. For example, I think that seeing the jacket that Noël Coward wore on stage tells you so much about him and his character.”
“Nestled at the base of the brutalist-masterpiece National Theatre, this bar has an enormous range of independent and unusual craft beers, gins, ales and mead. It’s not your typical theatre bar – typically small, cramped and tucked behind the dress circle, where you have to fight for a drink at the interval. Rather, it was designed to be a social space, facing out to the river and the community. It’s a place where theatre-industry people always meet, drink and relax.”
“Right at the top of Shaftesbury Avenue, one of the great parades of theatres in the West End, is this sleek, sexy and modern hotel. It’s filled with young, hip media types. I really enjoy the food – especially the mullet with fennel and aioli – but there are also some fantastic Japanese restaurants nearby like Kanada-Ya and Fushan. You’re not far from Christmas shopping at Tottenham Court Road either – and, of course, the most enormous pantomime in the country, at the London Palladium."