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A Role to Die For Tickets

007 problems and the lead actor's one

This production is recommended for ages 12+.

Performance dates

26 July - 30 August 2025

Run time: TBC

No interval

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A Role To Die For Tickets

From Olivier Award winner Derek Bond comes a razor-sharp new comedy that takes you undercover behind the scenes of a blockbuster casting call where the real drama is off script. When things go hilariously wrong, it’s clear this mission needs more than a martini to fix. Shaken? Definitely. Stirred? Into total chaos. Don’t miss this wickedly funny limited-run show at the Marylebone Theatre.

About A Role To Die For

One casting director with a license to kill a blockbuster, if she gets it wrong. The show follows casting director Deborah as she’s about to announce the next face of the world’s most legendary spy franchise. But things take a turn for the double-oh-no when the chosen actor suddenly withdraws the day before the big reveal. With a new mission on her hands, Deborah faces an impossible choice: stick to the sleek, suited formula the world expects, or dare to let the next generation redefine a global icon?

Facts and Critical Acclaim

  • The play first opened at the Barn Theatre in January 2025 to rave reviews.
  • ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ – Wilts & Glos Standard, ★ ★ ★ ★ – The Telegraph, ★ ★ ★ ★ – Mail on Sunday, ★ ★ ★ ★ – West End Best Friend

A Role To Die For Creatives

  • Book - Jordan Waller
  • Director - Derek Bond

Upcoming Performance Times

Tuesday19 August 2025
Tuesday19 August 2025
Wednesday20 August 2025
Thursday21 August 2025
Saturday23 August 2025
Tuesday26 August 2025
Tuesday26 August 2025
15:00
19:30
19:30
19:30
17:30
15:00
19:30

Performance Months

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Access

Captioned Performance: Thursday 21 August at 7:30 pm

Latest A Role to Die For News

A Role to Die For review: A farcical romp that has a license to thrill

News / Reviews / Features / New Shows + Transfers

A Role to Die For review: A farcical romp that has a license to thrill

It feels like we’ve been waiting 007 million years to find out who will be the next Bond. With casting speculation rife since Craig's departure from the franchise in 2021, it seems like we hear the same names (we’re looking at you, Idris Elba, Aaron Taylor-Johnson and Theo James) EVERY. SINGLE. DAY. And it appears that any male aged 20-40 is eligible, with any actor falling into this remit being asked if they would like the role, or are in the running for the prestigious job, in any press junket they attend - no matter what show they are promoting. If we know anything, we know that it’s not a quick process to assign a new double-o agent to his majesty's Secret Service. 

So, when American producer Deborah (Tanya Franks) finds out that her chosen Bond has been found guilty of sending indecent messages to underage girls (“Dr No-Concent”), and the world's press are expecting a name at the press conference the following day, she is given (to mix spy action films) an impossible mission. She must cast a new lead in 22 hours. 

Deborah is not alone in her (very) secret mission. Her Q is her son, Quinn (Harry Goodson-Bevan) and her M, is cousin Malcolm (Philip Bretherton). Yes, despite Bond's body count (both kills and bed notches), he is still very much a family enterprise. And Deborah and Malcolm want to keep it that way.

What follows is a farcical romp that has a license to thrill. The dialogue is as pinpoint as Auric Goldfinger’s laser, and just as deadly. Full of puns, double entendras, and impressive phone choreography (think Operation Mincemeat, but with one angry American, three mobile phones, a landline and a Bluetooth headset), the production is seriously silly, and brilliantly British.

1 Aug, 2025 | By Sian McBride

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3:00 pm
From £16
7:30 pm
From £16

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