Cynthia Erivo wearing custom Louis Vuitton and Suzanne Kalan jewelry arrives at the Los Angeles Premiere Of Universal Pictures' 'Wicked' held at the Dorothy Chandler Pavilion at The Music Center on November 9, 2024 in Los Angeles, California, United States. (Photo by Xavier Collin/Image Press Agency)
Australian theatre continues its formidable march across the globe, with Sydney Theatre Company’s boundary-pushing DRACULA confirmed to open on London’s West End in February 2026. The production—first unveiled at STC’s Roslyn Packer Theatre in July 2024—reimagines Bram Stoker’s gothic classic through director Kip Williams’ signature “cine-theatre” lens, fusing live performance with real-time and pre-recorded video.
At the heart of this new staging will be Oscar-nominated powerhouse Cynthia Erivo, taking on the role of the infamous Count as well as 22 additional characters—from the steadfast Mina to the unhinged Renfield. Erivo follows in the footsteps of Zahra Newman, who originated the part in Sydney, and will collaborate closely with Williams to craft a fresh interpretation for British audiences. Although the creative team will draw on lessons from the Australian run, the London season is being built from the ground up, promising an experience tailored to its new venue.
Co-produced by the Sydney-based Michael Cassel Group and the UK’s Adam Kenwright, DRACULA marks the latest chapter in a growing portfolio of Australian exports. Williams and Cassel previously scored a major coup with their solo-actor adaptation of THE PICTURE OF DORIAN GRAY, which recently garnered six Tony Award nominations after transfers to both the West End and Broadway. DRACULA, with its blend of live cinema techniques, lightning-quick costume changes and narrative agility, is poised to replicate—and potentially eclipse—that success.
Though not a musical, the play concludes with an original song by composer Clemence Williams, complemented by an eclectic soundscape that spans classical motifs and contemporary club beats. This audio-visual collage, combined with Williams’ cinematic camera angles and on-stage screens, positions DRACULA firmly in the vanguard of hybrid theatre.
For Australia’s creative community, the announcement reinforces the nation’s status as an incubator for innovative storytelling. As Erivo prepares to navigate the whirlwind of personas under Williams’ eye, anticipation is building on both sides of the equator: Australian audiences will watch a home-grown work take flight, while London theatregoers can look forward to a fresh bite of Antipodean ingenuity.
Tickets and venue details for the West End season are expected to be released later this year. One thing already seems certain: when DRACULA rises in 2026, London’s Theatreland will feel a distinct Australian pulse coursing through its veins.
Photo Credit: DepositPhotos.com
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