Waitress Musical at Birmingham Hippodrome: A Powerful, Emotional Triumph
Waitress Musical at Birmingham Hippodrome: A Powerful Triumph

This warm, funny musical hit me harder than I ever expected - I felt the power of these women. A warm, witty musical with real emotional bite, Waitress follows a group of women finding the courage to take back control of their lives. Surrounded by difficult, flawed men, Jenna, Becky and Dawn each carve out their own path to happiness, discovering strength, independence and a quiet, powerful sense of empowerment along the way.

There is something instantly comforting about Waitress. Maybe it is the diner setting, maybe it is the promise of pie, or maybe it is the way the show quietly wraps you up in its warmth before you even realise what it is doing. And right now, it is serving all of that up at the Birmingham Hippodrome until Saturday.

But do not be fooled, this is not just a feel-good musical. There is real substance here, and it lands. It is a deeply emotional watch, one that had tears streaming down my face as it follows three women, each trapped in their own kind of unhappiness, owning their flaws yet quietly refusing to settle for the lives they have been handed.

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A Star Performance from Carrie Hope Fletcher

At the centre of it all is Carrie Hope Fletcher as Jenna, and honestly, she feels made for this role. There is a natural ease to her performance that makes everything believable, whether she is cracking jokes, falling apart, or pouring everything she has into a song. And when those big moments hit, you feel them.

Women Navigating Chaos Created by Men

What really stands out is how the story centres on strong women who are constantly having to navigate the chaos created by the men around them. Whether it is the cantankerous old Joe, the foolish diner boss Cal, or Jenna's selfish and controlling husband Earl who keeps her feeling trapped in her own life, the contrast only makes the women's resilience shine brighter.

What really sneaks up on you, though, is how the show builds this quiet but powerful sense of female empowerment. It is not loud or forced. It grows. Jenna, Becky and Dawn each start in very different places, but as the story unfolds, you see them slowly take control of their own lives, making choices on their own terms.

An Earned and Honest Conclusion

By the end, it feels earned. Each of them finds their own version of happiness, not perfectly, not magically, but honestly. And that is what makes it emotional. It feels real. There is plenty of humour woven through it too. The audience is laughing one minute and completely still the next. That balance is what Waitress does best. It knows when to lean into the light and when to sit in the heavier moments, particularly around Jenna's relationship with Earl, which is handled with care and never brushed aside.

A Gorgeous Musical Score

Musically, it is just gorgeous. Sara Bareilles' score does not feel like songs dropped into a story. It is the story. From the playful to the heartbreaking, every number pushes things forward, and when Jenna finally lets her guard down, it hits hard.

Supporting Cast Shines Brightly

Not to forget, the other ladies in the show - it is brought to life beautifully by Sandra Marvin's bold, sharp-tongued Becky, Evelyn Hoskins' endearingly awkward and warm Dawn, and a brilliantly sassy turn from Nurse Norma that adds an extra spark of humour and heart. Les Dennis as Joe brings a gruff warmth to the role, and I have to admit, there was a real starstruck moment seeing him on stage, like a little flash of childhood TV nostalgia right in front of me.

But mainly it is all about the women. Even the production and creation of the show. This is why I loved it so deeply.

A Quiet Swell of Emotion

By the time it reaches its final moments, there is this quiet swell of emotion that catches you off guard. It is hopeful without being unrealistic. Messy, but uplifting. You walk out feeling like something has shifted, like you have watched people find strength they did not know they had.

And maybe that is the magic of Waitress. Underneath the pies and the humour, it is really about people learning they deserve more and slowly, bravely, going after it. Runs until Saturday, book here.

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