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Richard ll Tickets

Starring Olivier award-winner, Jonathan Bailey

Children under 5 will not be admitted

Performance dates

10 February - 10 May 2025

Run time TBC

Includes interval

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Richard II is charismatic, eloquent, and flamboyantly witty. And a disastrous King – dishonest, dangerous, and politically incompetent. Echoing down the centuries is the perennial problem: how to deal with a ruler who has a rock-solid right to rule but is set on wrecking the country he leads.

Shakespeare’s subtle, caustic, and powerful play revolves round two startlingly modern figures: Richard, an autocrat who believes he is divinely sanctioned, and Henry Bullingbrook, a hard-headed pragmatist who has genuine authority.

Richard II is played by Jonathan Bailey, whose past work includes Bridgerton, Fellow Travellers, Cassio in Nicholas Hytner’s National Theatre production of Othello and Edgar to Ian McKellen’s King Lear. He has also won an Olivier Award for his role of Jamie in Company and is Fiyero in the Wicked movie.

Upcoming Performance Times

Friday21 February 2025
Saturday22 February 2025
Saturday22 February 2025
Monday24 February 2025
Tuesday25 February 2025
Wednesday26 February 2025
Thursday27 February 2025
19:30
14:30
19:30
19:30
19:30
19:30
14:30

Performance Months

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Special notes

Anyone under the age of 16 must be accompanied by an adult aged 18+

Access

Captioned Performance: 2 May 2025 at 19.30 , Audio Described Performance: 12 April 2025 at 14.30

Recent Reviews

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1 reviews

Latest Richard ll News

Richard II review: Jonathan Bailey’s wickedly charismatic king rules the Bridge Theatre

Reviews / Features / Celebrities

Richard II review: Jonathan Bailey’s wickedly charismatic king rules the Bridge Theatre

Guys and dolls have made way for kings and dukes at the Bridge Theatre, where Jonathan Bailey rules in his first stage role since Wicked and Bridgerton fame. 

No stranger to Shakespeare (Bailey trod the boards with the RSC long before he walked down the Yellow Brick Road in Wicked), the Olivier award-winner appears centre stage, bathed in a decadent glow of light from three large crystal chandeliers - a false halo cast over him. The titular character in the lesser performed ‘Henriads’, Richard II (Bailey), believes he’s Jesus. That he is of divine right. But when we see the angelic image quickly dispel as he steps out of the light and stalks downstage (or upstage, it is in-the-round afterall) to claim his crown, we see he’s simply delusional. 

Sitting in a sea of black and gold furniture, grandiose and ostentatious. The decor, chosen by set designer Bob Crowley, could quite easily fit into a hotel room in Trump Tower. This visual parallel sets the tone for a king who, like President Trump, craves admiration and notoriety above all else, shifting opinions to curry favor or simply to alleviate his own boredom. Bailey’s Richard is intoxicated by his own divine right, dismissive of his advisors, and blinded by entitlement—a dangerous cocktail that ultimately sets in motion his downfall. When he banishes his cousin, Henry Bolingbroke, and seizes his inheritance from his uncle's hospital bed (and celebrates by scoffing the dead man's grapes) the cracks in his rule begin to show, paving the way for rebellion.

19 Feb, 2025 | By Sian McBride

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