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This production is recommended for ages 14+.
Performance dates
23 August 2025 - 27 September 2025
Run time: 1 hour 30 mins (no interval)
No interval
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Interview tickets
Experience the thrilling stage debut of Interview, a razor-sharp new two-hander starring Robert Sean Leonard and Paten Hughes, playing a strictly limited run at Riverside Studios from 23 August to 27 September 2025.
About Interview
One night. Two people. Just the truth – or someone’s version of it. Step into the charged atmosphere of Interview, a tense and seductive encounter between a fading war correspondent and a famous actress. What begins as a simple interview quickly unravels into a gripping battle of egos, secrets, and shifting power dynamics.
This world premiere stage adaptation of Theo van Gogh’s acclaimed 2003 film makes its London debut with a bold new production. Set entirely over the course of one unpredictable night, Interview explores themes of manipulation, fame, journalism, and gender politics in a way that feels urgent and unforgettable.
Facts and critical acclaim
- Tony Award winner Robert Sean Leonard returns to the stage in a rare UK appearance
- A tight, one-act drama filled with suspense, seduction, and razor-sharp dialogue
- Based on Theo van Gogh’s cult film, now reimagined for the theatre
- Only five weeks to catch this world premiere production at Riverside Studios
Interview cast
- Robert Sean Leonard - Pierre
- Paten Hughes - Katya
Interview creatives
Produced by Tony Award-winner Douglas Denoff, with co-producers Kevin Kinsella, Alexander “Sandy” Marshall, and Broadway Rainbows.
- Scenic Design: Derek McLane
- Costume Design: Bernat Buscato
- Lighting Design: Jackie Shemesh
- Sound Design: Ata Güner
Latest Interview News

News / Reviews / New Shows + Transfers
Interview review: A thrilling game of Kat and mouse
Texts, social media alerts, phone calls and voice notes ping on to the white brickwork of the ‘Kat Cave’, Katya’s fashionable New York apartment. Her world is dominated, and her worth defined, by these notifications. They tower over her on the walls of her home, inserting themselves into her inner sanctum. Wherever she is they follow her, and she must be prepared. After all, ‘if you lose the narrative, you lose the leverage.’
Adapted from the 2003 Dutch film, Interview follows Katya, an influencer turned actress, and Pierre, a war correspondent turned reluctant entertainment journalist, as they spar, seduce and scheme their way toward the truth (or at least their version of it).
It is the first time this story has been brought to the stage, and it feels more urgent here than on screen. Katya’s entire existence already plays out as a performance, so to watch her command an actual stage blurs the line between life and theatre even further. Updating the 22-year-old story to the digital age sharpens the script to a killer point. When the film premiered, Facebook was a year away, Twitter three, Instagram seven. Now, Katya can reach her followers in a heartbeat via Instagram Live. Unlike before, every half-truth or slip of the tongue risks instant exposure and cancellation.
29 Aug, 2025 | By Sian McBride