The House with Chicken Legs review
In Slavic folklore tradition, Baba Yaga is an ambiguous character – sometimes a vicious old hag who eats children, in other stories a kindly grandmother figure who lends a helping hand to those in need – but she always lives in a magical house that stands on chicken legs.
Sophie Anderson’s young adult novel, the basis of the play, is in the second camp. Inspired by stories told by her Prussian grandmother, Anderson’s Baba Yaga is an eccentric but well-meaning old lady (played with comic idiosyncrasy by Lisa Howard) who holds the great responsibility of guiding the dead safely through the gate into the afterlife. Les Enfants Terribles is the perfect partner to bring Anderson’s magical story to life and Oliver Lansley’s adaptation is a whimsical, exuberant and inventive.
The story follows Marinka (Eve de Leon Allen), Baba’s granddaughter and future guardian of the gate, an awkward pre-teen who longs for a normal life where houses don’t grow chicken legs and relocate every few weeks. Marinka is initially reluctant to take on the responsibilities of their ancestry, and the play is a family-friendly lesson in learning to love your heritage and embracing what makes you unique.
The performance gets off to a clunky start and there are some acoustic issues which make it difficult to hear the cast over the music. The opening, in which Marinka befriends neighbour Ben (Michael Barker) and starts to harbour dreams of teen romance, is too long for a scene setting piece and the production takes its time to gather momentum.
It is only when the house ups and leaves in the middle of the night, cutting their blossoming relationship short, that we are pulled into Marinka’s and Baba Yaga’s enchanting world. The energy of a Día de los Muertos festival jostles alongside lively musical performances and elements of the masterful puppetry for which Les Enfants Terribles are renowned.
The focus on life and death is an interesting theme, particularly for a family-friendly performance. However, the subject is handled well and we are shown that whilst death can be tragic, a celebration of life is possible even in moments of profound grief.
Set design by Jasmine Swan and Nina Dunn’s hand-drawn video backdrops are highly immersive and instrumental in bringing the performance to life. The attention to detail throughout is impressive, with sound, costume and design coming together to create a rich and engaging landscape.
Eve de Leon Allen’s Marinka is highly likeable and across the board the small cast pulls off a wide array of characters, puppets and musical numbers with energy and ease. Stephanie Levi-John is brilliant as a hospitable, funny Yaga who takes Marinka under her wing and Dan Willis as Jackdaw breathes life and humour into a small puppet.
As the play comes to an end the story is tied up neatly with a bow, cutting short some of the more interesting questions that have been raised. But this is, after all, a festive performance aimed at families – and unlike a lot of family-friendly Christmas shows, is one to be enjoyed at any age.
Date: 13 – 30 December 2023. Location: Queen Elizabeth Hall, Southbank Centre, Belvedere Road, London SE1 8XX. Price: £20 – £40. Book now.
Words by Ellen Hodgetts
Highgate International Chamber Music Festival · Hampton Court Palace Festive Fayre · Carols at the Royal Albert Hall · Hotel Chocolat Tasting Experience · YARDLIFE at Dalston Yard · Electric Dreams: Art and Technology Before the Internet · The Tempest at Theatre Royal Drury Lane · Hot Chocolate Trail at Old Spitalfields Market · Electric Brixton · The Nutcracker · Camille Walala and Alex Booker · Sh!t Actually · Baileys Christmas Sip and Sing · HUMO Winter Charity Lunch · Ever After Garden ·
Holy Carrot, located on Portobello Road, is a stylish and sustainable plant-based restaurant offering a fresh alternative to the area’s burger-heavy dining scene.
Khandakar Ohida wins the Jameel Prize for her work on cultural heritage, as the ‘Jameel Prize: Moving Images’ exhibition showcasing shortlisted artists opens at the V&A South Kensington.
UP Projects and LLDC partner with artist Sahra Hersi to create a public art piece focused on safety and inclusivity for women, girls, and gender-diverse individuals in the Marshgate Lane area…
Artist Anna Lomax reimagines the Christmas tree as a playful, light-filled installation celebrating strength, tradition, and festive joy at the V&A…
One of Hoxton’s favourite brunch spots - Friends of Ours has a new pop up in The Magazine restaurant site located at the Serpentine North Gallery…
Belmond unveils the Britannic Explorer, a Belmond Train, UK the first luxury sleeper train in England & Wales. Launching in July 2025, this innovative train blends British heritage, fine dining, and cultural exploration for an unforgettable travel experience…
London’s dazzling Winter Lights festival returns with 11 new installations and iconic displays, transforming Canary Wharf from 21 January 2025…
The UK Premiere of Antony Hamilton’s award winning piece 4/4 performed by Melbourne based Chunky Move, a leading Australian dance company, known for being on the boundary in the art form.…
The UK Premiere of Antony Hamilton’s award winning piece 4/4 performed by Melbourne based Chunky Move, a leading Australian dance company, known for being on the boundary in the art form.…
Running through 16 November, Juno Birch, an outlandish blue alien is performing her brand-new standup comedy show Probed. She is a British comedian and artist from Manchester, who rose to fame performing professionally in late 2018 and has built a cult following…
SKATE at Somerset House · EFG London Jazz Festival · Covent Garden Christmas lights · Booker Prize Shortlist Readings 2024 · Manchester Collective & Abel Selaocoe: Sirocco · Christmas at Kew · World Kindness Day · The Piano Lesson · Taylor Wessing Photo Portrait Prize 2024 · Self-Made: Reshaping Identities · Drop in drawing at the National Portrait Gallery · Rachel Kneebone · Supperclub on the Tube · FoodCycle…
The 170-metre boardwalk, inspired by the area’s timber trade history, offers a new way to connect with nature and enhances the community-focused transformation of the 53-acre Canada Water site.
Housed in two vintage 1960s Victoria line carriages, this unique supper club transforms the carriages into an intimate dining experience three nights a week.
Peggy Gou headlines Field Day 2025 alongside Jungle, Skream & Benga, Folamour, and more in a star-studded lineup, as the festival moves to Brockwell Park for an electrifying start to summer.
Pitchfork Music Festival · Fireworks · Christmas Light Switch-on events · Voila! Theatre Festival · Canary Wharf Ice Rink · Picasso: Printmaker · Louis Blue Newby & Laila Majid: Inner Heat · Spirit of Lagos by Abi Morocco Photos · Urban Adventure Challenge · Unreported Uprisings by Inès Elsa Dalal…
EFG London Jazz Festival · Fireworks Displays in London · Skate at Somerset House · Chelsea Barracks Winter Fair · The 80s: Photographing Britain · Pitchfork Festival · 30 Years of Bugged Out! · Woolwich Contemporary Print Fair · Christmas at Kew · Christmas Lights in London · Winter Market Southbank Centre · Hacienda Sounds · Winter Light Festival · Michelangelo, Leonardo, Raphael: Florence, c. 1504 · Eva Recacha: The Picnic · Chunky Move: 4/4 · The Royal Opera: Hansel and Gretel
Claudette Johnson’s ‘Three Women’ mural, inspired by her earlier work and Picasso, celebrates the Black female experience while contributing to the station’s public art initiative.
Melek Zeynep Bulut’s Duo at the Painted Hall · An Evening with Fran Lebowitz · Celebrate Diwali with Rav & Tarunima · Fireworks displays in London · Víkingur Ólafsson & Yuja Wang: Two Pianos · Winter Market at the Southbank · Día de los Muertos with Disciples · Ekow Eshun: The Strangers · Preview: Blitz by Steve McQueen · Farah Atassi: The Lost Hours · Claudette Johnson: Three Women · Halloween with LEGO at Battersea Power Station
PATRÓN Tequila presents a month-long celebration featuring top DJs, signature cocktails, and vibrant Mexican food across London’s trendiest venues.
Frieze London came with much anticipation (and hesitation) this year…not least because of gloomy market outlooks. But the mood was cheery, and the crowd was buzzing…
Directed by Patrick Marber, who won a Tony Award in 2023 for Leopoldstadt, an exploration of Viennese Jewish history, the play features familiar TV faces and delivers an entertaining yet serious comedy that tackles weighty issue…
Frieze Sculpture · Halloween at Kew · Jan de Vylder and Inge Vinck · Gin and Jazz at Artesian Bar · LAPADA Berkeley Square Fair · London Literature Festival · Mahler 2 · Jordan Stephens · The Apprentice · Lift 109 Sound Bath · The World of Tim Burton · Francis Bacon · UMBRA · Making a rukus! · Oscar Murillo · Kioku Bar · Action for Happiness
Discover fifteen locations in London where you can enjoy the celebrations on the weekends before and after and the official Bonfire Night itself.
Captain Morgan and Pepsi MAX are celebrating their new pre-mixed drink with a two-day immersive in Shoreditch on 23 and 24 October 2024.…
In partnership with Penguin Books, Canary Wharf Group celebrates Black History Month by offering free, accessible literature from a diverse range of Black authors.
Leap Year explores Yang’s multifaceted, interdisciplinary, and inventive practice from the early 2000s to today, featuring key works from some of her most notable series…
12th edition of 1-54 Contemporary African Art Fair 2024 at Somerset House, London review…