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All Audience Reviews of Till the Stars Come Down

 ★ 3.8 / 5  •  Show Ended  •  Plays
6
audience reviews
3.8
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out of 5 stars
5 star
33.3%
4 star
50%
3 star
0%
2 star
0%
1 star
16.7%
Logo for user Angus Moorat on Stagedoor
Angus Moorat
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Like watching a TV soap on a bad day. Crude characters and all a bit pointless. Set around a miserable family wedding. Avoid.Read more →
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Logo for user Anastasiia T. on Stagedoor
Anastasiia T.
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This play feels more like a British TV show — it has everything: a steady stream of hilarious jokes, characters that feel instantly familiar, and family drama that slowly eats away at everyone and everything. And like any decent British TV show, it’s all laughs and warmth — until it isn’t. The tonal shift hits hard — just when you’ve let your guard down, the emotional weight drops in and reminds you why you were so invested in the first place.Read more →
Logo for user Karen McKenzie on Stagedoor
Karen McKenzie
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So funny. Fantastic ensemble cast.Read more →
Logo for user Edward Daffarn on Stagedoor
Edward Daffarn
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Loved this play. Contemporary issues of family dynamics, racism and alienation discussed in a mature and down to earth manner. Great script and great cast performances. Highly recommended.Read more →
Logo for user Stuart King on Stagedoor
Stuart King
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In a post-industrial East Midlands town where the largest employer was once the coal mines but is now a warehouse, three sisters prepare for the wedding of one of their number to a Polish immigrant. The scene is primed to unveil a gamut of familiar tropes — class disenchantment, resentment of immigrants, decades-old family feuds and of course the appalling spectacle of drunken wedding dancing en masse. But Beth Steel's caustic family drama also has some unexpected skeletons in its closet, and the excellent cast seem ****-bent on freeing them.Read more →
Logo for user David Roy on Stagedoor
David Roy
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A family wedding saga set in a single day. I thought Beth Steele’s last play had too many themes running at once; this is much sharper and has both heartbreak and humour in equal measure. It is like the very best Coronation Street writing in a good way with terrific performances and a star turn from Lorraine Washborne as Auntie Carol with all the funniest lines . Very enjoyable.Read more →