LUU Musical Theatre Society’s production of The Addams Family is a standing ovation-worthy night out you won’t forget.
If you missed opening night of LUU Musical Theatre Society’s production of The Addams Family at the Riley Smith Theatre, you missed something truly special. The audience (a sea of students, theatre lovers, and curious first-timers alike)Â rose to their feet the moment the curtain fell. The stamping, shouting, and sustained applause said it all: this was outstanding.
The two-act musical is one of those rare productions that manages to be genuinely funny, emotionally resonant, and utterly bizarre all at once. FUN is the word that comes to mind, the only way to capture what happens when gothic grotesque meets wholesome family drama, and somehow both win.
“A society of students delivered something that felt, at every moment, like a fully professional show.”
The story
At its heart, The Addams Family is about what happens when the people we love grow up and start making choices we don’t recognise. Wednesday Addams – darkly dramatic as ever, and our og black cat energy girl – has fallen in love with Luke (your classic golden retriever guy), and she wants to get married. Cue a family dinner with Luke’s thoroughly normal parents, and the sparks (and skeletons) come flying out. Morticia, struggling with the thought of losing her daughter, reaches a crisis point that sees her nearly walk out entirely. Gomez and Wednesday’s father-daughter bond is tested as he carries a secret too heavy for one man. And Luke’s parents arrive carrying their own quiet marital tension, which the evening gently unpacks with surprising heart.
What makes the show sing (literally and figuratively) is how it takes this wonderfully strange family and reveals that underneath the tombstones and the Thing, they understand love, loyalty, and the pain of letting go more deeply than most so-called normal families ever do. The ancestors, who materialise throughout in spectral cameos, give the show a beautiful sense of legacy and continuity. Quirky? Absolutely. But there’s more warmth in the Addams household than in most places.
The cast & crew
The ensemble was, frankly, amazing – every role felt considered, every performance committed. A special mention must go to Uncle Fester, who was a personal highlight of the evening: scene-stealing, perfectly timed, and played with an infectious joy that had the audience roaring. The chemistry between Gomez and Wednesday grounded the show’s emotional core. Morticia was magnetic! Her arc from composed matriarch to a woman on the edge of leaving was handled with real nuance. The crew behind the scenes matched the cast’s energy every step of the way, and it showed in every scene change, every lighting cue, every costume flourish.
A first-timer’s verdict
I brought along someone who had never been to a live play before. Naturally, they were unsure what to expect. By the end of the night, they told me that they loved it so much that they’d be going to more plays from now on. That, more than any review, tells you everything. The Addams Family is the kind of production that converts people, that reminds audiences why live theatre exists and why it matters.
LUU Musical Theatre Society, take a bow. You’ve earned it twice.
Editor: Grace Lees