“Why is everyone in Paris so Parisian?”
Christian
This new version of Cyrano de Bergerac is written by the director Simon Evans and a grime poet Deloris Stevenson. Although Edmond Rostand wrote the original in the 1890s there was a real person called Cyrano de Bergerac in the 17th century. Most elements of the original have been adhered to, the sword fighting, the verse and the music. The storyline is a romantic one: Cyrano (Adrian Lester) has been brought up with the beautiful Roxane (Susannah Fielding) and they have always has a friendship but not a romance, although Cyrano is deeply in love with Roxanne.
The impediment to Roxanne’s feelings is maybe politically incorrect in so far as it involves nose shaming and the extra large nose sported by Cyrano. Ironically large noses have never been a problem for the French who are also happy to have a reputation for larger than average sexual physique. I have never been attracted to the extra small noses inherited by the Scandinavian Vikings. Remember the Chinese call the British the “large noses”. Roxanne has two requirements for a lover, that he be fair of face and a master wordsmith. She has been married before and is now a widow but she spies Christian (Levi Brown) a handsome young man (tick) but whose idea of a good vocabulary is to know as many collective nouns as possible (no tick).
Christian is called up into the army under Cyrano’s command and Roxanne asks Cyrano to protect him. Not only does Cyrano protect Christian but he also writes romantic letters for Christian to give to Roxanne. Roxanne is also pursued to be his mistress by the Comte de Guiche (Scott Handy, whom I will always remember playing a Scottish Laird who had a predilection for Nazism and who at one point in David Greig’s play Victoria appeared as a naked Aryan youth wearing only a swastika tattoo on his upper arm.)
Grace Smart’s set designs are filled with love letters and her costume for Roxanne has a green pointed bra reminiscent of those Jean-Paul Gautier scent bottles. Adrian Lester delivers the rhymes perfectly in a magnificent performance of one quick of tongue with a monumental vocabulary. He is as fine a swordsman as he is a wordsmith. When Roxanne wants to talk to her lover directly, Cyrano imitates Christian’s Brummie accent to woo her. Touchingly, towards his death we see Cyrano’s language breaking up into a babble of nonsensical words as he loses his life force.
Whilst I was impressed with the superlative word play, this production of Cyrano failed to engage my heart and I wasn’t moved by Cyrano’s failed romance and Roxanne’s inability to value him as a lover. I remember with affection the opposite reaction to Jamie Lloyd’s modernist Cyrano with a beat boxer which I saw at the Pinter in 2022 with Jamie McAvoy in the lead. Maybe it is the sheer busyness of this production which has too many distractions.
Cyrano de Bergerac
Written by Edmond Rostand
Adapted by Simon Evans and Debris Stevenson
Directed by Simon Evans
Starring:
Adrian Lester
Chris Nayak
Christian Patterson
Daniel Norford
David Mildon
Greer Dale-Foulkes
Josh Sneesby
Oliver Grant
Philip Cumbus
Rachel Dawson
Robert Jackso
Scott Handy
Susannah Fielding
Joe Butcher
Levi Brown
Fergus Murphy
Matt Mordak
Sunny Chung
Lizzie May Bell
Joseph Christain
Director: Simon Evans
Designer: Grace Smart
Composer: Alex Baranowski
Movement: Sarita Piotrowski
Lighting Designer: Joshie Harriette
Fight /Intimacy: Bethan Clark
Musical Director: Josh Sneesby
Video/projection designer: Barbara Houseman
Sound Director: Donato Wharton
Running Time: Two hours 50 minutes including an interval
Booking to 6th September 2026
Theatre:
The Noël Coward Theatre
85-88 St Martin’s Lane
London WC2N 4AP
Telephone: 0844 482 5151
Website: noelcowardtheatre.co.uk
Tube: Leicester Square
Reviewed by Lizzie Loveridge at the Noël Coward
on 23rd June 2026