The Great British Bake Off Musical is coming to the West End 🍰

On your mark, get set, BAKE!

Author: Rhys FreemanPublished 18th Oct 2022
Last updated 18th Oct 2022

Get ready bakers, the new musical based on The Great British Bake Off is coming to the West End next year.

The musical had its world premiere at the Everyman Theatre in Cheltenham earlier this year and will now get a 12 week run at the Noël Coward Theatre from 25th February until 13th May 2023.

Inspired by the hit TV show, The Great British Bake Off Musical follows amateur bakers as they compete to be crowned star baker.

John Owen Jones (Les Misèrables, The Phantom of the Opera) reprises his role as Phil Hollinghurst, the esteemed blue-eyed, silver-fox judge.

Scott Paige (The Addams Family, Nativity!) reprises his role as a presenter along with the original cast of musical professionals who play the contestants Claire Moore (Mary Poppins, The Girls, The King & I), Catriana Sandison (Evita, We Will Rock You), Charlotte Wakefield (The Boy In The Dress, Crazy For You), Damian Humbley (Merrily We Roll Along, Hedda Gabler), Jay Saighal (Hedda Gabler , Romeo and Juliet), Michael Cahill (Martin Guerre, Les Misérables), and Aharon Rayner (West End debut).

More cast will be announced soon.

The book, music and lyrics are by writing duo Jake Brunger and Pippa Cleary (Adrian Mole the Musical) and the musical is directed by Rachel Kavanaugh (Wind in the Willows, Half a Sixpence).

The original creative team includes: choreographer Georgina Lamb, set, costume and cake designer Alice Power, lighting designer Ben Cracknell, sound designer Ben Harrison, orchestrations Tom Curran, musical supervisor Mark Collins, assistant musical director Chris Poon and casting director Jim Arnold CDG.

The musical is produced by Mark Goucher and in association with the TV show's executive producer, Richard McKerrow.

Bake Off judge Prue Leith said: “I am thrilled to bits that The Great British Bake Off Musical is going to the West End. It is an uplifting, funny, heartfelt story, which will have you singing and dancing out of the theatre with a huge smile. A theatrical sweet treat. Just what we need right now.”

17 things you didn't know about Bake Off:

1. Anyone can apply for Bake Off

Except professional bakers or chefs!
Applications are open to any UK resident over the age of 16. However they cannot make their main source of income from commercial baking and entrants can't have worked as a professional chef or baker at any point. Plus, applicants cannot have acquired any professional catering qualifications in the last ten years.

2. The GBBO application form is VERY LONG

It's seven pages long, asks a LOT of questions, and demands you reveal the truth about your previous successes and failures in the kitchen.


You can find it here.

3. The Great British Bake Off application process doesn’t stop there!

If they like what they see on your application form, a researcher will call you and give you a 45 minute interview over the phone.


Then, if you pass THAT test, they'll have you whip up two baked treats, bring them to London, have an interview with a producer, and go through a screen test.


Think you're done? Nope!


You then have to try out a Technical Challenge set by the GBBO judges - in front of the camera. They also ask that you bring another bake along (presumably the producers are taste testing these / big fans of cake).


If you're still in the running, you'll then be interviewed by the show's psychologist to make sure they can handle the pressure of filming.

4. GBBO filming is intense

The show is filmed over a 10-week period between April and June, with contestants spending up to 16 hours a day filming.


They manage to package up a whole session of baking into one hour, which means that a lot of it ends up on the cutting room floor.

5... but at least it’s contained to weekends

That's right, contestants only do their GBBO stuff on weekends, which means that they can keep working their normal 9-to-5 jobs in the week.


However they are picked up from their hotels at 9am each Saturday and Sunday morning, to ensure they get as much filming time in as possible.


No rest for the wicked, eh?

6. GBBO contestants don’t do the washing up themselves

There's no dishwasher on Bake Off, because the noise would disrupt filming. Instead, home economists spend 160 hours washing up everything by hand. We hope they all get given a free hand lotion each…

7. GBBO contestants pay for ingredients themselves

Yes, that's right. They only get their ingredients provided when they reach the finals - which makes things pretty expensive. Particularly as they use between 12-20 ingredients per bake.

8. A lot of people are involved in the production of GBBO

There are around 50 crew members on set - and, yes, they all get to tuck into the cakes and goodies after the judges give their verdict.

9. GBBO contestants are encouraged to become friends

Producers take all contestants out for dinner together on the first night, and they usually become good pals over time; they often stay at the same hotel, so dinners and drinks and socialising become pretty regular.


Which means that, yes, they really DO mean it when they say they're happy for the overall winner - they're pretty much all besties by that point!

10. They make more cakes than you’d ever dreamed of

They bake a Victoria Sponge in each oven every single morning of filming, to make sure everything is ship-shape and ready to go. We imagine everyone gets a bit sick of tucking into that particular type of cake come the end of filming!

11. The show is LITERALLY based on village fetes

That's right; Anna Beattie, the show's creator, really believed that village fete baking competitions would suit TV. Anna, judging by the viewing figures, was 100% correct!

12. Mel and Sue recommended Mary Berry

The duo were approached to present the show together - and they were quick to suggest that Mary Berry should be a judge back when GBBO was on BBC One. The show moved to Channel 4 in 2017 without Mary Berry.

13. It’s not a disaster if someone forgets an ingredient

In fact, producers are well and truly prepared if this happens; they have a runner on standby at a local supermarket every morning in case a contestant realises overnight that they've forgotten an ingredient.

14. Oven time is crucial

So much so that contestants aren't allowed to put anything in - or take anything out of - the oven without flagging a producer down first. They want to make sure that they have a camera on standby to film those big baking moments.

15. The Bake Off challenges are NOT surprises

If you make it through to the Bake Off finals, you will be told what the challenges are going to be - and you'll have to submit your recipes for approval. No pressure, eh?

16. Mary Berry and Paul Hollywood were off limits

Back when the show was on BBC One, they preferred to keep things professional with contestants, and wouldn't usually speak to them outside of the Bake Off tent.

17. … but Mel and Sue weren't

The duo were happy to chat to contestants away from the cameras - and Sue even said that she likes to stay in touch with them via email once the show is all over. N'aww.

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