Children under the age of 3 will not be admitted. Those under 16 must be accompanied by an adult.
Performance Dates
13 June - 5 September 2026
Run time: 2 hours 45 minutes
Includes interval
242 reviews
★★★★★ “Playful, poignant, profound” – Financial Times
★★★★★ ‘This huge-hearted production is enchanting’ - The Times
‘No master to serve, no leash to bear. I walk as I please, and I speak as I dare.’
Poet. Soldier. Philosopher. Cyrano de Bergerac burns with brilliance.
Fiercely funny and intensely romantic, Cyrano lives by his words and his sword. Haunted by doubts about his own his appearance, he watched from the shadows as Roxane falls for another man. Handsome but hopeless with words, Christian turns to the one person who can help.
Following a sold-out, critically acclaimed run with the Royal Shakespeare Company, this ‘hilariously funny and ultimately heartbreaking’ (Mail on Sunday) production transfers to the West End for a strictly limited season.
Olivier Award-winner Adrian Lester (Riviera, Hustle) is ‘perfect’ (The Times) as protagonist Cyrano, with Susannah Fielding (Wolf Hall) as the ‘instantly charming’ (The Stage) Roxane.
Directed by Simon Evans (Staged, The Dazzle) and co-adapted with Debris Stevenson (Poet in Da Corner), Edmond Rostand’s timeless classic is reimagined with exhilarating wit, lyricism and heart
Playing at the Noël Coward Theatre from 13 June.
Following a sold-out and critically acclaimed run in Stratford-upon-Avon, the Royal Shakespeare Company’s funny, moving, and deeply romantic adaptation of Cyrano, starring Adrian Lester and Susannah Fielding, has officially opened at the Noël Coward Theatre, but what did the critics think of this West End transfer?
Cyrano de Bergerac is a poet, a soldier, and a philosopher, a man of extraordinary wit and courage who is nevertheless haunted by profound self-doubt. When he secretly helps a handsome but tongue-tied soldier court the woman they both love, he must endure the agony of watching Roxane fall for his words while believing they belong to another.
Hilarious, passionate, and devastatingly tender, this timeless story of unspoken love, honour, and sacrifice asks what it truly means to reveal yourself to the world, and what it costs to remain hidden.
⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ “This magnificent Cyrano de Bergerac is a West End triumph.” - The Telegraph
⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ “Adrian Lester is sensational in this pitch perfect RSC overhaul of the classic romantic drama.” - Time Out
⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ “Adrian Lester delivers his best performance in donkeys’ years as Cyrano.” - WhatsOnStage
“A show so good we wrote it a love poem” - London Theatre Direct. Read our Cyrano review here.
26 Jun, 2026 | By Hay Brunsdon
Following a sold-out, five-star run in Stratford last year, Cyrano arrives at the Noël Coward Theatre with all the swagger, wit and heart that have made this production such a triumph. Martin Crimp's vibrant adaptation reimagines Edmond Rostand's classic tale of the brilliant swordsman and poet Cyrano de Bergerac (Adrian Lester), whose razor-sharp tongue conceals a deep insecurity that prevents him from declaring his love for Roxane (Susannah Fielding).
It's a production bursting with humour and linguistic dexterity, delighting in wordplay, poetry and verbal sparring. Adrian Lester is simply magnificent as he reprises the titular role, combining boastful bravura with rough-edged charm and a deeply protected tenderness. Enhancing the lyrical quality of the piece is a talented ensemble of onstage musicians, whose atmospheric accompaniment underscores Cyrano's speeches and lends a musical rhythm to the production's poetry.
Inspired by Cyrano's own impromptu acrostics and dazzling battles of words and wit, we penned Cyrano a love poem of our own:
26 Jun, 2026 | By Sian McBride
Not long ago somebody called writer and director Simon Evans, whose beguiling and funny hit RSC production of Cyrano de Bergarac opens in the West End this month, enquiring about whether he could write a radio show. After they had been talking productively for a while, the caller said, 'It's funny that I’ve found you, because the person I was originally trying to find was Simon Evans, the magician.
'Well, you won’t believe it,' said Evans, ‘but you have found him. That’s me too.’
Evans has had what might be called an eclectic career. He is indeed a magician: his clever and moving 2016 show The Vanishing Man explored reality, truth and self-deception through the story of magician Hugo Cedar, who vanished on London Bridge in 1930 and was never seen again.
But he is also a director with credits including Secret Cinema and Inside No. 9 Stage/Fright as well as directing Andrew Scott in The Dazzle, Orlando Bloom in Killer Joe and Toby Stephens and Claire Skinner in A Day in the Death of Joe Egg.
Writing is increasingly part of his portfolio of skills; he is co-writer with poet and playwright Debris Stevenson on Cyrano, a version of Edmond Rostand’s comedy about the verbally dextrous soldier—played here by the wonderful Adrian Lester, who hides his love for Roxanne because of his large nose, which he believes disfigures him, instead using his poetry to court her on behalf of a rival.
Oh, and Evans is an actor too. He appeared in Staged as himself alongside David Tennant and Michael Sheen for the two series of the lockdown BBC hit, which he also co-created, wrote and directed. You’ll never know quite what he might do next.
Staged, and the attention it got during the pandemic has been a game-changer for Evans in terms of profile, but he says that for quite a long period during his career he has been prone to insecurity, perhaps a little like Cyrano himself.
‘This can be such a difficult industry to navigate, and there have been times when I have wondered whether I was good enough, and of course you feel insecure and have envy as other people progress, and you wonder whether maybe you should have made other choices, maybe more myopically concentrated on being a director. But now I think the eclecticism is paying off. But it has sometimes felt hard.”
He adds, 'We all have Cyrano’s nose, don’t we? We all have this thing which holds us back, which makes us worry that we won’t be loveable and which makes us lonely and isolated. To some degree we all go through life wearing masks, being afraid and wondering whether we are good enough.'
24 Jun, 2026 | By Lyn Gardner
The Jamie Lloyd Company has announced that the Olivier Award-winning production Cyrano de Bergerac, by Edmond Rostand and freely adapted by Martin Crimp, will be returning to London for a limited run at the Harold Pinter Theatre. James McAvoy will reprise his role in the critically acclaimed play for 5-weeks in the West End, with performances beginning on 3 February 2022. Tickets for Cyrano de Bergerac are now booking until 12 March 2022. Don’t wait to secure your seats – tickets are expected to be in high demand.
4 Nov, 2021 | By Jade Ali

Created in 1991, one year after the beloved Scottish actor Ian Charleson († 40) passed away, the Ian Charleson Awards is meant to honour the best performances in classical roles by actors under 30 years of age. Run by the Sunday Times newspaper and the National Theatre, the institution has now released the shortlist of nominees for this year's ceremony. Find out who has been nominated below.
26 May, 2020 | By Nicholas Ephram Ryan Daniels

It has just been announced that NT Live will be broadcasting X-Men star James McAvoy in Jamie Lloyd's production of Cyrano de Bergerac along with other big-name actors, including Maxine Peake (Black Mirror's "Metalhead" episode).
15 Nov, 2019 | By Nicholas Ephram Ryan Daniels
Rehearsal images shot by Marc Brenner have been released for the upcoming Playhouse Theatre staging of Edmond Rostand's Cyrano de Bergerac. Boasting a star-studded cast that features X-men actor James McAvoy in the lead role of our beloved big-nosed protagonist, this highly anticipated London theatre production — newly adapted by Martin Crimp and directed by Jamie Lloyd — is set to take the West End by storm on 27 November.
14 Nov, 2019 | By Nicholas Ephram Ryan Daniels
The full cast for the highly anticipated West End revival of Cyrano de Bergerac has been announced and are set to join the previously confirmed James McAvoy. London theatre maven Jamie Lloyd will premiere his brand-new and freely adapted production of Cyrano de Bergerac at the Playhouse Theatre on 27 November 2019.
15 Oct, 2019 | By Nicholas Ephram Ryan Daniels
The talented French ‘jack of all trades’ with a huge conk Cyrano de Bergerac is coming to London’s Playhouse Theatre this November in one of the most highly-anticipated productions of the year. Freely adapted by Martin Crimp and set to star the James McAvoy, the new staging of Cyrano de Bergerac by West End maven Jamie Lloyd is guaranteed to sell out fast! You definitely won't want to 'keep your big nose out of this one!' Catch the classic play by Edmond Rostand this autumn with tickets available now from just £18 and up!
18 Sep, 2019 | By Nicholas Ephram Ryan Daniels
Did you know that the late French poet Edmond Rostand, author of Cyrano de Bergerac, has a blood relative with the exact same name? Having prematurely passed away in 1918 at the age of 50, Rostand's lineage doesn't exactly stretch as far back as one might imagine of such an esteemed playwright in French literature. Now with Jamie Lloyd's new production of Cyrano de Bergerac starring James McAvoy set to open at the West End's Playhouse Theatre on 27 November 2019, we were fortunate enough to be put in touch with Edmond Rostand's great-nephew of the same name (who also goes by Eddie).
Read our exclusive interview with Edmond (Eddie) Rostand below!
20 Aug, 2019 | By Nicholas Ephram Ryan Daniels
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