TV Obsessions & Netflix Must-Sees
The Summer I Turned Pretty – Volleyball matches, late-night beach talks, and the classic love triangle between Belly, Conrad, and Jeremiah. Sibling rivalry, first kisses, and emotional confrontations make this summer jaunt ripe for a West End musical, all underscored by a Taylor Swift–style soundtrack.
Squid Game – Dystopian, terrifying, and ridiculously stage-ready. Picture the Red Light/Green Light doll looming over the stage, every move counting like literal stage fright. That iconic dorm with stacked bunk beds is perfect for multi-level staging, while the auditorium itself could be divided into VIP Viewing Areas. And yes… masks are not optional.
Wednesday – Gothic, gleefully morbid, and packed with the incredible choreography from the dance scene in Season 1. Picture a stage filled with outcasts, swirling mist, dramatic shadows, and perfectly timed spooky effects. It’s a darkly delightful teen spectacle ready to haunt the West End!
Bridgerton – You know the drill: ruffles, gossip, scandal, and grand balls blooming with flowers at every turn. Imagine sweeping costumes, glittering masks, and orchestras plucking every scandalous note with perfect precision. Love, rivalry, and secrets played out across the stage, turning every curtsey and glance into pure West End spectacle.
Saltburn – Gothic decadence meets aristocratic chaos; Saltburn feels ready-made for a West End stage. It’s twisted, it’s glamorous, and it’s already so theatrical you can almost hear the audience gasp. Can we keep Rosamund Pike and Richard E. Grant but cut out the whole bath water bit please?
The Rivals – This is just ripe for the stage. The Rivals delivers smutty tension, twisted dynamics, and enough melodrama to make an audience lean forward in delicious disbelief. David Tennant is no stranger to the stage either.
Where the Crawdads Sing – Crawdads has all the makings of atmospheric theatre. The marshlands, the isolation, the murder trial, and Kya’s resilience are begging for moody staging. Picture reeds swaying under stage lights, courtroom drama at centre stage — and maybe a boat, Phantom-style. And yes, we’d definitely like to keep Daisy Edgar Jones.
Modern Classics & BookTok Hits
Normal People & Conversations With Friends – Intimate, emotional, quietly devastating. Minimalist staging and problematic characters = we’d be gripped throughout!
Dolly Alderton’s Everything I Know About Love – Female friendships, chaotic nights out, heartbreaks, hangovers, and the kind of twenty-something drama that feels both painfully awkward and painfully familiar. On stage, it could swing from kitchen-table confessions to glitter-fuelled dancefloors, capturing the joy and heartbreak of growing up and figuring it all out.
Bridget Jones – The ultimate modern classic: chaotic, wine-spilling, diary-confessing genius that defined a generation. On stage, picture Bridget belting out an opening number like “All By Myself” before stumbling through disastrous dates, oversized knickers choreography, and romantic near-misses — a perfectly British mix of comedy, calamity, and musical numbers.
Crime & Thrillers
We’ve got The Mousetrap and The Girl on the Train, but even more modern hits are begging for the stage. Lucy Foley’s The Guest List and The Hunting Party bring storms, remote islands, and ensemble whodunnits, while Lisa Jewell’s Then She Was Gone and The Family Upstairs pack in dark twists and family secrets fit for a dramatic spotlight. Then again, maybe Harlan Coben would be up for writing a play?!
Why These Need the Stage
From murderous marshes to Regency ballrooms, BookTok smut to Netflix nightmares, the West End is crying out for these stories. Bigger, bolder, and perfectly stage-ready — curtain up, please.