“I don’t feel anything. And that, I suppose, is what makes me so dangerous.”
Madame de Montreuil

When Pierre Choderlos de Laclos published Les Liaisons Dangereuses in 1782, it was considered borderline pornographic. Marie Antoinette was said to have owned a copy with a plain white cover. Laclos claimed the novel was compiled from real letters “for the instruction of others”. Christopher Hampton’s stage adaptation, first performed by the Royal Shakespeare Company at The Other Place in Stratford‑upon‑Avon in 1985, remains one of the most successful translations of the material to the stage.
Unusually, I begin with the staging and ensemble work, because they are among the strongest reasons to see this production. The Lyttelton Theatre offers a large, open performance space. The floor is polished and reflective, while the walls are formed of large full length adjoining mirrors that open to reveal wheeled‑in room fragments for the various scenes. Above them runs a frieze of grisaille classical nude figures, setting the tone of elegance and decadence.

The performance opens with music and a tableau of men dressing in tails for a society ball. The mirrors part, women in evening gowns enter, and the couples dance across the full breadth of the stage. We are introduced to the Marquise de Merteuil (Lesley Manville), the young Cécile de Volanges (Hannah van der Westhuysen), her mother Madame de Volanges (Cat Simmons), and the notorious Vicomte de Valmont (Aidan Turner), whose reputation as a philanderer precedes him.
Valmont visits the Marquise hoping for an afternoon of debauchery, but she sets him a task: seduce Cécile and provide written proof, as revenge against her mother. This complicates Valmont’s plans, as he is on his way to visit his aunt (Gabrielle Drake), who is hosting Madame de Tourvel (Monica Barbaro), recently departed from a convent, a far more challenging conquest. After some manipulation from the Marquise, Valmont agrees to pursue both women, one after the other.

France at the time was divided starkly between the wealthy and everyone else; no doubt in 1789 there was a readjustment The aristocracy, with little to occupy them, filled their days with gossip, intrigue, and clandestine affairs. Lovers exchanged letters in secrecy, forgetting the permanence of the written word. For Valmont, seduction is a sport, and emotional consequences are irrelevant. To one of his conquests, who genuinely loves him, he can only reply, “It’s beyond my control.”
Aidan Turner is a strong choice for Valmont, charismatic, attractive, and entirely believable in the role. Lesley Manville, who has played several parts in this play over the years, is completely at ease as the Marquise. Director Marianne Elliott keeps close to Hampton’s text and the spirit of Laclos, though the production does run long at three hours.
This is a solid, well‑acted production – with a few weaker minor roles – and its message about the consequences of one’s actions is clearly delivered. For me, however, the standout feature is the staging: inventive, elegant, and consistently engaging.

Les Liaisons Dangereuses
Written by Christopher Hampton after Pierre Choderlos de Laclos
Directed by Marianne Elliott
Starring:
Aidan Turner
Cat Simmons
Curtis Angus
Lesley Manville
Gabrielle Drake
Hannah van der Westhuysen
Ishmail Aaron
Katie Lusby
Liz Ewing
Nandi Bhebhe
Sharif Afifi
Darragh Hand
Lucia Chocarro
Ali Goldsmith
Bryony Pennington
Dianté Lodge
Georges Hann
Monica Barbaro
Charlotte Avery
Amy Macken
Aisha Naamani
Director: Marianne Elliott
Set Designer: Rosanna Vize
Costume Designer: Natalie Roar
Choreographer: Tom Jackson Greaves
Lighting Designer: James Farncombe
Fight Director: Sam Lyon-Bevan
Composer: Jasmin Kent Rodgman
Sound Director: Ian Dickinson for Autograph
Running Time: Three hours including the
interval
Booking to 6th June 2026
Theatre:
Lyttelton Theatre
Reviewed by Malcolm Beckett
at the Lyttelton Theatre
at the matinée on 4th April 2026
