Beauty & The Beast – Trinity Players ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐

Beauty & The Beast – Trinity Players
Sutton Coldfield Town Hall
Monday 1st June 2026 – Dress Rehearsal
By  Nigel Gambles
Photography –Studio 55 Photography

Disney’s timeless tale of love, acceptance and transformation arrived at Sutton Coldfield Town Hall this week as Trinity Players presented a wonderfully entertaining production of Beauty & The Beast.

From the opening scenes, the audience was transported into Belle’s provincial French village before being swept away to the enchanted castle of the Beast. Packed with colourful costumes, memorable songs and plenty of humour, this production delivered all the magic audiences have come to expect from this much-loved Disney classic.

Leading the cast as Belle, Sasha Barnes gave a delightful performance, bringing warmth, intelligence and determination to the role. Her vocals were consistently strong throughout the evening, particularly in the show’s more emotional moments. Just as impressive was the chemistry she shared with Matt Hunt’s Beast, whose portrayal captured both the character’s intimidating exterior and the vulnerability hidden beneath. Together they created a believable and engaging relationship at the heart of the story.

For me, however, the standout performance of the evening came from Matthew Cotter as LumiĂšre. Commanding the stage whenever he appeared, Cotter delivered a charismatic and confident performance packed with energy, humour and charm. His stage presence was exceptional and he lit up every scene he was involved in, earning some of the biggest reactions from the audience throughout the night.

Sam Jones was superb as Gaston, perfectly capturing the swagger, arrogance and larger-than-life personality of Disney’s iconic villain. Every entrance was filled with confidence and theatrical flair, making him a thoroughly entertaining antagonist. Alongside him, Richard McNally-Reilly’s LeFou provided excellent comic support, delivering plenty of laughs with impeccable timing and a wonderfully playful performance.

The supporting cast also impressed throughout. Phil Lines brought plenty of personality to Cogsworth, while Bex Perry delivered warmth and heart as Mrs Potts. Special mention should also go to Amy Homer as Babette, Gemma Parton as Madame de la Grande Bouche, and the talented young performers portraying Chip, Aoife Davies and Lucy Brisband.

Musically, the production was in very safe hands under Musical Director Samantha Hedley, with the cast handling the demanding Disney score admirably. Numbers such as Belle, Gaston, Be Our Guest and the title song were delivered with enthusiasm and confidence, while the ensemble performances added scale and energy throughout.

The choreography from Leigh-Ann James made excellent use of the large company, creating lively and visually engaging production numbers. Director Dan Barnes clearly understands how to balance spectacle with storytelling, ensuring the heart of the story remained front and centre while still delivering plenty of theatrical magic.

Behind the scenes, producer Lewis Wescott, the stage management team, crew, technical team and countless volunteers deserve enormous credit for bringing such an ambitious production to life. The attention to detail in the costumes, staging and overall presentation helped create a truly immersive experience for the audience.

Trinity Players continue to demonstrate why they are one of Sutton Coldfield’s most respected amateur theatre companies. Beauty & The Beast is a production filled with heart, humour and Disney magic, performed by a company clearly passionate about what they do.

A wonderful evening of family entertainment and a fitting reminder that true beauty really does come from within.

Beauty & The Beast – Script Youth Musical Theatre ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐

Beauty & The Beast – Script Youth Musical Theatre Company
Crescent Theatre
Thursday 11th September 2025 – Dress Rehearsal
By : Nigel Gambles
Photography by : Studio 55 Photography

This familiar story, is a magical tale of mystery, sorcery, dreams, sadness, longing, and a just-in-time happy and moving ending.

A young prince, cursed and imprisoned in the form of a beast must find true love before the last rose petal falls to break the spell.

The true love appears in the form of Belle played by Erin Phillips, a wonderful singer with an amazing voice, a village girl who is being pursued by the narcissistic and arrogant hunter Gaston played to perfection by Findlay Laidlaw a strong and powerful vocalist, along with his side-kick LeFou the talented and hilarious Evie Rice, more on Evie later.

Belle refuses Gaston’s advances, yet the other village girls Effie Jobling, Isabelle Round and Darci Rice very amusingly fawn for his attention and affections.

Belle comes face to face with the Beast Samuel McCormac in his castle, whilst looking for her father Maurice, Zachariah Scrivens, who has been captured and selflessly ends up swapping places to gain his freedom. Belle soon befriends a host of wonderful characters in the ‘enchanted’ castle, who hope ‘this is the one to break the spell’. This magnificent group – Lumiere (Kian Haden), Mrs Potts (Chloe Mason), Chip (Oliver Malkin), Cogsworth (Amiee Whillis), Madame De La Grande Bouche (Jess Lewis) and the constantly amusing Babette (Louise Heard) are forever memorable.

Despite a turbulent beginning, a deep friendship develops between Belle and Beast and eventually the curse is broken. The true prince is revealed, Gaston is seen off, and peace, dance and merriment ensue. Therein lies the underlying message of the play: inward characteristics such as kindness should forever be valued over superficial qualities like appearance.

Forgive me for not mentioning by name the many other young actors, but they were all fantastic and the final number including the whole cast was a total delight.

Well done to Louise Farmer for such creative, enthusiastic production and once again ensuring that she got the maximum enthusiasm and effort from the whole cast and Kelly McCormac for the meticulous choreography.  A very special mention to Evie Rice who upon finding out the group would be doing Beauty and the Beast jumped at the chance to design and make Belles dresses as part of her finals at BOA, they are superb.

I have always thought that putting one’s trust and faith in children and young people brings out their best. Script Youth Musical Theatre certainly helps in this by promoting positive growth opportunities such as confidence building, creativity, communicating and working with others, as well as enabling the skills of acting, singing and dancing.

Verified by MonsterInsights