The Lion King (West End) — My Review

The Lion King (West End) — My Review

When & Where

  • Date: 25 October 2025
  • Theatre: Lyceum Theatre, London (about 2,100 seats)
  • Seat / Price: Royal Circle (2nd level), Row B, Seat 26£96
  • My runtime: 2:30pm–5:00pm (the show is ~2h30 incl. interval)

What I compared

I’ve now seen Broadway, Japan, and West End productions. Conditions weren’t identical — my Japanese viewing was years ago, Broadway was a week earlier, seats and acoustics varied, and my ear has adjusted to English over two weeks in the UK — so take these as informed impressions, not lab results.

Good Points

🦓 Puppetry that feels “alive”

In the opening sequence, the zebras struck me first.

  • Broadway: a hard-charging sprint across the plains.
  • West End: a light, floating canter — honestly beautiful.
  • Japan: from memory, precise, correct travelling.
    Likewise, the leopard work in London felt more delicate than New York. The UK’s deep respect for puppetry as actorly craft shows.

🔸 Performers right beside you

In “Circle of Life” and the Act Two opener “One by One”, performers appeared in the auditorium, sometimes close enough to touch — especially near the boxes. I watched a mother and daughter light up at the proximity; that small human moment warmed the whole afternoon.

🎵 Choral blend

Across my six-ish viewings, this is the first time I actively thought, “the chorus is beautiful.”

  • Broadway: wild, muscular choral colour.
  • Japan: unified and accurate blend.
  • West End: a more artful, sculpted sound — less about force, more about line.

🎭 A more “theatre-forward” tone

All three tell the story clearly, but the temperature differs:

  • Broadway carries a hint of show even when acting is tight.
  • Japan leans toward text made concrete — clean, faithful realisation.
  • West End felt most like straight theatre: finely judged silences, close, private speaking when needed, intentional stillness, and confrontations that breathe. It’s not better or worse — just a distinct flavour.

Summary

Different cultures leave different fingerprints on the same score and staging:

  • Broadway: energy and individual spark
  • Japan: accuracy and cohesion
  • West End: theatricality and beauty

The differences are what make seeing the show worldwide so rewarding. My aim is to absorb each strength, then build towards my own ideal of expression.

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