

Little Red Riding Hood and the Three Little Pigs: Babe in the Hood. January 2026

Little Red Riding Hood and the Three Little Pigs: Babe in the Hood. January 2026

Little Red Riding Hood and the Three Little Pigs: Babe in the Hood. January 2026

Little Red Riding Hood and the Three Little Pigs: Babe in the Hood. January 2026
The Reviews are in!
Scene One:
Despite only living a few miles away I have never encountered the Castle Players, whose home is the Village Hall in Lytchett Matravers, and I hope now to turn up again some time. I was greeted by jovial front of house crew who were friendly and chatty which is lovely when you’ve no idea what the deal is for the set up of the village hall for a show. I discovered the bar for refreshments, always a joy! I had a read of my very well put together program, someone should be proud to take credit for it. I bought my raffle ticket in support of the players and settled down into my seat. There were only a handful of children in attendance in the auditorium at this, the first performance of the run, but that hardly mattered as the adults were just as loud.
The pantomime is a smash up of Little Red Riding Hood with Three Little Pigs, but other characters such as Hansel and Gretel pop up too which makes sense as it’s all based around a wood which of course where Grandma lives. There are lots and lots of ‘in’ jokes based around the village of Lytchett Matravers which were popular with the local audience. All of the panto baddies centre around some shoddy property development where building houses from straw, sticks or even gingerbread is a way to get rich quick all under the watchful eye of the Big Bad Wolf. The pantomime itself is from the creative brain of Phil McMullen who wrote and directed the production which I enjoyed very much.
The stage itself is very minimal, much more black box than the glitz and glamour of backdrops with flashy lights. I personally don’t mind this, as it rather gives the actors nowhere to hide so all the creativity must come from them, and Castle Players didn’t disappoint.
There are some new actors to the company which appear in the panto; Debora Hornsby who plays Robin the love interest of Red gave a great performance and she looked like she was having a wonderful time. Jasmine Lloyd, playing Little Red Riding Hood, has joined the company for panto and has a beautiful singing voice. Sharon White, another newbie to Castle Players has done a great job with being half of a baddie comedy duo, Bodgeit, with Nikki Cross as the other half, Makedo. Nikki also holds the credit for choreography, and I thought the chase scene choreography was spot on; great job! Susan Boakes makes her Castle Players debut as the Witch with her punchy singing and wand wielding spells. Sophie Brackenborough, featuring as Oopsie, appears in her first show with the Players and manages multiple characters well with comic effect.
I enjoyed the comic endeavours of Beverley Smith as Sellit, who has the timing spot on, allowing the audience the laugh before she moves onto the next set up; she has the calm of a professional. As does Pete Bennet who plays the dreaded Health & Safety official, Smithers. In fact, all of the cast members who have trod the boards have clearly learnt their craft; they also play beautifully with one another too, acting as a team.
There are a number of young people in the cast who all deserve a mention; it’s not an easy task to put yourself on a stage and actually ask to be ridiculed but they were all completely marvellous, not a foot wrong, not a word out of place. I hope they continue down the road of the arts because they all have a talent for it.
Do come and see this lovely production, if you don’t well then … Boooo!
Review by Marilyn Barber | newseditor@dorsetview.co.uk
The clue is in the title. This is a production like no other. A mash-up of several popular stories, it is a truly village panto with Lytchett references that brought knowing laughter from the audience, together with a topical Greenland one.
There is no dame, but two principal baddies and, quite simply, it’s a whole lot of fun.
Written and directed by member of the company, Phil McMullen, the story revolves around dodgy builders and their demolition plans.
Dominating many scenes is the Big Bad Wolf, played with a lot of pizzazz by Becki Dawson, who certainly manages to elicit lots of boos and hisses.
Her interaction with Sellit, a local tycoon played by Beverley Smith, works well, and her sidekicks Bodgeit (Sharon White) and Makedo (Nikki Cross) add a huge amount of humour.
The same can be said for the other comedy duo, Jim (Linsey O’Neill) and Bob (Kim Burdon-Thompson), who deliver plenty of chaos.
Making a rather good debut with the Castle Players as the Witch is Susan Boakes, who combines humour with the right level of malevolence.
Jasmine Lloyd is suitably sweet as Little Red Riding Hood, teaming well with Deborah Hornsby as Robin.
The three little pigs, Porker (Ella Burdon), Gruntling (Sarah Peacock) and Babe (Charlotte Haworth), add fun and pathos, with the latter, the youngest cast member, putting in a very skilled performance.
Val Holland’s timing is good as Grandma, with Pete Bennett perfecting the role as the meticulous health and safety officer.
And then there is poor little Oopsie (Sophie Brackenborough), whose part requires her to turn up at intervals dressed in an outfit from the wrong pantomime!
Completing the 17-strong cast are Ashley Pires as Hansel and Mollie Burden as Gretel.
It’s a personal thing, but for me, this excellent production would have been further enhanced by scenery, as there was very little.
There is still time to see this panto, as there are performances next weekend on 30 and 31 January at 7.30pm, with a matinee on the Saturday. Tickets are available via castleplayers.com/tickets or 07771 444376.