OriginalTickets logo
Broadway

Review: THE SPY WHO CAME IN FROM THE COLD at Theatre Royal Glasgow

John le Carré's classic 1963 Cold War novel, "The Spy Who Came in from the Cold," receives a fresh stage adaptation in Glasgow this week, following British intelligence officer Alec Leamas through treacherous espionage.

·May 28, 2026·via BroadwayWorld
Review: THE SPY WHO CAME IN FROM THE COLD at Theatre Royal Glasgow

Broadway + NYC

Broadway

Off-Broadway

Off-Off Broadway

Cabaret

Dance

Opera

Classical Music

Eastern

Central

Western

West End

WEST END

UK Regional

International

Canada

Australia / New Zealand

Europe

Asia

Latin America

Africa / Middle East

Entertainment

TV/Movies

Music

Atmospheric and Intriguing, But Missing Emotional Fire

POPULAR

Get all the top news & discounts for Scotland & beyond.

Get all the top news & discounts for Scotland & beyond.

Initially a 1963 novel by John le Carré, The Spy Who Came in from the Cold sneaks into Glasgow this week in a fresh new stage adaptation. Set amid the deceptive terrain of Cold War Europe, the story follows British intelligence officer Alec Leamas as he is sent on a dangerous mission to East Germany.

Ralf Little delivers a solid central performance as Leamas, convincingly portraying a man hollowed out by years of espionage and emotional detachment. There is a genuine weariness to him that suits the production’s bleak atmosphere. Gráinne Dromgoole’s Liz Gold, however, feels less convincing. Her performance lacks emotional variation and, crucially, the chemistry between Liz and Leamas never fully lands — a problem when so much of the story depends on the audience investing in their connection.

Like many adaptations of dense novels, the production struggles at times under the weight of exposition. The first half can feel slow-moving and overly talkative, though the pace sharpens significantly later on. The final courtroom sequence is particularly gripping, finally bringing together the tension and moral ambiguity the play spends much of its runtime building towards.

Visually, the production is far more successful. The staging is striking, with a giant map spread across the stage floor and a bullseye fixed over East Germany, a constant reminder of Cold War political gameplay. Impressive lighting and gobo effects help create a shadowy world of surveillance and suspicion.

There is an interesting story buried within the production about identity, dishonesty and the emotional damage caused by living a life built on manipulation... but the performances don’t always bring enough humanity to match the strength of those ideas. Stylish and atmospheric throughout, but emotionally colder than it perhaps intends to be.

The Spy who Came in from the Cold is at Theatre Royal Glasgow until 30 May

Photo: Johan Persson

Receive the latest updates, breaking news, and exclusive coverage from Broadway directly in WhatsApp.

Videos

Scotland SHOWS

Recommended For You

Sign up for announcements, and exclusive discounts on tickets to your favorite shows!

© 2026 - Copyright Wisdom Digital Media , all rights reserved. Privacy Policy

_Originally reported by [BroadwayWorld](https://www.broadwayworld.com/scotland/article/Review-THE-SPY-WHO-CAME-IN-FROM-THE-COLD-at-Theatre-Royal-Glasgow-20260528)._

Source Attribution

This story is summarized from coverage by BroadwayWorld.

Read full story →

Comments

Sign in to join the conversation.

Loading comments…