Frontmezzjunkies reports: The 2026 Critics’ Circle Theatre Awards winners are in, and the night belonged to Brendan Gleeson, Rosamund Pike, and more than a few delightful surprises
By Ross
Every awards season brings its share of surprises, but the Critics’ Circle Theatre Awards have a way of cutting through the noise with a critic’s eye for what mattered most. Last night at the National Theatre, the winners of the 2026 awards were revealed, and if the nominations had us dreaming of a season to envy, the results delivered a night to remember—one that celebrated the unexpected, the intimate, and the undeniably brilliant.
At the centre of it all was Brendan Gleeson, who took home Best Actor for his West End debut in The Weir. Conor McPherson’s quietly haunting pub drama slipped entirely past this year’s Olivier Awards nominations, making this recognition feel all the more pointed. Gleeson’s performance, subtle and deeply felt, stood out in a category that included Bryan Cranston and Paapa Essiedu, proving that the quietest work can sometimes leave the strongest impression.

Rosamund Pike was awarded Best Actress for her commanding turn in Inter Alia, a performance that cut through a competitive field with clarity and precision. Meanwhile, Hayley Atwell claimed Best Shakespearean Performance for her Beatrice in Much Ado About Nothing, edging out her co-star Tom Hiddleston in a result that felt both surprising and entirely earned.
Among the evening’s strongest showings were two productions I’ve had the chance to see firsthand. All My Sons, directed by Ivo van Hove, secured both Best Revival and Best Director, continuing its remarkable critical run. At the Bridge Theatre, Into the Woods also claimed two awards, with Tom Scutt recognized for design and the company honoured with the inaugural Best Ensemble award.
Elsewhere, new work found its moment. Punch earned the Michael Billington Award for Best New Play, further cementing James Graham’s place as one of the most compelling voices writing today. And in one of the night’s most joyful outcomes, Paddington The Musical charmed its way to Best New Musical, a win that feels as warm and well-earned as the show itself.
What made this year’s awards especially exciting was the sheer range of work being recognized. From the intimacy of The Weir to the theatrical sweep of Paddington, from Shakespeare to new writing, the Critics’ Circle highlighted a season that resisted easy categorization. It was not defined by a single trend, but by a willingness to embrace variety, risk, and scale.
For those of us watching from across the Atlantic, the awards offer something more than a list of winners. They provide a snapshot of a theatre landscape that continues to evolve, challenge, and expand its reach. London theatre is not settling into a pattern; it is pushing forward, shaped by artists who are finding new ways to tell stories that feel urgent and alive. And if this ceremony is any indication, the temptation to experience it all firsthand is becoming harder to resist.


