Matthew Bourne’s New Adventures has grown a strong following at Lowry with innovative takes on classics like Swan Lake, Nutcracker, Sleeping Beauty and Cinderella.
The company’s latest production the Midnight Bell, which premiered in 2021, comes to Salford for the first time as part of a UK tour. And while it might not have such an immediately well-known story, this show has all the emotion, spectacle and top quality dance fans of Bourne have come to expect.
The title is taken from one of Patrick Hamilton’s early novels, but this is not a straightforward adaptation. Instead, Bourne has taken inspiration from Hamilton’s wider body of work to create a piece that captures the essence of the 1930’s London captured in his writing.

In this respect, it doesn’t matter if you are familiar with Hamiliton’s work or not, because rather than retell one story Bourne chooses characters and scenarios from several novels and weaves them together with characters and scenarios of his own creation, into a series of vignettes linked by the Midnight Bell pub. Through these snapshots we are drawn into the relationships and dreams of the pub’s regulars and employees.

Credit here goes to the whole team, choreographer, designers and cast for an utterly absorbing experience that draws us into this world of 1930s Soho and Fitzrovia with its array of distinctly complex characters and relationships. Although there is no linear narrative the storytelling is captivating through its atmospheric evocation and detailed characterisations. Lez Brotherston’s sets fill the breadth and depth of the Lowry’s huge Lyric stage, switching scenes with a seamless filmic quality. Terry Davies musical score adds to the feel of silent movie nostaligia, including some songs from the 1930s, which the dancers mime to.

Here the cast are described as actor/dancers, and rightly so – this piece works because we both recognise and believe the situations being played out. The wide age range of characters allows scope for both the company’s most experienced dancers like Dominic North to perform alongside rising stars like Hannah Kremer – a real treat for audiences who have followed the company for years.

The themes of loneliness and search for connection that grew out of the Covid pandemic from which the production emerged still weigh heavy. But Dominic North tops and tails the evening with such lightness he provides the beer goggles to the bleakness of the romantic characterisations. And as the audience we have the best people watching seat in the bar, where it seems the search for love and connection in the 1930s was no less elusive than today, and certainly no less fascinating.
Matthew Bourne’s the Midnight Bell is at Lowry, Salford from 1-5 July 2025. Age guidance 14+