Come to the Adelphi Theatre for a night of 4 Lorraines at the Adelphi Theatre. Back to the Future leaves the West End 12 April!
NewsLondon

Four Lorraines, One Stage: Back to the Future The Musical's Most Special Night Yet

tickadoo Editorial Team Updated 30 Jun 2026 2 min read

Back to the Future The Musical is doing something it has never done before on Monday 9 March - bringing all four of its West End Lorraines together on the Adelphi Theatre stage simultaneously. Rosanna Hyland, Amber Davies, Sarah Goggin and current Lorraine Maddie Grace Jepson will each play Lorraine Baines across a single evening performance, sharing the stage in what the cast are calling a "full-circle moment" and a "time-travel reunion." With tickets from £24.44 and discounted seats available across the house, this is also one of the most accessible evenings in the show's entire run - and with the final West End performance set for Sunday 12 April 2026, the timing feels significant.

What's Actually Happening on 9 March

To understand why this is special, a bit of context helps. Lorraine Baines - Marty McFly's mother, the heart of the show's time-travel love story - is one of the most demanding roles in the production. She's warm, funny, and has to believably exist in two completely different decades within the same show. Since Back to the Future The Musical opened in London's West End in 2021, four different actresses have taken on that challenge.

Rosanna Hyland originated the role at the Adelphi Theatre. Amber Davies followed, bringing her own energy to Lorraine before going on to originate Jordan Baker in The Great Gatsby at the London Coliseum (earning a WhatsOnStage Award nomination in the process). Sarah Goggin then stepped in, and Maddie Grace Jepson currently holds the role - reaching a global audience through her 2.1 million digital following alongside the traditional theatre crowd.

On 9 March, all four will share the stage across one performance. Each actress brings something different to the role, and this evening celebrates exactly that - the way a great character can live through multiple performers without losing what makes it tick.

Amber Davies (left) and Madie Grace Jepson (right)

Rosanna Hyland (left) and Sarah Goggin (right)

tickadoo
Written by
tickadoo Editorial Team

Built by the founders of London Theatre Direct, with 25 years of expertise in theatre ticketing. The tickadoo editorial team covers West End and Broadway shows, attractions, tours and experiences across 700+ cities.

About the team

Share this post

Copied!

You might also like