
The touring production of Mean Girls brings Tina Feyâs classic to the stage with fresh, fizzy confidence â and the Milton Keynes audience absolutely loved it.
This musical doesnât pretend to be subtle. Itâs bold, bright, and unapologetically extra, leaning fully into the heightened world of North Shore High, slick choreography, and a popâinfused score that keeps the pace relentless. Beneath the glitter, though, is a surprisingly sharp heart: the show still lands its message about identity, belonging, and the cost of cruelty.
One of the eveningâs biggest delights was Faye Tozer (Ms. Heron/Ms Norbury/Mrs George), whose performance adds real star quality to the production. She brings humour to her role with every line delivered in perfect comic timing â the confidence of a performer with years of stage experience. Whatâs especially impressive is how she balances satire with warmth; she never tips into caricature, instead grounding the chaos with a charismatic, polished presence. The audience clearly adored her, making it a genuine heartbreak when her time on stage came to an end.
At the centre of the chaos are two performances that anchor the entire production: Vivian Panka as Regina George and Emily Lane as Cady Heron.
Vivian Panka delivers a Regina who is every inch the true ruler of North Shore High â icy, magnetic, and charismatic. She doesnât just play the role â she owns it. Her vocals slice through the theatre with precision, and her stage presence is so commanding that every entrance feels like an event. Vivianâs Regina is the kind of âvillainâ you canât help but adore, even as she plots social destruction with a perfectly practised smile.
Emily Lane, meanwhile, brings a wonderfully grounded warmth to Cady Heron. Her journey from wideâeyed newcomer to accidental âApex Predatorâ is played with charm, humour, and emotional depth. Emilyâs vocals shine in the showâs more heartfelt numbers, and she makes Cadyâs moral unravelling both funny and uncomfortably relatable.
Together, she and Vivian create a dynamic that feels electric â two performances in perfect counterbalance.
The ensemble work is consistently strong, with choreography that feels both contemporary and characterâdriven. The Plastics are suitably terrifying and magnetic, while the supporting cast injects energy and personality at every turn. Vocally, the company is impressive across the board, and the harmonies in the bigger numbers fill the theatre with real punch.
What makes this tour so successful is its ability to appeal to both dieâhard fans of the film and total newbie. The humour lands, the music soars, and the emotional beats â particularly around friendship and selfâacceptance â are felt throughout. By curtain call,
Milton Keynes Theatre was firmly on its feet.
Mean Girls at Milton Keynes Theatre is a vibrant, witty, and irresistibly fun night out. With a standout turn from Faye Tozer and a cast firing on all cylinders, this tour proves the musical has more than enough bite to match its bubblegum exterior.
Catch it whilst in Milton Keynes - showing until Saturday 18th April 2026!










