The week of 15 to 21 June 2026 is one of those weeks where UK theatre is doing more outside the West End than inside it. The National Theatre opens two main-stage productions on the same Tuesday evening. Chichester Festival Theatre runs a Gabriel Byrne premiere alongside the closing weekend of its world-stage Atonement. The Karate Kid musical hits Liverpool for a six-night run with exact dates that match this week one for one. And the Bridge Theatre's just-opened Oresteia is settling in for the summer. Here is the round-up, by region and venue, with a focus on what you can still book before the week is out.
The National Theatre: two openings, one Tuesday night
The story this week begins on the South Bank, where the National Theatre is opening two of its biggest productions of the year on the same evening. Tuesday 16 June marks the start of Pride in the Olivier, the stage adaptation of the much-loved 2014 film about the Lesbians and Gays Support the Miners alliance during the 1984-85 strike. It runs through 1 August, and the first two weeks of previews have built considerable word-of-mouth. The Olivier's thrust stage and large ensemble cast suit the source material well, and the production is shaping up to be one of the National's summer-defining shows.
The same evening in the Dorfman, Sandra Oh leads The Misanthrope in a new version of Molière by Martin Crimp, directed by Indhu Rubasingham. It is Rubasingham's first big main-stage statement since becoming the National's artistic director, and Oh's first major London stage role since her Killing Eve years. Same run, same closing date, smaller and more intimate venue. If you can get into both productions on the same trip, this is the week to do it.
Chichester Festival Theatre: a closing weekend and a new opening
The most interesting regional-house programme this week is sixty miles south of London, at Chichester Festival Theatre, where two productions overlap for the first time. In the Festival Theatre, Christopher Hampton's world-stage adaptation of Ian McEwan's Atonement reaches its closing weekend, with the final performance on Saturday 20 June. Miriam Petche, Siân Phillips and Jasper Talbot lead a cast that has had critics travelling down from London week after week, and tickets for the closing performances have moved quickly.
Round in the Minerva, the smaller of Chichester's two stages, 45 Years began previews on 12 June and runs through 11 July. The world stage premiere of Andrew Haigh's acclaimed film features Gabriel Byrne and Geraldine James as the couple at the heart of the story, directed by Prasanna Puwanarajah. The Minerva is a tight 310-seat space, and a play this delicate, with two performers of this calibre, is exactly what the room is built for. Worth a day trip from London if you can build it in.
The Karate Kid musical hits Liverpool Empire
Out on the touring circuit, this week's standout date is at the Liverpool Empire, where The Karate Kid The Musical runs from Monday 15 June through Saturday 20 June. The production has been one of the most-anticipated UK tour openings of 2026, adapting the 1984 film into a stage musical with new songs and a brand-new book. The Liverpool Empire is a 2,300-seat house and a long-standing fixture on the UK number-one touring circuit, which suits a production of this scale. The Liverpool dates are the only confirmed UK city stop for the show in our data for this specific week.
Other big touring titles are between dates rather than on stage right now. The Heathers UK tour does not begin until late August in Windsor; the Waitress tour with Carrie Hope Fletcher returns to Liverpool in September. The genuinely live touring picture this week is concentrated on Karate Kid plus the smaller-scale regional and producing houses doing their own work.
London beyond the West End
Two London venues outside the traditional West End cluster are doing some of the most interesting work in the city this week. At the Bridge Theatre on the South Bank, Simon Stone's bold reimagining of The Oresteia is settling into its run, led by David Morrissey, Mary-Louise Parker, Tom Glynn-Carney and Rosie Sheehy. The production stepped into the slot vacated when Chris Pine's Ivanov was pushed back to 2027, and on early reports has more than justified the substitution.
Across the river at Shakespeare's Globe, Romeo and Juliet continues its summer run in the open-air playhouse, in repertory with Much Ado About Nothing. Tickets in our data start at £106, reflecting the small seated capacity of the working reconstruction. Further along the river, the National's Lyttelton Theatre will host Connections 2026, Britain's biggest youth theatre festival, from 25 to 28 June, just after this week closes. For families planning ahead, it is worth a diary line.
The shape of the summer ahead
This week is also a useful moment to look at what is coming next. Across town at the Theatre Royal Haymarket, rehearsals are underway for Trainspotting: The Musical, written by Irvine Welsh himself, opening 15 July. Chichester's summer musical My Fair Lady opens in the Festival Theatre on 6 July, directed by Rachel Kavanaugh. The Royal Shakespeare Company's 2026 Stratford season continues running through the summer; the National's Pride and Misanthrope double bill plays through to 1 August. And the West End absorbs three star-led casting changes at the Trafalgar across the same window, as Catherine Tate hands the lead in Oh, Mary! to Cole Escola on 20 July and on to Jinkx Monsoon from 17 August. By mid-September the calendar has done a complete reshuffle. This week is a good moment to lock plans in before it does.
Frequently asked questions
What is the biggest UK theatre opening this week?
The National Theatre opens two main-stage productions on the same Tuesday evening, 16 June. Pride in the Olivier and Sandra Oh in The Misanthrope in the Dorfman both run through 1 August. It is unusual for the National to open two productions on the same evening, and worth flagging as the event of the week.
Which big UK tours are playing this week?
The headline touring date is The Karate Kid The Musical at the Liverpool Empire, Monday 15 June through Saturday 20 June. The Heathers UK tour does not begin until late August, and the Waitress UK tour returns to Liverpool in September, so the major touring activity for this specific week is more concentrated than usual.
What is on at Chichester Festival Theatre this week?
Two productions overlap for the first time in the 2026 season. In the Festival Theatre, the world stage premiere of Christopher Hampton's adaptation of Atonement reaches its closing weekend on Saturday 20 June. In the Minerva, the world stage premiere of 45 Years with Gabriel Byrne and Geraldine James runs from 12 June to 11 July. The summer musical My Fair Lady opens just after this week, on 6 July.
Where can I see open-air theatre in the UK this week?
In London, Shakespeare's Globe is running both Romeo and Juliet and Much Ado About Nothing in its open-air playhouse on the South Bank. Regent's Park Open Air Theatre's summer programme also opens in June. For audiences happy to travel, the smaller Iris Theatre at St Paul's Covent Garden runs through the summer too.
For the West End side of this week's coverage, see our West End round-up for 15 to 21 June, the best-reviewed shows, and the best-value tickets piece. Our evergreen guide to every UK tour hitting the road in 2026 and the live touring shows index are kept up to date as new dates land, and the off-West End page covers the venues outside the central cluster.
Editorial Staff is a contributor at British Theatre, covering West End productions, London theatre news, casting updates, and UK stage trends.
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